The Daily Walk 2025

Study Through the Bible in 2025

The Daily Walk includes devotion and Bible readings for each day of the year and informative charts and insights that will help you understand more as you read from Genesis to Revelation in 2025.

July 16 - 31, 2025
July 16
Isaiah 9–12

Judah’s Darkness and Dawn

Key Passage: Isaiah 9

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Overview
Chapters 7–12 have been called “The Book of Immanuel” because of the many prophecies and allusions regarding the Messiah:

  • He would be born of a virgin (7:14).
  • He would be given the name Immanuel (meaning “God is with us,” 7:14).
  • He would be a stumbling block to Israel (8:14).
  • He would be a great light to the nations (9:2).
  • He would be a Ruler, Counselor, and Prince (9:6).
  • He would come from the line of David (11:1).

Is it any wonder the redeemed gather together for a grand chorus of praise and worship at the thought of their Immanuel?

Your Daily Walk
Titles can be deceiving. A young executive was describing, with pride, his recent promotion to the position of vice president. “Aw, that’s nothing,” responded a friend. “Vice presidents are a dime a dozen. I’ll bet there’s even a vice president of peanuts at the supermarket.”

“You’re on!” exclaimed the executive, as he telephoned the store. “May I speak to the vice president of peanuts, please?”

The voice replied, “Packaged or bulk?”

By contrast, the titles you will find attributed to Jesus the Messiah are highly significant. He is the “Wonderful Counselor”—and God alone is “wonderful in counsel” (Isaiah 28:29). He is the “Mighty God”—the same term used to describe “the Lord, the Holy One of Israel” (10:20).

Share with one other person today the significance of one of the names of Jesus. Ask God to open a door of witness through it.

Insight - First to Feel the Groan, First to See the Glory
“The land of Zebulun and...Naphtali” (9:1)—the first region to succumb to the Assyrian onslaught within months of Isaiah’s meeting with Ahaz (7:1-9)—would also be the first to see the glory of the Lord (9:1-2), a striking prophecy that went unheeded when the Messiah came (John 1:46; 7:52).

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July 17
Isaiah 13–16

Woes on Babylon and Moab

Key Passage: Isaiah 13

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Overview

God is sovereign over His nation; He is also sovereign over the nations. No empire or tribe on earth is exempt from the judgment of God when wickedness replaces righteousness. Isaiah now turns his verbal missiles upon the Gentile nations, which will melt away before the furnace of God’s wrath for their opposition to His people and plan. Babylon faces the gloomy prospect of being dominated by the Medes (which occurred in 539 B.C.). The city of Moab can look forward to being sacked (it happened in 701 B.C.). Clearly, wicked kings and kingdoms are no match for the justice and holiness of God.

Your Daily Walk

There’s something deliciously satisfying about seeing “the other guy” get what he deserves. About watching the speeding car ahead of you get pulled over. About learning that your obnoxious next-door neighbor is being audited. About the reading of a corrupt politician landing in jail.

But wait! Smugness in the face of another’s calamity diminishes when you remember your imperfections. In His Word, God has included the bad with the good, the condemnation and commendation of nations, that you might profit from their example. The fact that nations such as Babylon and Moab no longer exist should warn you that when God promises punishment for persistent sin, it is no idle threat.

Think of a recent calamity that has befallen someone you know because of his or her inattention to God’s Word. How can you save yourself some grief by learning from that example?

Insight - Tomorrow’s Headlines Prophesied Today

Isaiah’s prophecy regarding Babylon is this: Babylon would supersede Assyria (14:25); Media would supersede Babylon (13:17); and Babylon would disappear forever (13:19-22). Historically, Babylon conquered Assyria in 607 B.C. and fell to the Medo-Persian armies in 538 B.C. Today, all that remains of Babylon are several square miles of its ruined capital, exactly as predicted.

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July 18
Isaiah 17–20

Collapse from Corruption

Key Passage: Isaiah 17:1-6; 18:1-4; 19:1-10

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Overview

Damascus, Cush (Ethiopia), and Egypt are the next to feel the weight of Isaiah’s burdens of judgment. The glory of Damascus would be removed, leaving leanness of body and soul. But a handful would repent and—like the gleanings from an olive tree—provide hope for a future harvest. Ethiopia would be pruned away like branches, and it would one day return to Zion to pay homage to God and acknowledge Him as its sovereign. Egypt would experience civil war, economic ruin, and spiritual poverty, showing the bankruptcy of her false gods. But one day, “The Lord Almighty will bless them” (19:25).

