The Bible Recap - Day 204 (Isaiah 31-34) - Year 4
Episode Date: July 23, 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: - Titus 3:5-6 - The Bible... Recap Book! 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!
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Hey Bible readers, I'm Tara Lee Cobble and I'm your host for the Bible recap.
Yesterday we covered woes number one, two, and three, and today we wrap up the final three
of six.
Today's reading ended on a dark note, but hopefully you'll be encouraged to know that
tomorrow things brighten up a bit. And we're not far off from the parts of Isaiah that deal with the new heavens and the new earth,
which are pretty amazing to read about. We open today with a reinforced woe to Judah,
woe to those who go down to Egypt. We've heard this one before. We know Judah is working on an
alliance with Egypt because Judah is afraid of asyria. So this is clearly directed at Judah.
God says they will seek help from Egypt,
but Egypt will be rendered helpless themselves.
They may have horses and chariots,
but God has weapons Judah can't even imagine.
He can provide in ways that are supernatural.
And he foretells a day when they'll finally turn
to him and destroy their idols.
And in that day, a righteous king will reign.
Hopefully you've picked up on this by now, but any time we see the future righteous king
reigning after the day of the Lord, that points to Jesus.
Of course, the people in Isaiah's day didn't know this, they naturally assumed it would
be an earthly king, but a good one to contrast all the bad ones they've experienced.
In that day, fools and scoundrels won't be exalted anymore, but for now they're still running rampant.
The fool and the scoundrel are two distinct people here. 326 describes the fool like this.
The fool speaks folly, and his heart is busy with iniquity, to practice ungodliness,
to utter error concerning the Lord,
to leave the craving of the hungry and satisfied, and to deprive the thirsty of drink.
And here's what verse 7 says about the scoundrel. As for the scoundrel, his devices are evil.
He plans wicked schemes to ruin the poor with lying words, even when the plea of the
needy is right.
One of the first things that came to mind when I read this was the people who
work as sex traffickers, luring unwitting poor people into lives of rape after
promising them good jobs or college degrees. When I read about the fool in the
scoundrel, all I know is I never want to be either of those people, and one thing
they both have in common, besides their hatred of God and his word, is a disregard
for the poor and needy.
In fact, a lot of people in Isaiah's day have this problem.
Their wealth has made them complacent.
He specifically addresses the complacent women and calls them to repent.
They are the focus of the fifth woe.
He warns them that they're living in a false sense of security,
when in fact things are about to get really bad within the year.
But then, as he always does, he reminds them of the message of hope
beyond the desolation.
He says, God's spirit will be poured out all over the land,
which will cause people's hearts to turn back to him,
and they'll begin to flourish again.
The sixth and final woe is pronounced to the destroyer and the traitor, which ultimately
points to those who have wounded God's people in Judah.
They will serve God's purposes in bringing Judah to repentance, but then they will be judged
themselves.
Isaiah declares God's trustworthiness to the people of Judah, who will be inclined to doubt
it as all of this is unfolding.
He wants to remind them who Yahweh is. In the midst of everything they know being turned on its head and everything they found their identity and hope in being shaken, as they are reminds them in
336. He will be the stability of your times. Nothing else is worth building your life on.
the stability of your times. Nothing else is worth building your life on." He says, the fear of the Lord is Zion's treasure. In other words, the most valuable thing you have is your
trust in God. After we wrapped up the six woes, we moved on to the judgment of the nations in chapter 34.
Much lighter reading, right? Nope. God promises to bring judgment on all the nations of the Earth.
Honestly, this should come as no surprise.
We know what humanity is like.
We've seen the news.
Isaiah begins to paint images of Eden
being turned into an abandoned wasteland full of tar
and fire and terrible animals like porcupines and owls.
I just had to point that out because owls terrify me.
See, it's biblical.
While Isaiah is describing what will happen
to eat him after God brings vengeance on it,
some people believe this is also alluding to hell.
Either way, owls are there, so I'm not going.
And near the end of today's reading,
we have another reminder of why we don't take
versus out of context and claim them for ourselves.
A well-meaning single woman once told me she was claiming Isaiah 34-16 as her promise that God has a husband for her.
It says, none shall be without her mate.
I wasn't sure if I should tell her that verse actually refers to the wild animals who are populating the desolate tar covered sulfur smelling wasteland God has cursed.
The pretty sure I'd rather stay single.
Okay then, what was your God shot? The Albit? No? We neither. Mine was in God's warning to the
complacent women. In 32, 15 through 16, Isaiah says God's Spirit will be poured out over the land,
which will cause people's hearts to turn back to God, and they'll begin to flourish.
Because the active present of God's Spirit brings justice and righteousness.
In the next verse, he says, the effect of righteousness will be peace, and the result of righteousness will be quietness and trust forever.
So follow me here for a second. The thread we see running through these verses is that
righteousness is what brings quietness and trust, and that God is the one who brings righteousness.
You don't have to manufacture your own righteousness. You couldn't, if you had to, how freeing is that?
Titus 3, 5 through 6 puts it this way. He saved us, not because of works done by us in righteousness, but according
to his own mercy by the washing and regeneration and renewal of the Holy Spirit whom he poured
out on us richly through Jesus Christ our Savior.
Because of Christ's death and his blood covering our sins, the Holy Spirit is poured out on us,
making us righteous, something we
could never achieve on our own.
And that is something that will set our heart at peace and help us trust God forever.
What a great relief.
He is where the joy is.
We're so grateful to all of you to have picked up a copy of the Bible Recath book.
One of you, our listeners, is the one who thought of this idea,
just three weeks into whom we launched this podcast back in January 2019.
This has been a long time coming, which is why we're so grateful to your Helmets
for loving it as you follow along with the podcast and the book together.
If you haven't picked up your copy yet, you can find the Bible Recast Book
wherever books are sold, or get more info at thebibelrecap.com forward slash books.