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Book of Isaiah
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== Structure == General scholarly consensus through most of the 20th century saw three separate collections of oracles in the book of Isaiah.{{sfn| Petersen| 2002| pp = 47β48}} A typical outline based on this understanding of the book sees its underlying structure in terms of the identification of historical figures who might have been their authors:{{sfn|Sweeney|1998|p= 78}} * [[Isaiah 1|1]]β[[Isaiah 39|39]]: Proto-Isaiah, containing the words of the original [[Isaiah]]; * [[Isaiah 40|40]]β[[Isaiah 55|55]]: Deutero-Isaiah, the work of an anonymous Exilic author; * [[Isaiah 56|56]]β[[Isaiah 66|66]]: Trito-Isaiah, an anthology of about twelve passages.{{sfn|Soggin|1989|p= 394}} While one part of the general consensus still holds, this perception of Isaiah as made up of three rather distinct sections underwent a radical challenge in the last quarter of the 20th century.{{sfn|Petersen|2002|pp=47β48}} The newer approach looks at the book in terms of its literary and formal characteristics, rather than authors, and sees in it a two-part structure divided between chapters 33 and 34:{{sfn|Sweeney|1998|pp=78β79}} * [[Isaiah 1|1]]β[[Isaiah 33|33]]: Warnings of judgment and promises of subsequent restoration for Jerusalem, Judah and the nations; * [[Isaiah 34|34]]β[[Isaiah 66|66]]: Judgment has already taken place and restoration is at hand.
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