Beyond Hope
Opening Prayer
Lord God, You are known in heartbreak and hope. I wait for You to make Yourself known to me now.
Read Isaiah 47:1-15
[1]
Scripture taken from the THE HOLY BIBLE, NEW INTERNATIONAL VERSION, NIV Copyright © 1973, 1978, 1984, 2011 by Biblica, Inc.® Used by permission. All rights reserved worldwide.
Meditate
“There are two kinds of people: those who say to God, ‘Thy will be done,’ and those to whom God says, ‘Thy will be done'” (C.S. Lewis).
Think Further
We’ve all met no-hopers–people who seem naïve, wasteful, lazy or just plain stupid. Sometimes they prove us wrong and make something significant of their lives. But Babylon was not going to prove God wrong. He declared the city beyond hope–and for good reasons.
Babylon should have learned from its long history of political and social ups-and-downs that success and security in the present were no guarantee of survival. This grand and wealthy city, having gained independence from Assyria in 612 BC, saw itself as eternal royalty (1,5,7), but in God’s eyes was immoral (1-4), merciless (5,6), proud (7,9) and self-deluded (8,10). Babylon pursued pleasure and trusted magic, believing no one would notice. It sought the counsel of false advisors rather than reflecting wisely on its own behavior and fate. One of its most famous kings, Nebuchadnezzar, exemplified much of this false pride (Dan. 4:28-33). Babylon’s eventual fate would be calamity. It was captured, consecutively, by Cyrus’ Persians (in 539 BC; 2 Chr. 36:20-23) and Alexander’s Hellenists, losing its prosperity, stability, political prestige, and eventually ceasing to exist.
Biblical cities at the receiving end of God’s judgment were not always considered beyond hope; sometimes mercy was extended and remnants survived. Sodom and Gomorrah were destroyed, but righteous Lot’s family was rescued. Jericho tumbled, but believing Rahab was spared. Nineveh responded to reluctant Jonah’s call to repent, and judgment was averted (Jonah 3:10-4:2). Even the sinful nations of Israel and Judah were not without hope. Babylon, however, became the pinnacle of hopelessness. In Revelation 18, Babylon is a pseudonym for Rome, the most evil of cities. Its final judgment is symbolic of the ultimate hopelessness of proud defiant powers and the certainty of God’s final victory and salvation.
Apply
Can you think of a city (or a person) that seems to be beyond hope? Pray for their transformation.
Closing prayer
Lord, I’m thankful that Your patience is far greater than mine. You see hope for the hopeless, transformation for the broken. Continue Your transforming work in me.
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