Slices
Prepare
Pray: ‘Father, help me to hear from you and grow in my understanding of you as I read your Word today. Amen.’
Bible passage
A prophecy about Jerusalem
22 A prophecy against the Valley of Vision:
What troubles you now,
that you have all gone up on the roofs,
2 you town so full of commotion,
you city of tumult and revelry?
Your slain were not killed by the sword,
nor did they die in battle.
3 All your leaders have fled together;
they have been captured without using the bow.
All you who were caught were taken prisoner together,
having fled while the enemy was still far away.
4 Therefore I said, ‘Turn away from me;
let me weep bitterly.
Do not try to console me
over the destruction of my people.’
5 The Lord, the Lord Almighty, has a day
of tumult and trampling and terror
in the Valley of Vision,
a day of battering down walls
and of crying out to the mountains.
6 Elam takes up the quiver,
with her charioteers and horses;
Kir uncovers the shield.
7 Your choicest valleys are full of chariots,
and horsemen are posted at the city gates.
8 The Lord stripped away the defences of Judah,
and you looked in that day
to the weapons in the Palace of the Forest.
9 You saw that the walls of the City of David
were broken through in many places;
you stored up water
in the Lower Pool.
10 You counted the buildings in Jerusalem
and tore down houses to strengthen the wall.
11 You built a reservoir between the two walls
for the water of the Old Pool,
but you did not look to the One who made it,
or have regard for the One who planned it long ago.
12 The Lord, the Lord Almighty,
called you on that day
to weep and to wail,
to tear out your hair and put on sackcloth.
13 But see, there is joy and revelry,
slaughtering of cattle and killing of sheep,
eating of meat and drinking of wine!
‘Let us eat and drink,’ you say,
‘for tomorrow we die!’
14 The Lord Almighty has revealed this in my hearing: ‘Till your dying day this sin will not be atoned for,’ says the Lord, the Lord Almighty.
Explore
The last verse of today’s reading speaks of a terrible sin the people of Judah have committed. What is this sin?
We begin to see hints of it from verse 8 onwards. Jerusalem has been attacked – perhaps Isaiah is prophetically foreseeing the destruction of the city in King Zedekiah’s day (see 2 Kings 25) – and the people are taking steps to defend themselves and to store drinking water in case of a siege. What is wrong with this?
The clue comes in verse 11. They made all their own plans, to protect themselves, but they forgot to look to God. All through their history he had been giving them victory in battle, even against overwhelming odds. Yet they didn’t seek him in this crisis, but relied on their own strength and ingenuity.
This breaks God’s heart. He longs for his people to look to him in times of need. He has not changed and neither have we. We still try to live independently of him, only crying out when things are desperate. Let us hear his heart cry, echoing down the ages, and choose to rely on him, even when we think we don’t need to.
Respond
Pray: ‘Lord Jesus, you taught us to ask our Father even for our daily bread. Please help me remember how deeply dependent I am on you for everything, and to seek your help quickly in times of need. Amen.’
Bible in a year
Read the Bible in a year: Numbers 28,29; Psalm 31
Pray for Scripture Union
Geoff Brown, Mission Enabler in the north region, has been running a pilot called Story Explorers with a Faith Guide, which sees primary school assembly children invited to come back to explore the story at lunch time after an initial assembly. Pray that he will know how best to roll this out to other Faith Guides and Mission Partners.