Readings for today: Isaiah 13-17
It’s easy to look around the world today and despair. We wake up everyday and are inundated with reports through social media and other traditional media outlets. Wars between nations. Tribal violence. Ethnic cleansing. Corrupt governments perpetuating cycles and systems of exploitation, injustice, and oppression. Preventable famine and starvation. Lack of access to clean water and nutritious food. Limited opportunities for education. Entire regions with no healthcare. The largest human migration in history as refugees cross borders and others are internally displaced. It’s heartbreaking and overwhelming and easy to feel hopeless in the face of it all.
I imagine the prophet Isaiah may have felt the same way. He looked around his world and saw mighty empires like Assyria and Babylon who seemed unstoppable. Their war machines trampling everyone in their path. Closer to home, two of Israel’s ancient enemies - Philistia and Moab - continued to create all kinds of chaos. Their constant attacks causing all kinds of suffering and pain. But then Isaiah does a curious thing. One we would do well to learn from. He lifts his eyes. Above all the tumult and tribulation of our world. He places his faith in God who reigns in absolute authority over all He has made. And when he looks to God, what does he see? Righteous judgment. God holding the nations accountable. God exercising His power to bring them to heel. God will not let His people suffer forever. God will not let the oppression of His people stand. He will not allow the empires of this world to have the final word. Indeed, God says to Isaiah, “I will punish the world for its evil, and wicked people for their sin. I will put an end to the pride of the insolent, I will bring down the arrogance of tyrants…I will shake the heavens, and the earth will shake loose from its foundation, because of the fury of the Lord who commands armies, in the day He vents His raging anger.” (Isaiah 13:11, 13 NET)
I think of some of the places I’ve been where tyrants rule with an iron fist. They put down any opposition. They pay off their family and friends. They rob their nations blind while so many suffer and die. It’s hard to see how such things end but then I look to God. I turn my eyes to the one who will judge the nations. I know their end is near and I know everything I am doing to help alleviate the pain they cause is not in vain. I think about my own country. I think about how many of our political leaders act in corrupt ways, taking advantage of our system to enrich themselves. Everything seems stacked against the ordinary person in favor of the privileged and connected and elite. But then I look to God. I turn my own eyes to the one before whom every single person must appear to give an account. I know their end is near and I know everything I do - from voting to serving the least resourced in our communities to advocating for justice to doing all I can to make things safer and better for all - is not in vain. God sees all. God knows all. And God will judge all and one day every knee will bow and every tongue confess that He is Lord. Maranatha! Come Lord Jesus!
Readings for tomorrow: No devotionals on Sundays
