Salvation: A Study in IsaiahSample
What does it say?
God promised to bless Cyrus and the Persians, even though they were not His people, so they and the surrounding nations would know that Israel’s God is the only God.
What does it mean?
This is one of the most amazing prophecies in the Bible. God named Cyrus as the foreign king through whom He would reveal Himself to the Persians and the nations in Northeast Africa. This prediction was made at least 140 years before it was fulfilled. The purpose of the prophecy was not to bless Cyrus for his own sake but to show the world’s foremost superpower Who the one true God is. The end result was that the nations who came to submit to Cyrus would do so in recognition that the one true God was the One Who had granted Cyrus such power.
How should I respond?
Have you ever wondered why God sometimes blesses people who do not follow Him? Jesus said that God causes the sun to shine and rain to fall on both good and bad people (Matt. 5:45). Not every tough situation is a curse from God for doing something wrong, and not every blessing from God is a reward for doing something right. However, we should praise God when He blesses anyone – even those who do not deserve it. We should also help and pray for those in tough situations, even if they seem to deserve it. God can use both situations to bring them to Him.
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About this Plan
God calls Isaiah to prophesy to the idolatrous and rebellious people of Israel. Although a season of destruction was coming, Isaiah also prophesied of a coming “servant of the Lord” who would be “pierced for our transgressions, crushed for our iniquities…and with His wounds we are healed” (Isaiah 53:5). Even amid deep wickedness, God was still painting pictures of a greater salvation to coming in the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ.
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We would like to thank Thomas Road Baptist Church for providing this plan. For more information, please visit: http://www.trbc.org