The Bible Recap - Day 212 (Isaiah 59-63) - Year 3
Episode Date: July 31, 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: - Luke 4:18-30 - Exodus 3...4:6-7 - Printable Reading Plan 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.
Most of what we've read in Isaiah has been God speaking or Isaiah speaking, but today
we enter a section that seems like it's the response of the people, a confession recorded
by Isaiah, or maybe he speaking on their behalf,
or maybe it's a mingling of both. They confess their sins to God and acknowledge that they felt
the consequences of those sins. Our sin has a way of making us feel distant from God. And to make
matters worse, ultimately Israel knows they can't fix what's broken in themselves, and it devastates
them. Have you ever felt this way?
Do you ever wonder when you'll live up to your idealized version of yourself?
The you that never gets angry and traffic or yells at your kids or says a
mean word to your spouse or struggles with addiction?
Israel can relate.
Verses 12 through 13 say, our transgressions are multiplied before you and
our sins testify against us.
Our transgressions are with us, and we know our iniquities, transgression, and denying
the Lord and turning back from following our God.
But then verse 16 flips the script.
God shows up and the verse says, then his own arm brought him salvation and his righteousness
upheld him.
In other words, God did for Israel
what Israel couldn't do for themselves. God himself, God the Son, fulfilled what he required,
but no one could live up to. This section at the end of chapter 59 can be kind of confusing in
English, but the Hebrew I'm hacking my way through makes it a bit clearer. It appears to be a passage
where God the Father is speaking to God the Son about God the
Spirit and about the whole family of God.
I'll read the verse to you, but first I should mention that the reason a lot of commentators
think this is because when God speaks to Israel, He uses the plural word for you, the you guys
or y'all or all y'all of Hebrew.
But here, He's using this singular form of the word you.
Let me read it to you.
My spirit that is upon you and my words that I have put in your mouth shall not depart
out of your mouth or out of the mouth of your offspring or out of the mouth of your
children's offspring, says the Lord, from this time forth and for evermore.
And just to clarify, this isn't saying Jesus had literal offspring.
This is a promise
about everyone who comes into the family of God through his sacrifice, which is the only
way to get into the family of God. So don't be thrown off by the reference to God the
son having offspring. It's kind of like how you might have spiritual children who aren't
your biological children. God is promising here that he will continue what he has started.
Israel's sin and rebellion haven't put a crimp in his plan.
And if you needed an encouraging pick me up in your day,
Chapter 60-62 probably put a little pep in your step.
Chapter 60 is all about the future glory of Israel,
when people from all nations will come to bless Zion and bless the Lord.
This definitely points to a future fulfillment, but there are aspects of it that could also
have the double meaning that simultaneous leapoints to the Messiah as well.
For instance, chapter 60 verse 1 says, Your light has come, which is definitely a reference
to Jesus.
And then verse 3 says, Nation shall come to have been three of them. Who knows?illing the beans that the wise men weren't there when Jesus was born. It took him a while.
And there might not have been three of them.
Who knows?
Three gifts, maybe 40 wise men.
Okay, back to Isaiah.
The rest of the chapter paints Israel as a haven of peace and rest.
God has granted them a beauty and majesty they didn't possess on their own as a part
of his redemption plan.
And then God promises to improve on everything that hoped for.
Gold instead of for, gold instead
of bronze, silver instead of iron, and most of all, the presence of God Himself will be
the light for the nation.
He's done this before, as the pillar of fire and pillar of cloud, but this time it will
be so bright that we won't need the sun and moon anymore.
And God says He'll do all this in its perfect time.
It won't happen a moment
too soon or too late.
Chapter 61 is pretty special. It's a prophecy of the Messiah, and it's the chapter Jesus
reads from Scripture one day when he walks into the synagogue and is childhood hometown
of Nazareth, unrolls a scroll, and starts teaching. He tells them that he is the fulfillment of this
chapter. He's the one
who will set the captives free and bind up the brokenhearted, you can read all about it
in Luke 418-30. The people marveled that their local guy could probably be the Messiah.
They're like, hey, his parents are my neighbors. How cool is that? They're all for it until
he starts telling them that this good news isn't just for them. It's for the people they
consider their enemies as well, the Syrians and the Siddonians,
and then they hate him for it and actually try to kill him on the spot by throwing him off a cliff.
People love to hear how God wants to bless them, but it's more challenging to hear that God might also want to bless the people we hate, or the people who have heard us. My God shot caught my eye in the themes from chapter 61 through 63.
Chapter 61 and 62 represent the year of the Lord's favor, but chapter 63 tells us all about
the day of the Lord's wrath.
We've talked about a lot of God's attributes in the past two hundred and twelve days,
and occasionally we've had the chance to see how some of them that seem contradictory
actually fit together.
But here we see things unpacked in a way that helps us measure them a bit more.
Here's what I mean.
Isaiah's specific terminology points out how God's goodness far outweighs his wrath.
Compare the day of his wrath to the year of his favor and redemption from 63-4.
That's 365 times more favor than wrath. This reminds me of a verse we've encountered
a lot of times this year, Exodus 34, 6-7. In that passage, God is telling Moses his name
by describing himself, and he says he keeps love for a thousand generations and only
punishes to the third or fourth generation. So, by the math of these two sections of Scripture,
it looks like God is trying to show us
that he's approximately 300 times more loving
toward his people.
To be fair, these may all just be generalities.
It may not fit on a scale quite like that.
But I do think God is trying to communicate something
to us here about who he is.
I think he wants to point out
that he's actually a benevolent God.
Yes, sin has to be punished.
He's here for it, but he's also win some undesirable. He's worth loving and worshipping, and he's
actually kind of awesome to be around. He's not a drag, and he's not looking to smite everyone who
has a mean thought. He's already made a way to bridge that gap so we can just enjoy being in his presence. After all, he's where the joy is.
Did you know we have a printable version of our whole reading plan?
Many of you use our plan on the Bible app and a few of you use our daily posts on Instagram
stories to keep up, but you can have your very own printout or even just download the PDF
if you don't have a printer.
That way, if Instagram ever gets glitchy, you'll still know what chapters to read next.
Just go to thebibelrecap.com, forward slash start, and look for the printable plan in step
two.
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