Insights From IsaiahSýnishorn

Insights From Isaiah

DAY 21 OF 28

A Beautiful Hope and a Great Power

These verses are a lovely example of Hebrew Poetry:

  • Vivid imagery featuring polar opposites (wolf & lamb; child & cobra)
  • Parallel structures: Two sets of strophes with three lines about animals and one (or two) about a child.
  • The two lines about children and snakes are a parallelism.
  • It ends with strong inclusive imagery (mountain, earth and sea).

This vivid, imagination-igniting imagery was carefully and poetically crafted as a powerful expression of the hope that Isaiah has in the coming Messiah.

But you may ask:


"But isn't it all pie-in-the-sky?"

 
"What possible comfort can these verses offer when these images describe a reality that is just too good to be true?"


"Isn't Isaiah creating false hope? There is no point in Israel's history where any of this happened."

Three points need to be made about this:

Firstly, this is poetic language that is being used to describe our ultimate destiny. It's talking about heaven and the peace and harmony that we will experience in the presence of the Lord. The poetry points to peace, harmony, and healing. This is a strong hope.  

Secondly, while this is poetry, it hints at the significant power of the Messiah to bring about restoration. He is more than able to heal and restore and renew. Can He heal my broken soul? Can He restore my broken relationships? Can He bring justice to a broken world? Well . . . He can bring the wolf and the lamb together, He can make the lion a vegetarian and He can make the world safe for a child. We don't see it in its full reality yet, but we have experienced this incredible power when we were forgiven and when we forgive others.

Which brings us to the third point. While the full reality is yet to come, it is not just pie-in-the-sky. Every time we ask for God's forgiveness, every time a relationship is restored and every time a memory is healed, we are experiencing a taste of the hope and power we referred to in points one and two. Think about the peace that flooded your heart when you knew your sins were forgiven—was that not the leopard lying down with the goat? Think about the relief of a relationship restored. Was that not the cow feeding with the bear?

When Jesus died on the cross, His sacrifice was powerful enough to heal the world. While the full healing is still coming, the magnitude of its goodness inspires us and gives us hope, and in the meantime we draw on the power of the Messiah to bring hope and healing to our corners of the world.

And so we regularly pray:
"Thy Kingdom come, Thy will be done.
On earth as it is in heaven."

(Tomorrow we'll take a look at a BEAUTIFUL example of heaven on earth from the life of Hezekiah)

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About this Plan

Insights From Isaiah

This Bible reading plan provides some insights from the book of Isaiah. Rather than a sequential journey through the songs, prophecies, and accounts that make up this book that spans a time-frame of about 220 years, we're going to jump around and pick up some of the beautiful promises and challenges in it. I'll provide the historical context where it's needed.

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