Your Daily Walk

The courtroom scene unfolds as it has countless times before. The case is presented; the jury recesses; a verdict is reached: “Guilty!” However, the trial then takes an unexpected turn. The presiding judge also happens to be the father of the convicted criminal. And just before his son reaches the bar where the fine is to be assessed, the judge steps down from his seat, takes off his robe, and approaches the bar to pay the fine for his guilty son. Justice...and mercy!

That story illustrates a divine truth. The judge would not have been just if he had allowed his son to go free. But his love caused him to take his son’s place in paying the fine. The same is true of God. He would not be just if He ignored the sins committed against Him. At the same time, His great love shines forth in the gift of His Son to pay the price for humanity’s sins.

Isaiah 14:1-8 is a message of mercy, inserted between many dark chapters of judgment. God is just, but in His love for those who trust Him, He has provided the answer to humanity’s sin problem (11:10)—a Savior. What is your answer to Him today?

Insight - Old Testament POWs (20:1-4)

As part of His judgment on Egypt, God instructed Isaiah to dress as a prisoner of war—unclothed and barefoot—for three years as a sign of the calamity God was going to bring on Egypt.

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July 19/20
Isaiah 21–23

Judgment Near and Far

Key Passage: Isaiah 21

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Overview

Isaiah is not yet finished with his “woes for Judah’s foes.” In today’s reading, he mentions two more neighboring powers that are in line for God’s chastening hand: Arabia and Tyre. But amid his list of “endangered nations,” Isaiah shocks his countrymen by including Jerusalem with the rest. Because of the careless indulgence of its inhabitants, the city would suffer siege and calamity.

Your Daily Walk

Have you ever wondered why you can feel so convicted after you sin, but remain so indifferent before you sin? If there were only a way to reverse these conditions, and feel as remorseful before as you do after you disobey God, temptation would surely be easier to resist.

God’s verbal warnings are designed to do precisely that. He sent His prophets to paint in unmistakable tones the calamity awaiting His people if they continued in their wicked ways. Pestilence, plague, defeat in battle, destruction of home and family—all these and more would be the wages they would deserve for their sin. God designed harsh prophecies of national catastrophe to interrupt His people’s mad dash for power and prestige at the expense of righteousness and justice. The painful message of these promised calamities was God’s way of breaking down indifference and bringing His people to the point of repentance.

If the specific wages of specific sins were revealed to you ahead of time, would you be as eager to earn them? On one of your pay stubs, write these words: “Is sin worth the pain it brings?” Leave those words in your wallet or purse as a reminder of the high price of unholy living—wages you can’t afford to earn.

Insight - A Nickname that Makes Sense

The “Valley of Vision” (22:1) refers to Jerusalem, because the hill on which Jerusalem is situated is surrounded by valleys with hills beyond. The temple in Jerusalem was also the place where God was “visible” to His people.

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July 21
Isaiah 24–27

Judgment and Jubilation

Key Passage: Isaiah 26

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Overview

After 11 chapters of pronouncements upon specific nations, Isaiah’s focus changes. There is coming a day when the entire earth will reel in judgment, its inhabitants quaking in terror and dismay. But the redeemed of the Lord will welcome that day and sing hymns of praise to the God of their salvation. “Surely this is our God; we trusted in him, and he saved us. This is the Lord, we trusted in him; let us rejoice and be glad in his salvation” (25:9). While the nations of the world writhe in judgment, Israel enjoys peace and prosperity.

Your Daily Walk

During a violent thunderstorm, a mother tiptoed upstairs to her young son’s bedroom, assuming he would need comfort from his fears. She found him kneeling by his bed, talking to God—not in fear, but in excitement. With each new flash of lightning, the mother heard her son exclaim, “Do it again, God! Do it again!”

Amid God’s prophecy of a “thunderstorm of judgment” upon Israel and the surrounding nations, Isaiah pauses to praise God for His promise to overthrow the wicked (“Do it again, God!”). Isaiah knew it was meaningless to speak of judgment for sin on a national scale if one ignored the corollary that nations are composed of individuals; for a holy country, one must first have holy citizens.

Spend a few minutes today pondering chapter 26, Isaiah’s hymn of praise for God’s power to punish the people “of the earth for their sins” (26:21). If you feel uncomfortable as you read, maybe God is trying to speak to you.

