Story of Prophet Isaiah (pbuh)
Ibn Kathir
| Among the prophets between David and Zakariah is Isaiah  (pbuh), Ibn Amoz (Amisiah). According to Muhammad Ibn Ishaaq, Isaiah  (pbuh) appeared before Zakariah (pbuh) and Yahya (John the Baptist)  (pbuh). He is among those who prophesied about Isa (Jesus) (pbuh) and  Muhammad (pbuh). The king during his time was called Hezekiah (Hazkia).  He listened and was obedient to Isaiah in what he advised him to do and  prohibit for the good of the state. Affairs took momentum among the  Israelites. The king became sick with an infected foot. While he was  sick, King Sennacherib (Sinharib) of Babylon advanced towards Jerusalem  with sixty thousand men. The people were greatly terrified. The King asked  Isaiah: "What did Allah reveal to you regarding Sennacherib and his  army?" He replied: "He has not yet revealed anything to me." Then the  revelation came down for King Hezekiah to appoint a successor, as he  wished, because his end was at hand.  When Isaiah told him this, the  king turned to the qibla (the direction faced in prayer); he prayed,  glorified Allah, invoked Him, and wept.  Weeping and invoking Allah the  All-Powerful and majestic with a sincere heart, trust and patience, he  said: "O Lord of lords, and God of gods!  O, Benevolent and Merciful One  Whom neither sleep nor nodding can overpower, remember me for my deeds  and my just judgment over the children of Israel; and all that was from  You, and You know it better than I do, my open acts and my secrets are  with You." Allah answered his prayers had compassion on him.  He  revealed to Isaiah to tell him the glad tidings that He had compassion  for his weeping and would extend his life for a further fifteen years  and save him from the enemy, Sennacherib.  When Isaiah told this to  Hezekiah, his disease was healed.  Evil and sadness departed, and he  fell prostrate, saying: "O Lord, it is You Who grants kingship to  whomsoever You wish and dethrones whomsoever You wish and elevates  whomsoever You wish and degrades whomsoever You wish, Knower of the  unseen and the evident.  And lo!  You are the First and the Last; the  Manifest and the Perceived; You grant mercy and answer the prayers of  the troubled ones." When he raised his head, Allah revealed to Isaiah to  command the king to extract the water of the fig and apply it to his  sore, and he would be whole and cured.  He did so and was cured. Then Allah sent death upon the army of Sennacherib.  In  the morning they were all corpses, except Sennacherib and five of his  companions, among them Nebuchadnezzar (Bukhtanasar).  The king of Israel  immediately sent for them, put them in shackles and displayed them in  the land for seventy days to spite and insult them.  Every day each of  them was fed a loaf of barley bread; after seventy days he confined them  in prison. Allah then revealed to Isaiah that the king should send  them back to their country so that they might warn their people what  would happen to them.  When they returned, Sennacherib gathered his  people and told them what had happened to them.  The priests and  magicians said to him: "We told you about their Lord and their prophets,  but you did not listen to us.  It is a nation which, with their God,  nobody can overcome."  So, Sennacherib was afraid of Allah.  He died  seven years later. Ibn Ishaaq also reported that when King Hezekiah of  Israel died, the Israelites' condition deteriorated; there was political  confusion, and their wickedness increased.  Isaiah preached to them  what Allah revealed to him, directing them to righteousness and warning  them of Allah's severe punishment.  His preaching made him their enemy  and they decided to kill him, so he escaped from them. Ibn Ishaaq also reported an Israelite interpolation  which said that when Isaiah was passing by a tree, it opened, and he  entered therein; but Satan saw him and held onto the loop of his garment  so that it stuck out.  When they saw it, they brought a saw and sawed  the tree, and him with it.  Indeed, from Allah we come and to him we  return. | 
 
 
 
 
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