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In Godβs providence he has given us passages that highlight different features of his kingship in Isaiah, which are all part of different rhetorical arguments. This diversity points to the greatness of God, the king, as well as to the many ways his kingship can relate to us today. As we have seen, God is the holy king (6:1β3; 57:15), a warrior king (59:15bβ20; 63:1β6), a shepherd king (40:11), the unseeable king (6:2), the king we will see (33:17; 40:5; 52:10), the royal judge (33:22), the saviour and redeemer king (33:22; 44:6; 52:7; 59:20), the king of glory (6:3; 24:23; 40:5; 60:1β2), the king of Israel (44:6) and Jacob (41:21), the king of the nations (2:2β4; 25:6β8; 60:1β3; 66:18β24), the king of heavenly forces (24:21β23), the wise king (2:2β4), the king who inhabits the cosmos (57:15; 66:1), the king of the downtrodden (57:15; 66:1β2), the king in history (6; 36 β 37), the king at the eschaton (24:21β24; 52:7; 60), and more. The book of Isaiah does not want us to condense God, the king, into one simple idea; instead, the book invites us to allow its collage of portraits of God as king to elicit a range of responses.
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Andrew Abernethy (The Book of Isaiah and God's Kingdom: A Thematic-Theological Approach (New Studies in Biblical Theology 40))