The Bible Recap - Day 191 (Isaiah 5-8) - Year 4
Episode Date: July 10, 2022SHOW NOTES: - All the info you need to START is on our website! - Join our PATREON family for bonus perks! - Get your TBR merch - Show credits FROM TODAY’S PODCAST: - Numbers 26:55 - Numbers... 33:54 - Isaiah 2:9 - 2 Kings 16:1-9 - Genesis 14:17 - Video: Amos Overview SOCIALS: The Bible Recap: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter D-Group: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter TLC: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter D-GROUP: The Bible Recap is brought to you by D-Group - an international network of discipleship and accountability groups that meet weekly in homes and churches: Find or start one near you today!
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey Bible readers, I'm Tara Lee Cobble and I'm your host for the Bible recap.
Today we drop back in on Isaiah the major prophet who opens with a love poem to the people
of Israel and Judah.
In the poem, goddess compared to a vine, and the Israelites are compared to wild grapes.
But in the Hebrew, the term is actually more like stinking things.
Not so flattering, and not exactly what God wants to grow in his garden.
So God removes the protective hedger on the vineyard, and the wild grapes are trampled.
Then Isaiah goes on to highlight six ways the wild grapes are stinky and pronounces woe over them.
First, he denounces the greedy landowners who push the poor out of the land.
God had established land allotment rules back in Numbers 26 and 33.
So Isaiah says, their houses will become desolate.
Second, he speaks woe over those whose lavish lives of excess and drunkenness lead them
away from honoring God.
Instead of being filled, they'll be famished, and instead of eating, they'll be swallowed
by the grave.
The remaining woes are strung together closely.
Woe number three is spoken to people who mock God and doubt his judgment is coming.
They seek out sin.
Woe number four is to the prideful fool
with no discernment or integrity,
the storting the truth.
Woe number five is for the arrogant,
and the final woe, Woe number six,
doubles down on the drunkenness mentioned in Woe number two,
and adds to it the fact that they also rob a people of justice.
Verse 24 tells us that these people have
despised the Word of God. So God promises to send the nations as judgment on them. Do you remember
how God used Israel to drive out the wicked nations of Canaan when they first entered the Promised
Land? And now he's using those nations to drive Israel out of the same land because they've broken their covenant with him.
Then we move on to Isaiah 6, which is a stunning chapter. It's the prophet's vision of God's throne room. I cannot imagine what it was like for him to have this vision. Put yourself in Isaiah's
shoes for a minute. Everything is going terribly with God's people, and sometimes like in 2-9,
you don't even want him to forgive them
for how terrible they're acting.
It's a very natural response, right?
But if Isaiah is going to be God's mouthpiece,
it's important for him not only to have a proper view of God,
but of himself in light of God.
Yes, the Israelites have been acting wickedly,
but Isaiah is a sinner in need of God's mercy too.
And this vision is God's way of reminding him of that.
He sees the outer fringes of God's glory.
He sees the sick swing to Sarah them covering their eyes as they cry out, holy, holy, holy,
repeating this three times is a way of magnifying it exponentially.
Then there's an earthquake, then there's smoke, and one of the serifs
puts a hot coal in his mouth, and it burns away all that is impure. When confronted with God's
holiness, Isaiah rightly sees his own impurity. He's humbled. This was a necessary posture for Isaiah.
God commissions him for the task at hand.
Strangely, the task is to make sure
the people don't repent.
This reminds me of when God called Moses
to go meet with Pharaoh and then said,
here's exactly what to say and what to do
when you get there and by the way,
he's not going to listen.
God tells Isaiah to rebuke a people
who are not going to listen,
which only heaps more judgment on them.
Isaiah is perplexed by this as I'm sure most of us would be.
God tells him that despite all the judgment and destruction, there will be a remnant of
his people.
He will preserve this family that he has set his heart on from the beginning, this batch
of stinking fruit, while killing off all the wickedness that has set itself up against
him.
In chapter 7, the southern kingdom of Judah is in some potential military travel.
Is this God's judgment?
What's going on?
The people of Israel whose kingdom was toppled by the Assyrians have partnered with Syria
to take Judah's capital Jerusalem.
Judah's king Ahaz is nervous and is probably tempted to make some foreign alliances at this
point just to protect himself.
But Isaiah gives instructions to trust God because God promises to deliver them.
Then God speaks to King Ahaz and tells him to ask him for a sign.
Ahaz made a foreign alliance once before, back in 2nd King 16, so God is giving him an opportunity
to grow in faith.
But Ahaz refuses. This may seem like a humble, trusting response, but it was actually defiant.
So God says, I'm giving you a sign anyway. Then God gives a sign that you probably recognize
as the birth announcement for Jesus. But Ahaz doesn't know about Jesus, so we have to put
ourselves in his shoes
to see how he would have received this sign.
What would he have thought of this?
At the moment, he's worried about being attacked
by invading armies.
And God's words here sound a bit like a timeline, don't they?
How long would it take a woman to get pregnant
and deliver a child who would then be old enough
to tell right from wrong?
716 says, before this hypothetical boy would reach that age, the two nations A has fears will
be desolate. So let's put a pin in A has for a second and cover something important about prophecy.
Is the boy hypothetical or is he Jesus? Yes, he's both. For Ahaz, who is receiving that prophecy in real time, the boy is hypothetical.
But for the grand scope of the timeline of all history, the boy is Jesus.
This shows us one of the really incredibly beautiful layered aspects of prophecy.
God can speak present truths and eternal truths simultaneously, and they aren't in conflict,
they work in tandem.
In chapter eight, God tells Isaiah to go get a whiteboard
and write something down.
The message is,
maher shahal hashbaz,
which means, spoil speeds, pray hastens.
Or in layman's terms, things are about to get bad.
Around this time, a woman who is probably as a his wife gets pregnant, and God tells
him to name the son, Maharashtra-Lahashbhaz.
I bet he can't find that on any key chains.
But oh well, that's just one less souvenir to lose because Judah is about to get destroyed.
And God tells Isaiah in the midst of all this impending doom that he should remain unshaken.
It's going to be terrible, God says, but he shouldn't fear what everyone else fears.
What was your God shot today?
Mine was in the throne room in chapter 6.
There were two things that stood out to me.
First, in verse 1, we see that God's throne is in the temple.
Not in a palace where thrones usually are.
This reminds me of Melchizedek, remember him, from way back in Genesis 14?
He's part of a royal priesthood, where the royalty and the priests overlap.
I love how scripture keeps reiterating that for us.
I also love something from verse 6.
That's where the Sarah takes a burning coal
from the altar and touches it to Isaiah's lips
to purify him.
First of all, the word for altar is from the word misbeak,
meaning it's the altar of sacrifice.
What's on the altar of sacrifice that purifies us
from our sin?
Christ.
Thank God for the burning coal, for the death of Christ. He's where the joy is.
Tomorrow we'll begin reading the Book of Amos. It's nine chapters long.
We're linking to a short video overview in the show notes that will really help set you up
for success with this new look. So check that out if you've got nine minutes to spare.
The Bible recap is brought to you by D-group,
discipleship and Bible study groups that meet in homes
and churches around the world each week.
[♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