July 19 – Reading 200

by Marcia Rainey | July 19

“JUDGMENT AND PROMISE”
(Isaiah 24:1-27:13)

“In that day the great trumpet will be blown, and those who were lost in the land of Assyria and those who were driven out to the land of Egypt will come and worship the Lord on the holy mountain at Jerusalem.”  – Isaiah 27:13 

If you watch the news, you’re confronted by photo after photo of scenes of devastation—buildings reduced to rubble, families displaced by war, landscapes scarred by fire and flood. Those who are in such crisis must feel overwhelmed and hopeless but yet, in the middle of such ruin, we are often witness to people who cry out, “We will rebuild. We will overcome.” 

The prophet Isaiah lived through a world unraveling. He saw vision after vision of judgment—entire nations collapsing because “they have transgressed the laws, violated the statutes, broken the everlasting covenant” of God (Isaiah 24:5). This scene spans the arch of time to foretell the dramatic judgments of Revelation 6–18.

But Isaiah didn’t just see the ruin. God allowed him to glimpse the restoration that would follow His judgment. Isaiah sees a remnant—survivors who will return to Mount Zion with songs of praise on their lips. “They lift up their voices, they sing for joy; over the majesty of the Lord they shout” (Isaiah 24:14).

One day, the trumpet will sound (Isaiah 27:13; 1 Thess. 4:16) and the scattered faithful will gather on God’s holy mountain. Mount Zion–the eternal city of God. There will be a feast for all peoples (Isaiah 25:6), death will be swallowed up forever, and God Himself will wipe away every tear (Isaiah 25:8; Revelation 21:4). On Mount Zion on that day, the faithful of all time and place will sing: “Salvation belongs to our God who sits on the throne, and to the Lamb!” (Revelation 7:10).

These chapters remind us that history is not actually spiraling out of control—it’s actually moving toward redemption. God will judge evil, defeat death, and restore His people. May we live in light of that coming day—humbly, hopeful, righteously, and faithfully–as we await His return when the trumpet sounds.

Simple Truth:
God’s judgment is real, but so is His promise to redeem and restore a remnant of the faithful.

Reflections: 

  1. How does the image of a faithful remnant on Mount Zion challenge or comfort me?

     

  2. What does it look like for me to “live in light of that coming day” in my current season of life?

     

  3. How would my outlook change if I truly believed that history is moving toward restoration, not ruin?

Application: 

  • Choose to sing, praise, and thank God even when the world feels uncertain.

     

  • Be a voice of encouragement to those overwhelmed by what they see in the news or in their own lives.

     

  • Let the coming of the Lord motivate daily repentance and obedience.

Closing Prayer…
Heavenly Father, I praise You as the One who is able to keep me from stumbling and to present me blameless before Your glorious presence without fault and with great joy. You alone are the only God, my Savior. To You, belong all glory, majesty, power and authority through Jesus Christ my Lord, before all ages, now and forevermore! (Jude 24-25) In Jesus’ name, Amen.

About our Author

Marcia Rainey is a wife, mother, Nana, and retired educator who served eight years as principal and 11 years as a middle school Bible and science teacher at Hawthorne Christian Academy. She now spends her days with her grandson and enjoys baking, long walks with her husband, and the view from any mountain or beach.  She is thrilled to be part of the TLC family serving with the children’s, life group, and women’s ministry teams. 

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