Friday, December 22, 2023

Devotionals from my Bible app: The Second Exodus (Isaiah 49-58)

Note before sharing the devotional: the prayer at the end of the devotional stood out to me, and I wanted to share especially this prayer for anyone who also might be in this same boat as I am. I am indeed blessed, but at the same time I am ready for change, for good change, for a new mountain to climb. I do want to be clear, though, so as not to confuse the reader: I am not asking out of marrying my love, or to move on to anyone else. No, I want her with me in this change.

As such, even though I said that the prayer was at the end of the devotional (and it still is), I will also copy it here, ahead of the devotional, as I believe this is a powerful prayer. I want to pray this in faith for myself and for my love as well, and for any of you who are perhaps in a similar boat:

Lord, reading about this second exodus, I realize I need one too. Would you provide it for me? Would you lead me near cool waters—my soul is parched. Would you restore my strength? Would you change my pain to joy? I trust you to do all this. Amen.

As I've been typing this post up and going back and revising a few sentences, I think I'm also praying for scales to fall from the eyes of certain individuals in my life that have been a source of pain. This too may resonate with you at this time. Not to be remiss at the possibility that I too might have scales in my eyes, this could also be something God might be highlighting to you. As such, I will pray thus:

Father God, I ask for myself and for anyone reading this page on this day that I write, that I post, and any day that the reader may be coming across this page, for Your wisdom and Your truth to be made known, both to myself as well as to the people that have and continue to cause pain to me and those I love, and for the scales to fall off all our eyes, that we may see each other and the situation before us with Your eyes and not our own fleshly eyes. I pray also for anyone reading this who resonates with this that You make known Your truth and and Your wisdom to them and all their key relationships right now, in the name of Jesus. In Your Word it says that You desire truth in the innermost parts of our beings, and we pray in agreement with Your Word that You will uproot the lies that keep our hearts hardened, and that You soften our hearts to be ready to receive from You what You have for us. Thank You for Your faithfulness and goodness towards us. I ask You to remind us all of that truth continually. In Jesus's name. Amen.


Day Four: The Second Exodus

Read: Isaiah 49–58

When you hear the word exodus, you most likely conjure up images of the Red Sea parting dramatically. You might think of the plagues in Egypt, the plucky yet reluctant prophet Moses, and the ability of God to deliver a people from an enslaving nation. And you’d be right.

But have you considered God loves exodus, and he enacts it a second time here?

Many call the return from exile, from Babylon, back to a ruined Jerusalem, the second exodus. The past exodus is one of the themes of the book of Isaiah, so as you continue reading it, do so with that in mind. You may uncover new treasures.

When Israel is commanded to return, their exodus must involve repentance—leaving behind what brought on their captivity in the first place. “Get out! Get out and leave your captivity, where everything you touch is unclean. Get out of there and purify yourselves, you who carry home the sacred objects of the Lord” (Isaiah 52:11).

If you return to Isaiah 43, you’ll see that God says this new exodus will be different. In verses 15–17, God reminds the nation of the past exodus, helping them remember that he was the initiator of the deliverance through the Red Sea and performed the miraculous on their behalf.

Then the narrative takes a turn with the word but in verses 18–19. “But forget all that—it is nothing compared to what I am going to do. For I am about to do something new. See, I have already begun! Do you not see it? I will make a pathway through the wilderness. I will create rivers in the dry wasteland.” On their exodus from Babylon to Jerusalem, God will guide them through the wilderness (rather than the Red Sea). And instead of damming up rivers and seas, he will create water from dust.

In this new deliverance, God will feed them. “They will neither hunger nor thirst. The searing sun will not reach them anymore. For the Lord in his mercy will lead them; he will lead them beside cool waters” (Isaiah 49:10).

He will guide and protect them on this second exodus. “The Lord will guide you continually, giving you water when you are dry and restoring your strength. You will be like a well-watered garden, like an ever-flowing spring” (Isaiah 58:11).

He will utterly transform their circumstances from desolation to joy. “The Lord will comfort Israel again and have pity on her ruins. Her desert will blossom like Eden, her barren wilderness like the garden of the Lord. Joy and gladness will be found there. Songs of thanksgiving will fill the air” (Isaiah 51:3).

Lord, reading about this second exodus, I realize I need one too. Would you provide it for me? Would you lead me near cool waters—my soul is parched. Would you restore my strength? Would you change my pain to joy? I trust you to do all this. Amen.