The Bible Recap - Day 210 (Isaiah 49-53) - Year 6
Episode Date: July 28, 2024SHOW NOTES: - Head to our Start Page for all you need to begin! - Join the RECAPtains - Check out the TBR Store - Show credits FROM TODAY’S RECAP: - Article: Forbidden Chapter of the Tanakh - Vid...eo: "The Forbidden Chapter" of the Hebrew Bible - Isaiah 53 - Colossians 1:20 - Revelation 13:8 - Hebrews 12:2 - Book: Delighting in the Trinity* *Affiliate link BIBLE READING & LISTENING: Follow along on the Bible App, or to listen to the Bible, try Dwell! SOCIALS: The Bible Recap: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter/X | TikTok D-Group: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter/X TLC: Instagram | Facebook D-GROUP: D-Group is brought to you by the same team that brings you The Bible Recap. TBR is where we read the Bible, and D-Group is where we study the Bible. D-Group is an international network of Bible study groups that meet weekly in homes, churches, and online. Find or start one near you today! 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.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey Bible readers, I'm Tara Lee Cobble and I'm your host for the Bible Recap.
Today we hit one of the most important sections of prophecy in the Old Testament.
I can't wait to talk about those sections, but let's start in chapter 49.
First, you may be wondering who exactly the text is referring to when it uses the word coastlands.
One of the first verses we read said,
"'Listen to me, O coastlands.'
The general opinion is that this is a catch-all word
for all the nations of the world
reaching to the far corners of the earth.
God tells Israel,
"'I will make you as a light for the nations,
that my salvation may reach to the end of the earth."
He says that although Israel is a despised nation, he's chosen them and will use them
to bless all the nations that despise them.
So how will he do that and what exactly has he chosen them for?
He's chosen them to be the lineage of the Messiah, and that Messiah will save people
from among every nation.
His love will reach to those who hate him and the people of his lineage,
and then he will turn his enemies into his family.
In the meantime, though, Israel feels forgotten and ashamed.
Waiting can feel shameful and lonely.
I'm sure you can relate.
But God says,
Those who wait for me shall not be put to shame.
He reminds them that he cannot forget his people.
They're engraved on the palms of his hands.
By the way, I used to think this was a reference to Jesus and the nail marks in his hands, and maybe it is,
but then I learned that Roman crucifixion put the nails in the wrists between the radius and ulna bones,
not in the palms of the hands.
So who knows?
Chapter 50 brings us some beautiful prophecies of Christ.
Here are a few of the things it says to point us to Him.
Verse 4 says,
He knows how to sustain with a word Him who is weary.
This reminds me of the way Jesus spoke
to so many people He encountered,
from the woman caught in adultery,
to Zacchaeus, the tax collector, to the woman at the well, to Peter after people he encountered. From the woman caught in adultery, to Zacchaeus the tax collector,
to the woman at the well,
to Peter after he betrayed him,
his compassionate words sustained the weary.
Chapter 50 also points to Christ when it says,
"'I was not rebellious.
"'I gave my back to those who strike
"'and my cheeks to those who pull out the beard.
"'I hid not my face from disgrace and spitting.'"
Jesus endured all of that at his crucifixion.
This chapter also begins to draw a unique distinction for us.
So far, God has called a few people His servant.
The pagan king Cyrus, Israel as a whole, but in pointing to Christ,
these prophecies are pointing out that there's another servant, a superior servant,
which only seems fitting because, frankly, Israel hasn't quite lived up to its role, and we know Cyrus doesn't have a heart
for God, so this can't be referring to him.
Christ is the Messiah.
Christ is the servant.
Verses 10 through 11 are some of my favorite verses in the whole book.
Once when I was trying to make a decision about what I should do in a certain situation,
my mentor said, don't light your own fires.
I didn't know what he was talking about
until he quoted these verses.
They tell the story of two different types of people,
one who trusts God and obeys his servant Jesus
and one who forges his own path.
I wanna read the verses to you one by one,
see if you identify with either person.
Verse 10 says, who among you fears the Lord
and obeys the voice of
his servant? Let him who walks in darkness and has no light trust in the
name of the Lord and rely on his God. That's verse 10. The man who trusts God
and obeys Jesus. Despite feeling stuck in the dark, he knows God is with him there.
And in contrast, verse 11 says, behold all you who kindle a fire, who equip yourselves
with burning torches, walk by the light of your fire and by the torches that you have kindled.
