August 5
Monday, August 5, 2013
Isaiah 46-48
Sunday, August 4, 2013
Isaiah 44-45
August 4
Isaiah 44-45
The false
gods, the idols of the nations do not pursue a relationship with people, people
have to seek them out and pursue them. God, the true God is different. He
pursues people. He promised to pour His Spirit out on His people and He has,
beginning at Pentecost. Jesus came to reveal the Truth of God to a lost and
broken world. As we read Isaiah 44-45, we hear God calling His people to come
to him. He promises to be there if they will only return to Him. They have
rejected Him and His Word, but He continues to call them to himself.
God has put
a desire for a relationship with Him in the hearts of people, but people try to
fill that desire with all kinds of idols. Israelites made idols; today we build
big houses and drive fancy cars, or see how much money we can accumulate.
Whatever we use to try to fill the emptiness in our lives other than a
relationship with Jesus is an idol.
God pursues
us, but He does not force us into a relationship. He redeems us, but He does
not force us to take the gift He offers. He knows us before we are even born,
He promises to walk with us throughout our lives and to bless us and to protect
us, but He does not make us walk with Him. He even uses those who do not know
Him and reject Him to accomplish His purposes.
God desires
a relationship with us. He used Israel to reveal what a covenant relationship
with Him would look like. They rejected His grace. Jesus came to reveal God to
a broken world. He was rejected and killed. God sends the Holy Spirit to call
us into a relationship with Him. How will we respond?
"“Turn to me and be saved, all you ends of the earth;
for I am God, and there is no other." (Isaiah 45:22, NIV)
Saturday, August 3, 2013
Isaiah 42-43
August 3
Isaiah 42-43
Isaiah gives
us a glimpse of the servant God will send to redeem and restore the nations. "“I, the Lord, have called you in
righteousness; I will take hold of your hand. I will keep you and will make you
to be a covenant for the people and a light for the Gentiles, to open eyes that
are blind, to free captives from prison and to release from the dungeon those
who sit in darkness." (Isaiah 42:6-7, NIV) Jesus is the covenant for the people and the
light not only for the gentiles but also for the nations. Jesus said; “I am the
light of the world.”
Jesus
fulfilled each of the things Isaiah wrote down that the servant of God, the
Messiah would fulfill. He did not come in flamboyant fashion. He did not yell
and scream. He lived as the son of a humble carpenter. He traveled with a band
of common people. He preached Good New, he healed, he forgave, he set sinners
free. Jesus continues to do the same things he did while he was walking this
earth. He continues to heal and restore broken people.
On the night
he was betrayed Jesus “took the cup, gave
thanks and offered it to them, saying, “Drink from it, all of you. This is my
blood of the covenant, which is poured out for many for the forgiveness of
sins." (Matthew 26:27-28, NIV) He became the new covenant. Through our
relationship with Jesus, God restores us into the people He created us to
become. Through His blood we are cleansed.
Isaiah wrote
the words God gave him to share with Israel. Israel took his words and hung on
to them looking for the Messiah to come, but when He arrived, He did not look
like they expected and they missed Him. Jesus is the servant written about in
Isaiah who came to shine a light into a dark world, to set the captives free,
to make the blind see, and the deaf hear. He came to bring life to humanity and
glory to God.
Friday, August 2, 2013
Isaiah 40-41
August 2
Isaiah 40-41
"He gives strength to the weary and increases the power of the
weak. Even youths grow tired and weary, and young men stumble and fall; but
those who hope in the Lord will renew their strength. They will soar on wings
like eagles; they will run and not grow weary, they will walk and not be
faint." (Isaiah 40:29-31, NIV)
People come and people
go. Isaiah speaks of men being like grass, they are here today and gone
tomorrow. It does not sound very positive until we realized that our time on
earth may be short, but God has bigger plans for us. He has an eternal
perspective. Though people live relatively short lives when you look at
eternity, the word of God stands forever. (40:8)
People grow tired over the years. Stress and strain wears us
down. We lose energy, we may lose our drive, but when we depend on God he
renews and restores us. When we focus on Jesus instead of focusing on the
things of the world, He increases our strength. Paul wrote; "Therefore we do not lose heart. Though
outwardly we are wasting away, yet inwardly we are being renewed day by day."
(2 Corinthians 4:16, NIV)
Life wears us down. Our bodies waste away over the years,
but when we lean on the Lord we can be renewed inwardly day by day. Where we
put our hope directs where we put our future.
Thursday, August 1, 2013
Isaiah 37-39
August 1
Isaiah 37-39
Hezekiah
held off the Assyrians and held off death because he was a man of prayer. The
Assyrians were a powerful nation. They were conquering nation after nation as
they expanded their kingdom. They did not see Jerusalem as much of a problem.
Jerusalem was nothing in comparison to the power, the men, and the weaponry of
Assyria. But Hezekiah did not fear the Assyrians because he knew God. Instead
of calling for help from other nations, he called on the Lord.
The great
Assyrian mistake is that they saw the God of Israel as the same as the god of
the other nations they had conquered. They did not realize that Yahweh was the
God of all nations, the creator of the universe, and the protector of
Jerusalem. When the king of Assyria threatened Jerusalem, Hezekiah prayed. When
he prayed God moved. One hundred and eighty five thousand from the Assyrian
army died without Hezekiah and his men even picking up a weapon. God is more
powerful than the armies of the earth no matter how powerful they may appear.
Hezekiah,
because of his experience with God, knew where to turn when he was told his
illness was terminal. He cried out to God who heard from heaven and added
fifteen years to his life. Hezekiah did not fear death, he called on the Lord.
Just as the nations enemies were crouching at the door of Jerusalem, death was
crouching at the Hezekiah’s door. But God is more powerful than all our
enemies, even death.
God wants to
hear from us. He hears our prayers and responds. He does not always respond the
way we want Him to respond, but He always gives us what we need instead of what
we may want. He is a loving Father in heaven who walks through life with us and
escorts us into His eternal presence when our life on earth is over. Prayer is
our communication with God. He hears from heaven and responds with grace. As we
pray, we gain confidence in prayer. As we see God move in our lives, we
realized that He is with us as we pursue a life of righteousness, to give Him
glory.
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