Insight - There’s Coming a Day

Chapters 24–27 have been called “Isaiah’s Apocalypse” because of the similarity of these chapters to the Book of Revelation. One way Isaiah indicates he is prophesying is by using the phrase “in that day.” It occurs more than 40 times in the book as a whole; how many times can you find it in today’s section?

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July 22
Isaiah 28–30

A Painful Experience

Key Passage: Isaiah 29

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Overview

Isaiah now declares a series of specific woes upon Israel and Judah. Targeting his messages for the capital cities of Samaria and Jerusalem, Isaiah declares that destruction is imminent. For “Ephraim’s drunkards [Israel]” (28:1), it is too late to repent; judgment is inescapable. But Judah can still learn from the fate of her sister nation. Lulled into a false sense of security by empty ritualism, Judah must wake up from a spiritual stupor. Otherwise, she will follow Israel’s fatal error of substituting foolish alliances for faith in God.

Your Daily Walk

When was the last time you tried to help God solve one of your problems? “After all,” you probably reasoned, “God must not know how desperate my situation is. If He did, He would come to my rescue. But since I don’t see Him working, I’d better get in there and give Him a helping hand. Right?”

Wrong. That was precisely the mistake Judah made. To prevent the onslaught of Assyria, Judah looked to her pagan neighbors for alliances that would help to nullify Assyria’s mighty armies. Look at 29:15-16, and you’ll see that Judah thought she was doing this without God’s knowledge. But God compares Judah’s self-help program to a lump of clay trying to aid the potter who is shaping it.

Wear your least comfortable pair of shoes today as a constant reminder of the danger of pulling yourself up by your bootstraps. Rather, “in quietness and trust is your strength” (30:15).

Insight - Learning Temperance from a Farmer

Isaiah illustrates his predictions with a parable (28:23-29). Farmers must use various methods (some of which may seem silly or unnecessary to an unenlightened observer) to get the best results from their crops. Additionally, farmers must apply brute force to separate the good from the bad (28:27-28). In the same way, God deals severely with His people, but just the right amount, and never so much that it breaks their spirit.

ISAIAH AND HIS
Contemporaries

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July 23
Isaiah 31–35

Coming Calamity, Coming King

Key Passage: Isaiah 32–33

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Overview

As Isaiah ponders the prophecy of Israel’s deliverance from Assyria, his thoughts naturally turn to the arrival of the much-prophesied future King whose rule and righteousness would be worldwide. In the light of this glorious future, Isaiah urges the people of Judah to remain strong in their trust in God, even though the gathering storm clouds of Assyrian invasion can be seen on the horizon. With faith in God, they can wait expectantly for the promised era of restored prosperity when “sorrow and sighing will flee away” (35:10).

Your Daily Walk

The story is told of a church meeting called to discuss an urgent matter. There were insufficient funds on hand to pay an important bill. Worried expressions furrowed many a brow. Where could the church turn? Suddenly, a wealthy businessman stood to his feet and offered to underwrite the full amount. Sighs of relief were heard throughout the room—until one older Christian reminded the members that God had promised to fund His work all along.

It is easier for people to trust limited human resources than God’s inexhaustible supply. Judah looked to the military might of Egypt for security, forgetting that the God of Israel had shown once before how fragile that “great power” might prove (Exodus 14).

What need is uppermost in your life right now? Are the resources of God enough to put your mind at ease? Or are you seeking relief from another source? You wouldn’t ask a child to do what only an adult is capable of doing. But are you trusting others to do what only God can—and will—do on your behalf? Talk to Him about it.

Insight - No Smooth Path to Peace

The pampered ladies of 32:9 provide only one example of the self-indulgent society of Israel’s day (22:13; 28:15). But God cannot bring peace to a self-indulgent people. The ground must be cleared and resown with righteousness, of which peace is the fruit (32:16-17).

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July 24
Isaiah 36–39

Judah’s Day of Judgment

Key Passage: Isaiah 37, 39

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Overview

Today’s reading represents a four-chapter interlude in Isaiah’s prophecy—a historical parenthesis that shows the fulfillment of some of Isaiah’s early prophecies, and sets the stage for many of his later ones. The focus throughout is on King Hezekiah, perhaps the premier reformer of Judah. A man of prayer and principle, Hezekiah sees God destroy 185,000 Assyrian invaders and extend his own life by 15 years. But by responding in foolish pride to a Babylonian emissary, Hezekiah seals the fate of his nation.

