Isaiah, one of the great Hebrew prophets, the son of one Amoz; was a citizen of Jerusalem, evidently of some standing, and who flourished between 750 and 700 B.C.; like Amos (q.v.), he foresaw the judgment that was coming on the nation for its unfaithfulness, but felt assured that God would not altogether forsake His people, and that “a remnant,” God's elect among them, would be saved—that though the casket would be shattered in pieces, the jewel it contained would be preserved. See Hebrew Prophecy.
Definition taken from The Nuttall Encyclopædia, edited by the Reverend James Wood (1907)
Isæus * Isaiah, The Ascension ofLinks here from Chalmers
Aaron-Hariscon
Abbot, George
Abrabanel, Isaac
Alvarez, Diego
Amama, Sixtinus
Amner, Richard
Beaton, James
Blackmore, Sir Richard
Blayney, Benjamin
Busching, Anthony Frederic
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