Ahahaha I knew this was coming!
Boy oh boy, you're reaching... big time. So you mean that those who killed Jesus read that part in Isaiah, pretended to hate him, and killed him? All those people played along?
LOL!
So...the book told a prophecy about something in itself? Amazing.
The next sentence will start with the word "reading."
Reading Isaiah 53.....it reads like a vague horoscope, that we then read and say, "Uh....Jesus! Jesus did some of that stuff! That's gotta bet it!" Or maybe it was some other guy. Or maybe it was just a story some people told a very long time ago.
Here's something else - if the Bible was divinely inspired, surely there must be something in the Bible that speaks of some truth that was later discovered via science. Name one thing in the Bible that was later found out to be true.
And then compare it to the list of things the Bible predicted that
didn't happen, or which weren't true, or which it missed entirely. (Well, the list of things it missed or felt didn't need mentioning is quite incredibly lengthy.)
"Oh yeah, there are these geological fault thingies I put here and there. The ground's going to shake like hell sometimes, you might want to watch that. Also, living next to the ocean can be dangerous, because sometimes I'm going to send big splashes of seawater far inland, and you're all quite susceptible to dying if you're submersed for more than a few minutes. And some of those 'clean' things I said you can eat - they can also kill you if you don't cook them properly. But if you cook them too much, then you can get a buildup of carcinogens, which can damage your DNA, which can also kill you. No, I'm not going to give you any recipes. More fun: Sunlight exposure makes your body produce some substances that help you live. But it can also damage your DNA and eventually kill you."
I have a feeling that, if the original texts would be fed through the proper algorithm, you would find a giant trollface encoded in there.
I haven't trolled a religious thread with something new in a while. Let's see...
Hey religious troll, where's Heaven?
Religious person 500 years ago: "Up." Religious person 500 years ago, "where's Hell?" "Down."
Now that we have those telescope thingamabobbers, and a fairly solid understanding of the geology of the Earth - solid enough to exclude "the underworld" from being a part of this planet, both of those premises are fairly falsifiable.
Magically, the location of Heaven has evolved to be in another plane of existence. (Where's it say that in the Bible?) Furthermore, the Bible states that Heaven is up. (Which way did Jesus go when he ascended to Heaven? Tower of Babel? Etc.)
So, OP, how do you reconcile this?
It's all probably next door to where the Greek gods are living now, since the top of Mount Olympus was found to be strangely god-free.