Your Daily Walk

Something happened (on average) every 20 seconds last year. It affected the lives of 1.3 million Americans. Can you guess what it was? Answer: Every 20 seconds, someone in the United States suffers a heart attack and suddenly comes to realize that death is only a heartbeat away. And for more than 500,000 Americans, that realization became a reality.

Death. It’s the universally distasteful subject. But the fact remains that one out of one dies. For King Hezekiah—as with many people— the approach of death brought tears (38:1-3)—tears of regret, tears of remorse. So many good intentions, so many half-finished projects. God gave Hezekiah a gift of 15 additional years, but that doesn’t always happen. When it’s time for you to die, will you be ready, or regretful, to see the Lord face to face? Find the obituary column in your newspaper, and pretend for a moment that your name is there (you may even want to write it in, just to emphasize the point). Now talk to God about how He wants you to spend the rest of your days.

Insight - A Historic Spot Revisited (36:2)

Rabshakeh, King Sennacherib’s field commander, stood “at the aqueduct of the Upper Pool, on the road to the Washerman’s Field” when he shouted his arrogant threats. Twenty-three years earlier, God had told a man to stand in the same spot and declare His message. Do you remember who? (If not, check 7:1-9.)

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July 25
Isaiah 40–43

Mighty Lord vs. Idle Idols

Key Passage: Isaiah 40

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Overview

Beginning with chapter 40, Isaiah changes the focus of his message. For 39 chapters (much like the 39 books of the Old Testament), his major message has been the condemnation resulting from the waywardness and wickedness of God’s people. But now comes a heartwarming message of hope and comfort. Like the 27 books of the New Testament, the next 27 chapters declare the coming salvation of the Lord. He is sovereign over creation, and He is sovereign in the selection and protection of His nation, Israel. Thus, there can be certainty that He will comfort and deliver His people.

Your Daily Walk

Today, rather than looking for a project in which to put God’s truth to work, spend some quiet moments contemplating the greatness of the God who made you. Here are some thoughts to prepare your mind for worship:

The oceans of the world contain more than 340 quintillion gallons of water, yet God holds them in the hollow of His hand (40:12).

The earth weighs six sextillion metric tons, yet to God it represents but dust on the scale (40:12, 15).

The known universe stretches more than 30 billion light years (200 sextillion miles), yet to God that great expanse represents but the “breadth of his hand” (hand’s width, 40:12).

That same universe contains at least 100 billion galaxies, each made up of approximately 100 billion stars—yet God knows them all by name (40:26).

Now do you see why it is absurd to offer the God of heaven your advice rather than your worship? Even so, He says to you: “Fear not, for I have redeemed you... you are mine” (43:1).

Insight - A Key Verse for Isaiah 40–66

One verse (40:2) previews all of chapters 40–66: (1) “her hard service has been completed” describes the deliverance of 40–48; (2) “her sin has been paid for” describes the deliverer of 49–57; (3) “she has received” describes the delivered captives of 58–66.

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July 26/27
Isaiah 44–48

God’s Choice and Babylon’s Calamity

Key Passage: Isaiah 44–45

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Overview

Isaiah next contrasts the impotence of idols with the omnipotence of Israel’s God. From the same piece of wood, a workman fashions gods to be worshiped and logs to be burned. By contrast, the God of creation predicts centuries in advance the agent of His comfort (Cyrus, king of Persia) and the means He will employ to deliver His oppressed people. Is it any wonder God calls forth judgment upon idolatrous Babylon, a nation that would dare to substitute trees and rocks for the Lord of Hosts, the Holy One of Israel?

Your Daily Walk

Have you wondered about the unusual way God uses people and events to accomplish His purposes on earth?

God used a wet washcloth to call Gideon into His service (Judges 6:36-38). He used a talking donkey to rebuke Balaam (Numbers 22:28). He used a hungry fish to turn Jonah around (Jonah 1:17). He swept His spiritually dirty nation clean by using an even dirtier broom—the brutal Babylonians (Habakkuk 1:5-6). And He raised up a heathen king to free His people from exile and rebuild His holy house of worship (45:1, 4).

Can you see God’s purpose linked with personal events in your life, or with international developments in the life of our nation? Go back through chapter 45 and circle the words “I have,” “I am,” and “I will” every time you find them. Then make three columns on a sheet of paper describing God’s activities in the past (I have), the present (I am), and the future (I will). When you’re finished, you’ll have a wonderful prayer and praise prompter: “Father, as I see Your trustworthiness in the past, build my confidence in You to accomplish Your purposes in the present and future as well.”

