Day 8

The Lord of Hosts, the Only Refuge

from the Lent 2017: You Are Mine reading plan


Isaiah 7:1-25, Isaiah 8:1-22, Hebrews 9:24, 1 Peter 1:14-16

BY Guest Writer

Text:  Isaiah 7:1-25, Isaiah 8:1-22, Hebrews 9:24, 1 Peter 1:14-16

I’ll be the first to admit that when I read a book like Isaiah, I immediately want to understand all the history. As a former world history teacher, I really should already have this stuff down pat, but I don’t. So I dug back into my old lesson plans to see what I could rediscover about Assyria.

Historians suspect that the world’s first organized society developed in the “cradle of civilization” between the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers (modern-day Iraq and Syria). It was fertile land, easy to farm, and smack-dab in the middle of the biggest landmass in the world. If you wanted to be a farmer, a businessman, or a conqueror, you couldn’t find a better jumping-off point. That’s why over the centuries, so many different empires fought to claim that land. None were as strong or ambitious as the Assyrians; their empire was the first to make militarism the central policy of state.

Around the time of Isaiah, Assyrians were on the warpath. They’d already amassed a great amount of land to the north and east, and had their sights on Egypt. God’s people were literally right in the way. In addition to that, the kingdom of Israel had fractured into two pieces: Judah in the south and Israel in the north. At just the time when God’s people needed to be strong and unified against a foreign threat, they were deeply divided. At the beginning of Isaiah chapter 7, we’re told that the king of Judah and all of his people were afraid for their lives. They had two enemies to contend with, Assyria and Israel. In many ways, they felt surrounded, defenseless.

And yet, they were not alone. In the midst of these harrowing geopolitical circumstances, Isaiah told the people of Judah, “Be careful, keep calm and don’t be afraid” (Isaiah 7:4). Isaiah also makes a strange promise: the people would receive a sign that God was still good. A virgin would give birth to a child and His name would be Immanuel—God with us (v.14).

The rest of the prophecy was hardly pretty poetry. Judah saw Assyria as an enemy, and as Isaiah explained, God planned to use that enemy to accomplish His purposes. Egyptians were like flies, Assyrians were like bees—and they were coming to infest the land. Assyria would be a like a razor that arrived to cut off all of God’s people’s hair, leaving them in humiliation (v.20). With that as their future, how could the people of God be careful, keep calm, and remain unafraid? How was God with them?

God is with us, even in calamity. Our fear is not proof that our God is absent.

So often I want an Isaiah in my life. I want someone to come and tell me specifically what’s going to happen this year, next year, and the year after that. I want details. Dates. Times. I want a sign. In reading today’s passages, I realize that even if I got what I wanted—even if someone like Isaiah really did come to tell me what was to come—it might only lead to more confusion. It would likely only lead to fear of my circumstances, rather than fear of my Lord.

Perhaps all I really need to hear are the promises. Perhaps all I need to do is wait.

You are to regard only the Lord of Hosts as holy.
Only He should be feared;
Only He should be held in awe.
He will be your sanctuary.
– Isaiah 8:13-14

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Claire Gibson is a freelance writer and editor whose work has been featured both locally and nationally in publications including The Washington Post, and Entrepreneur Magazine. An Army kid who grew up at West Point, New York, Claire is currently growing roots in Nashville, Tennessee. She loves her husband, Patrick, and their dog, Winnie.

Post Comments (136)

136 thoughts on "The Lord of Hosts, the Only Refuge"

  1. Bethany Lauer says:

    Wow, wow, wow. This hit HARD…but that good kind of hard. Thank you, Lord.

  2. Bec says:

    I love this: And I will wait on the Lord: Waiting on the Lord is not passive inactivity. It means to wait on the Lord as a waiter would wait on a table. It means to be totally attentive to the Lord, focused on His every move, and responsive to His every desire.

  3. Ashley says:

    Thank you for explaining this passage! I was so confused when reading it, so I really appreciated you clearing things up!

  4. Danya Ho says:

    God is with us, even in calamity. Our fear is not proof that our God is absent.

  5. Bek says:

    I am a highly emotional woman who allows herself far too often to be driven by it. I am reminders today that although this is my reality, I don’t need to allow them to dictate to me what is truth. God alone is truth and in the midst of my circumstances, rather than allowing my emotions to control and have their way, I can and I must listen instead to the voice of truth who is always by my side! Thank you.

  6. Katy says:

    I am in a season of waiting and today’s devotional truly spoke to me. At mass and during the week we discuss worry -worrying about the future and how it steals joy from today. So often I want to know what is going to happen in my life today, tomorrow or a year from now. The truth is, I fear I would be even more miserable if my own Isaiah showed up. Would I worry even more if my plans didn’t turn out just right?

    I am hoping this Lenten season will help me to live more in the now and to stop stealing the joy from today, tomorrow and weeks to come by simply living for today.

    You are enough, Lord. Allow me to put my complete trust and faith in you because your timing is the only timing I need.

    1. Hannah Booker says:

      Hi Katy, I can relate to your feeling of living in fear. I find myself becoming stressed in the evenings and anxious about what’s to come tomorrow…much less, the next week, month, and year. I’m trying to learn to mind my own business because I am not the Lord of my own life. It’s no concern of mine what is to come, I am simply here to live my life to honor Him and glorify Him in whatever may come. I am finding that by focusing on this I live with much more joy and peace, and much less anxiety.

      I hope you find peace in your season of waiting.

  7. Kristena says:

    This year is my Year of No Fear (exodus 10-14) and this verse from Isaiah is so reaffirming that fear is reserved for our Lord and God only.

  8. Candice says:

    This was exactly what I needed to hear. I’m struggling with my next steps in life and what I should do and I just want God to come tell me but this reading is guiding me to wait and have hope. Couldn’t have come at a better time. It’s not my timing but the Lords timing for me.

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