This evening’s passage from the prophet Isaiah starts with a reminder:
What God has done.
In these words, directed at the Babylonian exiles, God reminds them of an earlier moment when God showed up, and God took care, and God carried God’s own people out of danger. I’m betting that you could recognize the scene that is described as the passage opens.
“Thus says the Lord, who makes a way in the sea, a path in the mighty waters” (Isaiah 43:16). When did God make a passage through the waters? Yes, absolutely—during the great exodus of God’s people from enslavement in Egypt. The people were able to cross on dry earth with the waters held back. But what happened next? The pharaoh’s soldiers followed in chariots pulled by horses, and then…
chariot and horse,
army and warrior;
they lie down; they cannot rise;
they are extinguished, quenched like a wick. ~Isaiah 43:17
God releases the waters, and the pursuing soldiers are drowned by the very seas that stood still so that God’s people could escape.
Our passage opens with a reminder of the remarkable: WHAT GOD HAS DONE.
But then the Lord says a strange thing—but don’t think about things that happened before, kiss today goodbye, and point me toward tomorrow. Now we are going to hear:
What God will do…
Image: Copyright P. Raube, 2025
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