Insight - Predicting the Rebuilding of a House Not Yet Fallen

Cyrus, who ruled Medo-Persia from 546 to 530 B.C.—more than 150 years after Isaiah’s prophecies concerning him—is proclaimed as the one to command the rebuilding of the Jerusalem temple, which in Isaiah’s day had not yet been destroyed (44:28).

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July 28
Isaiah 49–51

The Prince of Peace

Key Passage: Isaiah 51

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Overview

The first nine chapters of Isaiah’s message of comfort have centered on God’s deliverance of His people through Cyrus. Now Isaiah focuses on the One who will bring deliverance through His suffering and death (chapters 49–55). He would come as a Servant to His people and a Light to the surrounding nations, providing strength for the weary and compassion for the downcast. And as the crowning act of servanthood, He would offer Himself as the sacrifice for sin.

Your Daily Walk

Definition: A free country is a place where a man can say whatever he thinks—provided he isn’t overheard by his wife, his neighbors, his pastor, or his boss.

Independence—the freedom to speak, write, assemble, and worship without fear of a tyrant’s intervention—is a prized possession. But never forget, as you enjoy your independence, that you were also created to enjoy dependence under the lordship of Jesus Christ.

A violin string, when totally “independent” of the violin for which it was created, is “free” to twist and turn but not to do what a violin string is designed to do: produce music. By the same token, you are “free” when your life is uncommitted—but not free to be what God intended you to be.

Real freedom is not freedom from God, but freedom with God through the salvation which is in Jesus Christ (51:5-6, 8). In your travels today, look for a quiet place where you can park for free. Stop there and thank God for your independence as a citizen of Earth— and your dependence as a citizen of heaven.

Insight - The Great Commission, Old Testament Style

We are all probably familiar with the Great Commission in Matthew 28:19-20, but not many know that Isaiah 49:6 has been called the Great Commission of the Old Testament. In fact, Paul and Barnabas quoted part of it in Acts 13:47.

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July 29
Isaiah 52–57

The Suffering Savior

Key Passage: Isaiah 52–53

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Overview

Isaiah the prophet and Isaac Watts the hymnist have more than 24 centuries separating their lives. Yet the words you will read today about the selfless sacrifice of Jesus, our Suffering Servant, bear a striking similarity to these familiar, yet ever-moving stanzas written by Watts:

When I survey the wondrous cross
On which the Prince of Glory died,
My richest gain I count but loss,
And pour contempt on all my pride.
See, from His head, His hands, His feet,
Sorrow and love flow mingled down:
Did e’er such love and sorrow meet,
Or thorns compose so rich a crown?

Your Daily Walk

Christopher Columbus was writing a book about space travel. George Washington predicted the outcome of the 2016 presidential election. Absurd? Of course! No one can predict events like those centuries in advance. No one, that is, except a prophet of God. As you read Isaiah 52–53, the details appear so vivid as to make you think Isaiah is standing at the foot of the cross. In his mind, the events are so clear that he narrates them in the past tense, as if Jesus’ death had already occurred. Yet Isaiah penned his prophecies seven centuries before Jesus’ death.

Spend some time meditating on today’s reading. Put yourself into 53:5: “He was pierced for [my] transgressions, he was crushed for [my] iniquities;...by his wounds [I am] healed.” Then close your devotional time by giving God a heartfelt “thank you” for sending His Son to die on the cross for you.

Insight - The Bull’s-Eye of Comfort

In Isaiah’s prophecies of comfort (chapters 40–66), locate the middle chapter and the middle verse. Wouldn’t you agree that’s a good “central passage” on comfort? (In case you get lost, it’s 53:6.)

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July 30
Isaiah 58–62

Consummation of Judgment

Key Passage: Isaiah 58, 61

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Overview

Comfort is coming in the form of a deliverer (Cyrus, chapters 40–48); comfort is coming in the form of a Suffering Savior (Messiah, chapters 49–57); and finally, comfort is coming in the form of a delivered people (Judah, chapters 58–66). Obedience to God’s commands has always been the path to individual and corporate blessing. And the future of God’s people is bright indeed. When the Messiah, the light of Jerusalem, comes, then righteousness and salvation will shine to the nations of the world (60:1; 62:1), and Jerusalem will be “the praise of the earth” (62:7).

