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Day 191 (Isaiah 5-8) - Year 8

7/10/20269 min

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Transcript preview

First 90 seconds
  1. Tara-Leigh Cobble· Host0:00

    [upbeat music] Hey, Bible readers. I'm Tara-Leigh Cobble, and I'm your host for The Bible Recap. Today we drop back in on Isaiah, the major prophet, who opens with a love poem to the people of Israel and Judah. In the poem, God is compared to a vine keeper, and the Israelites are compared to wild grapes. But in the Hebrew, the term is actually more like stinking things. Not so flattering, and not exactly what God wants to grow in His garden. So God removes the protective hedge around the vineyard, and the wild grapes are trampled. Then Isaiah goes on to highlight six ways the wild grapes are stinky and pronounces woe over them. First, he denounces the greedy landowners who push the poor out of the land. God had established land allotment rules back in Numbers chapters 26 and 33. So Isaiah says their houses will become desolate. Second, he speaks woe over those whose lavish lives of excess and drunkenness lead them away from honoring God. Instead of being filled, they'll be famished, and instead of eating, they'll be swallowed by the grave. The remaining woes are strung together closely. Woe number three is spoken to people who mock God and doubt His judgment is coming. They seek out sin. Woe number four is to the prideful fool with no discernment or integrity distorting the truth. Woe number

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