This you shall have from my hand. You shall lie down in torment. Verse 11 shows us the person who
doesn't trust God to come through, who insists on making his own way out of the trials in the darkness.
He lights his own fires. And God says, enjoy the comfort of those torches because it's the only
comfort you'll know. You'll never know the joy of my nearness in the dark or of the moment when I
crack the sky open with light to dawn on you. When I read these two verses, I want to be the
person God is calling Israel to be in verse 10.
Moving on to chapter 51, this chapter tells us the earth is going to wear out like a garment,
and we're seeing that happen in real time. But it also says that His salvation will outlast even the undone earth. Chapters 52 and 53 are a section often referred to as the suffering servant, and they're
filled with prophecies of Christ.
In fact, some Jewish people refer to chapter 53 specifically as the forbidden chapter,
and they refuse to read it in the synagogues.
It's been removed from some of their holy books.
We'll link to a short article and video in today's show notes, just in case you want
to see more about this.
And trust me, you want to see it.
I found the video to be incredibly compelling, and it will not only tell you more about the
meaning behind this chapter, but it will also give you some insights into a common Jewish
perspective on the Messiah.
So let's take a look at these chapters and see what they show us about Christ.
53-2 tells us he wasn't particularly attractive.
One reason this is important is because it's human nature
to follow people who have some kind of physical presence.
But this goes to show that he was nothing special
to look at and that people followed him
because of his message, not his muscles.
53.3 points out that he was a man of sorrows
and acquainted with grief.
He was despised and rejected.
If you've been any of those things, he knows your pain.
53.5 says, upon him was the chastisement that brought us peace.
This reminds me of Colossians 1.20, which says that he makes peace by the blood of his
cross, peace through bloodshed. And speaking of his death,
5214 says he was beaten beyond human recognition when he was crucified.
That's one reason people were so astonished when they saw him three days
later, because as far as they know, bodies don't raise from the dead and they also
don't heal and regenerate that quickly. So when you see a crucifix with just a
little trickle of blood on the forehead,
just know that's a gross misrepresentation
of what he really endured when paying for our sins.
My God shot was honestly all of the suffering servant portion,
but especially the last part of chapter 53.
We see two of the three persons of the Trinity in this section.
Verse 10 says it was the Father's will to crush the Son.
Wow! What does that even mean and why? This is one of the many passages in Scripture that show us a
kind of hierarchy within how the Trinity works here on earth. The three persons of the Trinity
are all of equal value and Godhood, working in tandem for the same purpose and plan, and they
do that through various roles. The Father initiated the plan, and plan, and they do that through various roles.
The Father initiated the plan, and the Son and Spirit work out the Father's plan.
They do it joyfully because they have the same will.
They're united in will and purpose.
The Trinity works in unity, so that means the Son was on board with this plan.
According to Revelation 13, 8, this has been the plan to redeem our fallen world even before
the world
was created.
Jesus died willingly, submitting to the plan of the Father.
If all this Trinity talk feels confusing to you and you want a helpful tool to learn more,
we've linked to a great book in the show notes.
It's easy to read and super helpful.
It's okay if this is challenging to process.
Everything about this is complex,
including the emotions presented here.
In fact, verse 11 says God was both anguished
and satisfied simultaneously.
This reminds me of Hebrews 12, 2, which says,
For the joy that was set before him, he endured the cross.
Joy and endurance of the cross.
I love seeing God's complex emotions in these verses
because I love being reminded that He's not a two-dimensional God.
And I love that in these verses, we're promised that Christ did this to make many to be accounted righteous
and to bear the sins of many.
If you know Him, you're among the many whose sins He paid for that day.
How ironic is it that our physically unattractive Savior is the most beautiful thing of all?
He's where the joy is.
Hey Bible readers, it's time for our weekly check-in.
These prophets can be so hard, right?
For some people, the prophets are even more challenging than the Levitical laws.
That was me for a long time.
So how did this week go for you?
Was it awesome?
Do you have more questions than answers?
Each week of reading will be different, and I love that, even on the hard weeks.
It lets us see God's character in ways we haven't before.
And on the days when we're frustrated with the Israelites and want to beg them to repent,
well, now we know a little bit more about how God might have felt.
There's always something new worth learning and experiencing about God.
So let's keep going, team.
I'll see you back here tomorrow.