Your Daily Walk

Some people are so indecisive that their favorite color is plaid. For instance, when a lady was asked, “Do you always have trouble making up your mind?” she replied, “Well, yes and no...”

But there comes a time when changing your mind is not only desirable, but it is also imperative—and that is when God tells you to.

Chapter 58 describes a nation of people who needed to change their minds about God, themselves, and their wickedness. In a word, they needed to repent. Their worship was marked by shallow formalism; their outward piety did not match their inward purity; they fasted for public recognition while ignoring the needs of those around them.

Whenever an improper attitude or action has crept into your life, it’s time for a change. Do these three words describe your lifestyle before God today? Pure...undefiled...unstained. If not, let James 1:27 guide you to an outward religion that is consistent with your inward relationship with Jesus Christ.

Insight - A New Name Promised and Provided

In 62:2 the ransomed community of Zion is promised “a new name that the mouth of the Lord will bestow.” Keep reading and you’ll discover not one new name but four, all contained in the same verse (62:12). What are they?

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July 31
Isaiah 63–66

Isaiah’s Prayer and God’s Reply

Key Passage: Isaiah 66

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Overview

Isaiah closes his great prophetic work with a stirring prayer of intercession for the house of Israel. While acknowledging their waywardness and frequent rebellions, he nevertheless claims God’s promises on their behalf to redeem them and to refashion them into a people for His glory. God’s response is both stern and comforting. The rebels will be punished for ignoring God’s frequent invitations. Idolatry, covetousness, rebellion, and disobedience will be rooted out of His people. In addition, a rich store of glory and blessing awaits God’s faithful ones: a new heaven and earth, and no more tears, no premature death, no want of food, no violence in nature. Isaiah concludes by summarizing the major themes of his book: God exalts the humble and contrite; the Messiah is coming to avenge His enemies; all nations will see God’s glory; and all flesh shall one day worship the Lord.

Your Daily Walk

The Book of Isaiah is a sobering reminder of the consequences of taking God lightly: ignoring His promises can forfeit His blessing; ignoring His warnings can incur judgment; ignoring His invitations can cause one to miss the joy of a personal relationship with God.

Isaiah’s prophecy is long. It contains more chapters than any other Old Testament prophet. But his message is simple and concise: judgment and comfort. Judgment for those who fail to heed God’s voice, and comfort for those who don’t.

Give yourself a spiritual hearing test right now. Are you tuned in to hear God’s voice? Do you answer when He calls (6:8), or is your line constantly busy? There will come a day when the phone quits ringing... forever. Spend the next few minutes telling God what you have learned from the Book of Isaiah.

Insight - An Old Testament “News” Paper

Notice how many things there are in chapters 65–66: new nations brought into the fold, a new name for God’s people, a new heaven and earth, and a new order of worship.

THE GOD Among Us

As the prophet Isaiah’s warnings echoed through the homes and courtyards of Judah, few were listening. What God was saying through His prophet was not what the people wanted to hear. But recessed deep within the warnings and indictments was an astonishing statement: God would one day come to earth.

Jesus announced some 700 years later that He was God in the flesh who had come to pay for the sins of the world. He was the fulfillment of Isaiah’s prophecies. But again, few were listening.

Yet the life of Jesus Christ fits Isaiah’s profile of the “God who would come to earth.” The Anointed One would be:

  • a descendant of Jesse (11:1)
  • miraculously born of a virgin (7:14)
  • a miracle-worker (35:5)
  • wounded and bruised for us (53:5)
  • our sin bearer (53:12)
  • rejected by His people (53:3)
  • buried in a rich man’s tomb (53:9).

The overwhelming evidence points to Jesus as “God among us.” He came to bring us into a complete and satisfying relationship with God. Isa- iah explains how Jesus would do this:

“We all, like sheep, have gone astray, each of us has turned to his own way; and the Lord has laid on him the iniquity of us all” (Isaiah 53:6).

Our sins separate us from a holy and righteous God. Christ’s death paid for our sins—past, present, and future. He now invites you into a relationship that begins now and will last beyond time at His return. Why not trust in Jesus Christ as your only way to heaven?

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July 1 - 15, 2025
June 16 - 30, 2025
June 1 - 15, 2025
May 1-31, 2025
May 1-15, 2025
April 16-30, 2025
April 1-15, 2025
March 16 - 31, 2025
March 1 - 15, 2025
February 16-28, 2025
February 1-15, 2025
January 16 - 31, 2025
January 1-15, 2025