- What are “hokekim” and what is their appropriate responsibility?
- In this instance, what perverse activity do they represent?
- What particular group in the population especially arouses the concern of the prophet (Isaiah 10:2)?
- Is there a consequence to this action pattern and, if so, how is it set forth in Isaiah 10:3-4?
- In Isaiah 10:11, there is an indication that something has already happened to Shomron and that it is now about to happen to Jerusalem. What was it?
- Isaiah 10:12-13 explicate a theological conviction: political events represent Divine direction. The king of Assyria, then, is actually what in the hands of Whom? (See Isaiah 10:15, in particular.)
- In Isaiah 10:21 a well-known phrase appears – What is “Sh’ar Yashuv”?
- Reading Isaiah 10:24-28 is there some hope in terms of escape from the Assyrian overlord — eventually?
- The end of Isaiah 10 implies that devastation/ overturn, both in nature and politically, will be normative (and that is followed by a most unusual chapter of hope – Isaiah 11).
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