Tag Archives: Isaiah 17

July 25, 2023 Bible Study — Look To Your Maker and He Will Take Your Troubles From You

Today, I am reading and commenting on  Isaiah 17-21.

When I read today’s passage I decided that I wanted to write about chapter 17 verses 7-8 and verses 10-11.  However, I have struggled with how to connect verses seven and eight with verses ten and eleven.  In verses seven and eight, Isaiah says that in the day when only a remnant of the people will remain that the people will look to God.  Then in verses ten and eleven he says that, because we have forgotten God, our attempts to cultivate crops will fail.  I finally realized that verses ten and eleven tells us how the circumstances which led to seven and eight came to be.  When we forget God, things go very bad.  So bad that eventually those that remain finally turn to God for deliverance.  Then we have verses twelve through fourteen which tell us that if we turn to God before things go bad, terror will surround us at nightfall, but by the morning it will be gone.  For those who serve the Lord, we may feel like we are surrounded by troubles which cannot be overcome, but, if we continue to trust in God, those troubles will vanish with a new dawn.

I use the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.

July 25, 2022 Bible Study — In The Evening, Terror, Before Dawn, They Are Gone

Today, I am reading and commenting on  Isaiah 17-21.

I am not quite sure how this fits together as the prophet wrote it, but I am going to write about it as it struck me today,  While prophesying the fall of Damascus, Isaiah also prophesies that the people of Israel will become relatively few in number.  He uses the metaphor of the few olives which the harvesters leave on the tree as too much work to retrieve.  Isaiah writes that this will happen because the people have forgotten their savior, God.  He tells us that as a result of forgetting God we will plant the finest plants and care for them until they start to bear fruit, but, in the end, we will harvest nothing.  This is where I start to wonder if I am following the prophet’s thinking or not.  He goes on to write that nations will rage, and people will roar against God, and those faithful to God. Those raging and roaring will strike terror in the hearts of many, but suddenly they will be gone.  As I read this, those who remain faithful will be as the gleanings after the harvest.  The wicked will terrorize them for a short moment as night falls, but then, with the dawning of a new day, those who terrorized them will be gone as if they had never been.  The result will be that people from many lands, people who had no knowledge of God, or, perhaps were His enemies, will come to worship and serve Him.

You have forgotten God your Savior;

I use the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.

July 25, 2021 Bible Study — Put Your Trust In God And It Is Never Hopeless

Today, I am reading and commenting on  Isaiah 17-21.

Part of me would like to spend some time writing about Isaiah’s prophecy of doom on Egypt and Cush (more or less modern day Ethiopia), but I cannot quite get my head around what to write.  So, instead I want to look at what Isaiah says at the end of his prophecies against both countries.  He tells us that, after a devastating defeat, the remaining people in both lands will come to worship the Lord.  In fact, the Egyptians will partner with Assyria and Israel in an alliance which worships the Lord.  In addition to these prophecies against Egypt and Cush, there is a prophecy against Israel.  That prophecy also ends with God’s promise that the people will finally abandon their idols and turn to God.

I want to put some special attention to verse 14 in chapter 17:

In the evening, sudden terror!
    Before the morning, they are gone!

I think the New Catholic Bible translation makes this clearer:

In the evening terror has spread,
    but by the morning it has disappeared.

We should learn from this not to give in to terror.  God is in control.  No matter how bad things may seem, God will make things better for those who put their trust in Him.  I still remember a time a few years ago when I came across this passage just as my wife and I were facing a terrible financial crisis.  We had debts and bills that there seemed no way we would be able to meet.  The day I had published my blog on this passage, it all came together to seem like we would be out on the streets in a matter of weeks.  There was no conceivable way that we could find a way out.  Yet, God had provided me this message of hope.  My wife was initially skeptical that even God could solve our problems, but before we went to bed she had peace that God would rescue us.  I do not remember how that incident was resolved, except that the next day we were no longer in danger of being homeless.

 

 

I use the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.

July 25, 2020 Bible Study Why Did This Happen?

I am using the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.

Today, I am reading and commenting on Isaiah 17-21.

