June 24 / II Kings 19:8-37; Isaiah 37:8-38; II Kings 20:20-21

II Kings 19:8-37; Isaiah 37:8-38; II Kings 20:20-21 Unlike his father, Ahaz, Hezekiah listens to the right voice. He listens to what the LORD says through Isaiah. In faith, he recognizes that all those so-called gods of the other nations that Assyria has defeated are no gods at all. And so Hezekiah prays: Truly, O …

June 23 / II Kings 18:17-19:7; Isaiah 36:2-37:7

II Kings 18:17-19:7; Isaiah 36:2-37:7 Imagine yourself standing on the wall of Jerusalem, peering over the parapet, listening to the Rabshakeh of Assyria taunt Hezekiah’s officials and the people of Jerusalem (including yourself). You’ve heard reports of Assyrian brutality for years. You know that nations larger and stronger than Judah have fallen before the might …

June 22 / II Kings 20:1-11; Isaiah 38; II Kings 20:12-19; Isaiah 39; Isaiah 36:1; II Kings 18:13-16

II Kings 20:1-11; Isaiah 38; II Kings 20:12-19; Isaiah 39; Isaiah 36:1; II Kings 18:13-16 Would you know the power of repentance? Would you understand the strong weapon of salvation and the might of confession? By confession Hezekiah routed 185,000 of the enemy. That was important, but it was little compared with what shall be …

June 21 / Isaiah 22:15-25; Isaiah 30-32

Isaiah 22:15-25; Isaiah 30-32 Let’s recall the historical situation into which Isaiah speaks. Isaiah is in the Southern Kingdom of Judah, where Hezekiah is king, a good king who follows the LORD. The Northern Kingdom of Israel is no more, having been destroyed by the exceedingly strong — and brutal — Assyrian empire. Now Assyria …

June 20 / Isaiah 18-20; 15-16

Isaiah 18-20; 15-16 The other day, I mentioned that in reading through Isaiah and the other prophets we should not miss the message of hope in Christ. Today we see that message clearly extended beyond Israel and Judah to foreign nations, specifically Cush, Egypt, Assyria, and Moab. (See Isaiah 18:7; 19:18-25; 16:3-5.) That is good …

June 17 / II Kings 18:1-12; Isaiah 10:5-12:6

II Kings 18:1-12; Isaiah 10:5-12:6 Several themes run through Isaiah that we would do well to recognize, but which I cannot possibly cover with any adequacy. We see a few of these today (as we have already in prior readings): Of course, this is just a sampling. Isaiah has much more to say than what …

June 16 / Isaiah 28-29; II Kings 17:5-41

Isaiah 28-29; II Kings 17:5-41 Exile for the Northern Kingdom of Israel! Having walked through Israel’s sordid history, surely we could see this coming! After two centuries of persistent idolatry, despite warnings from numerous prophets, Israel must face the music. II Kings 17 provides all the explanation, so I need not repeat it here. The …

June 15 / II Chronicles 27-28; II Kings 17:1-4

II Chronicles 27-28; II Kings 17:1-4 As mentioned yesterday, Micah alludes to child sacrifice: Shall I give my firstborn for my transgression,the fruit of my body for the sin of my soul? Micah 6:7 With King Ahaz we see that Micah’s question is not just hypothetical. Micah is not expressing some abstract notion using a …