This prophecy is abundantly clear: A certain man named “Cyrus”
will authorize the rebuilding of Jerusalem and the temple.

Timeline
for some Non-Messianic Prophecies
Please check the timeline (see figure above) related to this
prophecy. Isaiah prophesied around 700 BC, about 100 years before Babylon destroyed Jerusalem and perhaps 160 years before Cyrus, king of Media and Persia, conquered
Jerusalem and Babylon in 539 BC. The following year Cyrus permitted Jews to return to
their land and build a temple:
“In the first year of Cyrus king of Persia, in order to fulfill the
word of the Lord
spoken by Jeremiah, the Lord
moved the heart of Cyrus king of Persia to make a proclamation
throughout his realm and to put it in writing:
This is what Cyrus king of
Persia
says: ‘The Lord,
the God of heaven, has given me all the kingdoms of the earth and
he has appointed me to build a temple for him at
Jerusalem
in
Judah
. Anyone of his people among you—may the Lord
his God be with him, and let him go up.’”
2 Chronicles 36:22-23 (cf. Ezra 1:1-4)
Analysis of the
prophecy:
- The
prophecy is crystal clear, historically fulfilled,
and beyond control of the Jews.
- The
archaeological discovery of the “Cyrus
Cylinder” confirms Cyrus’ policies as to the freedom
of religion. It
explains why Cyrus let the Jewish captives return to rebuilt
the Jerusalem temple exactly as predicted in the prophecy.
- The
weakest criterion is the dating of this prediction of Isaiah,
given the Deutero-Isaiah alternative. This theory claims the
latter part of the book was written later by another author.
Actually, the Cyrus prophecy is probably the reason liberal
critics have tried to re-date the second half of Isaiah and
onwards to around 550 BC or later.