Today’s passage begins with a prophecy against both Damascus and Israel (the Northern Kingdom), but which focuses mostly on Israel.  To a large degree this prophecy can be applied to many times in history.  Isaiah prophesies that the land will be devastated and only a few people will remain.  Only then will those who remain recognize their sin and turn to God.  Then they will give up their idol worship and seek to follow God’s commands.  To me this is especially relevant to this year.  People ask, “Why is 2020 so bad?” and the answer Isaiah gives here certainly applies.  The answer is because we have turned from God who can save us, we have forgotten the Rock who can hide us.  Things seemed to be going so well and then disaster struck.  That is what happens when people turn from God.  The scary part to me is that people do not yet seem to be turning to God.  They appear to still be relying on their idols (in this case, the government) to save them.

July 25, 2019 Bible Study — When Trouble Comes, Turn To God

I am using the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.

Today, I am reading and commenting on Isaiah 17-21.

I realized this morning that Isaiah prophesied in this section (which includes yesterday’s and tomorrow’s passage) about all of the nations which were significant in that part of the world in his lifetime.  This partly explains why he prophesied about Babylon before it rose to great power: it was already significant in world politics.  Isaiah’s message to all of these powers, and to us, was that God has a plan for each and every part of the world and nations only have the power which serves God’s purpose.

Several times Isaiah speaks of how the coming destruction will lead people to worship the Lord.  The prophecy regarding Israel (which appears to refer to the Northern Kingdom, but I believe is deliberately worded to be possible to be interpreted as all of Israel) says that the people of Israel will give up their idols.  The prophecy concerning Ethiopia says that the people of Ethiopia will bring gifts to God.  While the prophecy concerning Egypt speaks of multiple cities in Egypt where God will be worshiped.  Also in this passage Isaiah tells us that Philistia will fall because they relied on Egypt and Ethiopia.  Left unsaid was that things would have been different had they turned instead to God.  

I want to touch an a verse here which we should always remember when trouble seems about to overwhelm us, when it seems that even if God intervenes right now we will still be devastated. “In the evening sudden terror! Before the morning they are gone.”   We may think that all hope is gone.  But God can make all of our problems go away in an instant.  Put your trust in God, have faith that He will care for you.  I have seen it in my own life.  When I prepared for bed, the world was collapsing around me.  Before sleep claimed me, God had provided the solution.

July 25, 2018 Bible Study — Trust In God, He Will Deal With It (Whatever “It” Is)

I am using the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.

Today, I am reading and commenting on Isaiah 17-21.

    In today’s passage Isaiah prophesies that many nations will face disaster and defeat in order for them to be drawn to God. In particular, he focuses on Israel’s fall from its days of glory. People will continue to worship idols and things which they have made until they face total destruction. Only then will they turn to God. The land will become desolate because of the sins of the people. Yet, before going on to prophesy about how other nations will be brought low before they turn to God, Isaiah includes an interesting prophecy. One which applies more often than we realize.

    In Isaiah 17:14, the prophet writes something we should pay close attention to when life is at its darkest. In the prophecy, Isaiah tells us that in the evening when they go to bed the people of Israel will be terrified by what it appears that the next day will bring, but when dawn arrives their problems will be gone. God will often work the same way for us. Our problems may seem overwhelming one day and be completely gone the next. It may seem to us that our problems cannot be solved, that come the morrow we will drown in them, but if we put our trust in God, He will surely rescue us. How that rescue will come about none of us can know in advance. Perhaps all of those who threatened us will die, as in this prophecy. Perhaps the problems will be solved in other ways. Or, perhaps we will wake up in the morning and realize that what frightened us the night before is not a threat after all. Instead of worrying about our problems we will be better served by trusting God and praising Him for what He has done for us, even when we don’t yet know what that is.

July 25, 2017 Bible Study — Tragedy Causes People To Look To God

I am using the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.

Today, I am reading and commenting on Isaiah 17-21.

    I am not sure that my title today quite captures what this passage says to me today. The prophet predicts the downfall of Damascus, the Northern Kingdom of Israel, Egypt, Cush (Ethiopia), Babylon, Edom and Kedar (Arabia). The writer describes how when the disaster he is predicting comes to pass, the people will turn to God. The disaster will come because people have forgotten God, they no longer honor or worship Him. As a result of this failure to honor God all of their efforts to obtain wealth are futile. While the prophet initially refers to the people of Israel coming back to God after disaster strikes, he later predicts that the people of other nations (Egypt and Cush in this passage) will come to God after disaster strikes their land.
    There are two points I want to focus on. Let us not forget God when times are good and thus bring disaster upon ourselves and those around us. And, let us remember that sometimes God allows disaster to strike in order to give us the opportunity to show Him to those who might never otherwise be receptive to His love.