Friday 03 February 2012
- Bible Book:
- Isaiah
nor are your ways my ways, says the Lord." (v. 8)
Background
Traditional scholarship divides the book of Isaiah into threeparts, with many shared themes but dating from three periods ofIsrael's history. This chapter ends the second part, reflectingfrom exile on the sufferings of Israel and the promise ofreturn.
Many times Isaiah has brought us back to his vision of the momentof return. Now he turns his attention to 'the morning after': whatwill life be like in this renewed kingdom?
Centrally, it will depend on "an everlasting covenant" (v. 3), andthe content of this is God's unshakeable love for David.
The Old Testament tells the story of David 'as is', warts and all.God loves him unshakeably despite all that goes wrong in his life:the violence, the deceit, the immorality (
Generally, the Old Testament refers to David as a great king (
And beyond this, there is to be a renewal of creation itself. WhenAdam and Eve disobeyed God, their punishment was partly thehardship of labour to produce their food (
And at the root of all this is God's word, as effective as rainsoaking the ground (Psalm 65:9-10). God's word was the tool ofcreation in the beginning; now God's people are reassured that theyneed not doubt its ongoing power.
To Ponder
Are there ways in which we can make sense todayof God's challenge to the economic status quo? If so, what arethey?
"Why do you spend your money for that which isnot bread?" (v. 2)