The Bible Recap - Day 197 (Isaiah 13-17) - Year 8
Episode Date: July 16, 2026FROM TODAY’S RECAP - Article: Aren't Jesus and Satan Both Referred to as "The Morning Star"? - D-Group International Note: We provide links to specific resources; this is not an endorsement of the... entire website, author, organization, etc. Their views may not represent our own. SHOW NOTES: - Follow The Bible Recap: Instagram | Facebook | TikTok | YouTube - Follow Tara-Leigh Cobble: Instagram - Read/listen on the Bible App or Dwell App - Learn more at our Start Page - Become a RECAPtain - Shop the TBR Store PARTNER MINISTRIES: D-Group International Israelux The God Shot TLC Writing & Speaking DISCLAIMER: The Bible Recap, Tara-Leigh Cobble, and affiliates are not a church, pastor, spiritual authority, or counseling service. Listeners and viewers consume this content on a voluntary basis and assume all responsibility for the resulting consequences and impact.
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Hey Bible readers, I'm Tara Lee Cobble, and I'm your host for the Bible Recap.
While Isaiah is primarily concerned with warning God's people about their sins,
today he launches into the first of 15 chapters of prophetic speeches or oracles
to a bunch of pagan nations, and we'll find out why.
He starts out with Babylon, which is one of the ruling powers of the ancient world.
They're the ones who will take the people of Judah into captivity when Jerusalem falls in about 100 years.
and in today's reading, God pronounces a prophetic judgment on them for the thing they haven't done yet.
God's sovereignty shows up right off the bat in this scenario. In 13-3, he refers to Babylon as
my consecrated ones. As far as they are concerned, they have not consecrated themselves to Yahweh,
no, sir. But the point of this terminology is to show that God has consecrated them, or set them apart,
for his own purposes. He has a plan to use them and their sense,
ways to work out his long-term plans to bless his people, initially through discipline,
but then through restoration. Babylon will think they're doing their own thing, but they'll be
fulfilling God's plan. And the fact that it's written out more than a hundred years in advance
serves as evidence that the idea didn't originate with them. Then, even though God is using
their sin to accomplish his will as he does with all sin, he still punishes it as he does
with all sin. So he tells them how they will eventually be overtaken in return for what they did to his
people. This is the kind of big picture sovereignty that it's hard to wrap our minds around sometimes.
It's the kind of thing that can feel threatening to our ideas of self-sovereignty, and it's okay
to wrestle with that. But what I always come back to is that ultimately, I'm really glad I'm not
self-sovereign. I know my heart too well to wish that on anyone. So,
Bad things are about to happen first to Judah at the hands of Babylon and then to Babylon for what
they did to Judah. They'll both be destroyed. For Babylon, the end of the story is judgment and
desolation. But for God's people, the end of the story is restoration and fulfillment. The people of
Babylon, which probably represents all the ruling powers of the world, will eventually attach
themselves to the peoples of the restored Israel and offer themselves up as servants. That's how
juxtapose things will be from where they are now. Oh, how the tables will turn. Chapter 14 paints
this story in an interesting way. Remember how prophecy can often speak two or more stories at the
same time and how it can also speak truth about things that have happened in the past? Some scholars believe
that's what we're seeing here in 14, 12, through 15. What's for certain is that Isaiah is speaking about what
will happen to the king of Babylon, who will lose all his power and position through arrogant
attempts to exalt himself. What's possible is that Isaiah is paralleling the king's situation
to the story of a high-ranking angelic being, someone referred to as Daystar or Star of the Dawn
in most translations. Some translations listed as Lucifer, that's the Latin translation of
the English word for Day Star or Star of the Dawn. Either way, it's a common noun, not a
proper name. Regardless what you call him, this angelic being decided he wanted to be God
instead of serve God. And that's when he was cast down from heaven. There's some possible overlap
between this passage and Ezekiel 28, 11 through 17, which seems to point to the same idea.
We'll post a link in the show notes with a bit more info on this, but it's something I hold with
a really open hand. Moving on from Babylon, we continue with oracles against four more nations
today. Next up is Assyria, the ones who destroy the northern kingdom and mount a pretty
severe attack against Judah too. So God is going to punish them. And as God is crushing them,
the yoke and the burden they've placed on Israel will be broken, effectively freeing Israel.
Then we move on to Philistia. Isaiah reminds the Philistines that God has only promised to preserve
and protect his people. So even if they happen to see a reprieve from oppression, it won't last.
says God's heart is set on his people and he'll be a refuge to them. On to Moab, their oracle gets
two whole chapters and has a distinctly different tone from the oracles for the other nations.
For instance, we repeatedly see God mourning over the destruction of Moab. This is almost certainly
because the Moabites are distant relatives of the Israelites. Ruth, the Moabite, was King David's
great-grandmother. And David left his parents with the king of Moab when his life was
being threatened. Regardless, these distant relatives have to be judged for their sins like anyone
else. It's always interesting to see God mourn over having to punish sin. God is a real person with a real
personality and he's multifaceted just like anyone else, though his characteristics never contradict
each other. The Moabites will mourn over their own destruction, shaving their heads, putting on sackloth,
and they'll seek refuge in Judah. I have to be honest, I kind of chuckled when then the
midst of all their grief we came across this verse.
Mourn, utterly stricken for the raisin cakes of Kirhereseth.
Sorry, Isaiah, I'll mourn for a lot of things, but raisin cakes are not on the list.
Today's final oracle is for Damascus, a city in Syria.
The prophecy opens by saying it will become a heap of ruins, and even though it exists
today, it was conquered at least three times over the next 400 years and destroyed at least
once. But God says there will be a remnant here. Why does Damascus get a remnant when they're not
part of his family? There's something interesting going on here, and it helps if we know two things.
First, that Damascus shares a border with the Northern Kingdom of Israel. And second, that the
Northern Kingdom of Israel was often collectively referred to as Ephraim. You may recall that
Ephraim is one of the ten tribes in the Northern Kingdom. In this oracle, Ephraim and Damascus are
kind of blurred together. The northern kingdom has gotten so far off the path that they've effectively
merged with this pagan nation. Despite that, God has mercy on them by preserving a remnant who will
turn to worship Yahweh again. My godshot came from the spots where God mourned over the destruction
of Moab. In 15-5, his heart cries out for Moab, and in 16-9 he says, I will drench you with my tears.
It's incredible to see his tender-heartedness toward a pagan nation that has rejected him.
Most people don't expect to see compassion like this in the Old Testament, but his character
has always been the same. God the Father, God the Son, and God the Spirit are not only
consistent throughout eternity, but within themselves as well. Yesterday, today, today, and forever,
he's where the joy is. I love reading and recapping the Bible with you every day, and I
also like to study the Bible. That's what we do in our partner ministry, D-Groop International.
That's where we study scripture in community. By the way, the D&D group stands for discipleship.
And for six weeks at a time, these small groups meet all around the world, either in person or
online, and we study a specific book of the Bible. Pray, we memorize scripture, we serve together.
It's the best. I would love for you to join a D-group. To find or start a D-group, visit myd-group.
or click the link in the show notes.
