The Bible Recap - Day 211 (Isaiah 54-58) - Year 3
Episode Date: July 30, 2021SHOW 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: - Revelation 22:17 - Gene...sis 3:18 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.
We're almost finished with Isaiah, the majorest of all the major prophets.
Just two more days, then we'll be wrapping up book number 22.
So let's jump in with chapter 54.
Here God promises a blessing to the people of Israel.
He says, he will enlarge his family through them, and it will include people from all over the
world. At present, these other nations are their enemies, so it may feel like a strange blessing
to them, but he reminds them in the meantime that this is nothing to fear, and that this time of
waiting is nothing to be ashamed of. He presents Israel as a bride and himself as a husband,
one who redeems them.
He compares their current situation to what Noah and his family went through in the flood.
There was devastation and loss, but ultimately,
God protected his people through the trial.
He promises steadfast love, a covenant of peace, compassion, not anger or rebuke, and not only will he not
wipe them out, but since they have a lot of enemies, he also says no enemy will succeed
in wiping them out either. He promises security and protection of his people at large.
Their gates will be secure. He promises to teach all their children. Wow. The fact that God, the Spirit, teaches us is such a gift.
Think about the best teacher you've ever had.
Then multiply that experience by perfection,
omniscience, and infinite love.
Chapter 55 opens with God promising to feed his people
for free.
Is this actual food?
Is this your favorite medium rare filet,
the new flavor of bluebell ice cream
that's out of stock in every store in Texas? No, it's better. It's the food of salvation, the feast
of eternity. This verse reminds me of Revelation 22 17, which says, let the one who is thirsty come,
let the one who desires take the water of life without price. Then he says something very important.
This is paradigm shifting.
In 553, he speaks clearly about something
that he's been hinting toward.
He's had a covenant with Israel.
It was based on their behavior,
and they kept giving him every opportunity
with draw from it because they were not
keeping up their end of the covenant.
But God kept saying, I'm not going anywhere.
I'm here to bless you, despite the fact that you But God kept saying, I'm not going anywhere. I'm here to bless you.
Despite the fact that you've broken our covenant,
I'm keeping it.
And now he's making that official.
He says he's establishing an everlasting covenant with him.
This is forever.
But let's do think it gives them a pass on loving God.
He gets around to addressing that almost immediately.
Starting in verse six, he calls them not only to a change of action,
but a change of thinking.
He says, let the wicked forsake his way
and the unrighteous man his thoughts.
Let him return to the Lord that he may have compassion on him
and to our God for he will abundantly pardon.
It always has been and still is about the relationship,
about the love between God and His people.
God says He has good plans for His people.
Ideas that humans don't even have the brain capacity
to come up with, and that He will fulfill all His plans.
Everything He starts will accomplish what He intends for it.
Or as we say all the time around here,
what God initiates, He will sustain, and He will fulfill.
Probably one of the reasons they needed to hear these words is because God is working
things out on His timeline, not theirs.
It will take time, but He will eventually restore all of His creation.
And according to 55-13, that includes wiping out the briars and thorns that were a result
of Adam's curse way back in Genesis 318.
This feels especially poignant given the fact that Jesus was mocked with a crown of thorns.
But earth 3.0 will be thorn-free. Chapter 56 opens with shockingly generous words. God says not only has
He included the foreigner and the unit in His family, but he has also blessed them. And he will give them a name better than sons and daughters.
The chapter closes with a warning to Israel's leaders.
Isaiah rolls through a list of ways they've been foolish,
which includes being undiscerning, without knowledge,
lazy, deluded, unaware of danger,
gluttonous, drunkards, selfish, egocentric, and arrogant.
But the past few chapters, Isaiah has been prophesying about both immediate and future salvation. But when the Israelites heard it, they assumed it would all be immediately and completely
fulfilled.
So Isaiah clarifies further in the rest of the book, starting here in chapter 56.
He reminds them that they're still called to put away their idols and worship God alone,
because underneath all that worship of false gods is a heart that hasn't yet believed Yahweh can be trusted,
but he's not going to come through for them.
He says it like this in 5711,
whom did you dread and fear so that you lied and did not remember me, did not lay it to heart?
Fear of man leads to forgetfulness of God.
In chapter 58, God tells Israel
that there is a wrong kind of righteous deed.
The heart behind what they're doing matters.
It rather they fast from selfishness
than from food, from pride instead of wine,
because all their fasting is still selfishly motivated,
whereas proper fasting humbles us,
lesses others, and honors God.
Today my God shot reminded me of that game, Huakimul, because the same thing kept popping
up everywhere.
It all points to the way God draws near to sinners to help them.
I'll share just two of the spots with you.
First, it was in 5715, which says,
I dwell in the high and holy place,
and also with him who is of a contrite and lowly spirit.
The most high God is with the lowly.
And it goes on to say that he's with them
to revive the spirit of the lowly and to revive the heart of a contrite.
5718 says it like this,
I have seen his ways, but I will heal him.
God sees all our wickedness in full view,
and he draws near to help.
He doesn't run from our sin.
This reminds me of a meme I've seen floating around the internet
that draws the distinction between religion and censorship. It says, religion is, I messed up, my dad is going to kill me. But
sonship is, I messed up, I need to call my dad. In case you haven't seen this yet, we'll
post it on our socials today. One of the primary ways to determine how you view God is to
ask yourself where you go when you sin. Do you run to God, knowing his love,
comfort, and healing wait for you there? Or do you run from God? Afraid he's disappointed in you.
Afraid of his wrath. I will never stop reminding you that Christ absorbed all the Father's wrath
for the sins of his kids past, present, and future. All of it. There's no wrath left for you if you're his kid.
And if you're afraid he might be disappointed in you when you sin, do you know why that's
not even possible?
Because disappointment is the result of unmet expectations.
And God has no unmet expectations for you.
He knows you're a screw up.
It doesn't shock him one bit.
He expects everything you do because he's outside of time.
A thousand years ago, he already knew the sins you haven't even committed yet.
And two thousand years ago, he paid for them.
You can't possibly disappoint him.
You can't let God down.
That's not to say he isn't grieved over your sins.
He still loves you and has emotions and wants what's best for you.
But his wrath has been satisfied.
And disappointment is literally impossible for an omniscient God.
When you sin, he's with you ready and waiting with compassion and healing and joy, because
he's where the joy is.
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