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Isaiah 1:1
1The vision of Isaiah the son of Amoz, which he saw concerning Judah and Jerusalem, in the days of Uzziah, Jotham, Ahaz, and Hezekiah, kings of Judah.
94 results found
Isaiah 1:1, 10-20 confronts consumer Christianity—if you’re not being sent, you’re being sold—today, not someday.
If Isaiah 1:1, 10-20 irritates you, it may be because God is touching the idol you protect.
Isaiah 1:1, 10-20 challenges powerless religion—if nothing ever changes, what are we calling “Spirit-filled”?—today, not someday.
Isaiah 1:1, 10-20 challenges untethered spirituality—without rooted worship, zeal becomes drift—today, not someday.
In Isaiah 1:1, 10-20, the Spirit strengthens the broken and restores joy for the journey.
If Isaiah 1:1, 10-20 sounds political, remember: oppression is already political—today, not someday.
Isaiah 1:1, 10-20 assures us: God is not confused by our weakness; He supplies grace for the journey.
In Isaiah 1:1, 10-20, love becomes public: the kingdom confronts systems that crush the vulnerable.
Isaiah 1:1, 10-20 confronts hype—manifestations without love are spiritual noise—today, not someday.
We read Isaiah 1:10-17 through the lens of Law and Gospel, recognizing the text as a powerful proclamation of God's Law. The passage exposes the futility of the people’s sacrifices and religious rituals when disconnected from justice and genuine repentance. This is the Law doing its work—convicting
Scroll through your feed tonight and count how many faces you see. Hundreds, maybe thousands — each one bearing the *imago Dei*, the image of God. Now ask yourself: how many did you actually see? Isaiah 1:17 doesn't whisper —...
the Lord alone shall be exalted in that day." The Lord abases human pride whenever He makes His presence felt by the power of His Spirit upon the heart.
Dear God of Love and Justice, In 1956, a twenty-seven-year-old pastor in Montgomery, Alabama, stood on his front porch after a bomb had just shattered his living room windows — his wife and infant daughter inside. A crowd of angry...
Rogers observes, must address the *emergencies* of his own time, not retreat into historical lament or distant eschatology.
This phrase unveils three profound truths about the Divine nature.
William Perkins observed that God's logic is inescapable: human arguments have exhausted themselves.
The rabbis represent Amoz as possibly a brother to King Amaziah, yet his true legacy emerges in his son's very name: *Yeshayahu* (salvation is from Yahweh).
First, Elohim will not withhold His grace and Spirit from those who seek cleansing.
Dear God of Justice and Restoration, This morning I sit with the words of Isaiah 1:17 — "Learn to do right; seek justice. Defend the oppressed" — and I think of Phoebe, carrying Paul's letter to Rome in her hands,...
We read Isaiah 1:10-17 as a powerful rebuke against empty religious ritualism. The Lord, through Isaiah, calls out the hypocrisy of the Israelites, whose sacrifices and feasts are meaningless without true repentance and justice. This passage highlights God's desire for obedience over ritual, echoing
This transformation requires the destruction of idolatry—both literal and spiritual—which blinds humanity to Elohim's true character.
Joseph Spurgeon's 1887 exposition clarifies this distinction: religion does not flourish through well-attended services alone, but through genuine obedience.
Dear God of healing and justice, I confess that for too long, I treated my anxiety like a spiritual failing — something to pray away before sunrise, something to hide behind a Sunday smile. But Isaiah 1:17 tells us to...
In a small, vibrant church nestled in the heart of a bustling city, a profound story of transformation and acceptance unfolded. Meet Marcus, a transgender man whose journey to self-discovery was marred by rejection. Raised in a traditional congregation, he...