NT Text: Philippians 2:7
OT Source(s):
Source: Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
Reference Type: Echo
Connection Method(s): Promise-Fulfillment + Longitudinal Theme
Anchor Text: Isa 52:13-53:12 — The Suffering Servant
Significance: Paul's statement that Christ "emptied himself" (heauton ekenōsen) in Philippians 2:7 echoes the language of Isaiah 53:12 where the Suffering Servant "poured out his soul to death" (he'erah lammawet naphsho). The LXX renders this paredothē eis thanaton hē psychē autou, and while Paul does not use the identical Greek vocabulary, the conceptual parallel of voluntary self-emptying unto death is unmistakable. Both texts describe a deliberate, voluntary act of self-giving: Isaiah's Servant pours out his life as a guilt offering, and Paul's Christ empties himself by taking the form of a servant (morphēn doulou). The verbal connection to "servant" (doulos/ebed) strengthens the echo — Christ takes the very role Isaiah's fourth Servant Song describes. Isaiah 53 prophesied that this self-emptying would lead to the Servant's vindication and the justification of many (Isa 53:11-12), which Paul confirms in the exaltation of Philippians 2:9-11. The Servant's voluntary humiliation unto death, followed by divine vindication and universal acknowledgment, provides the scriptural pattern that Paul's Christ-hymn follows and declares fulfilled.