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These devotions are part of the Follow the Word Bible reading program at St. John Lutheran Church in Cypress, Texas. This year we are reading through the Scriptures together, listening for how God speaks through his Word day by day. I hope you will join me on this journey.
Today’s readings are Isaiah 31-33, Psalm 40.
Isaiah 31:1-5
Woe to those who go down to Egypt for help
and rely on horses,
who trust in chariots because they are many
and in horsemen because they are very strong,
but do not look to the Holy One of Israel
or consult the LORD!
2 And yet he is wise and brings disaster;
he does not call back his words,
but will arise against the house of the evildoers
and against the helpers of those who work iniquity.
3 The Egyptians are man, and not God,
and their horses are flesh, and not spirit.
When the LORD stretches out his hand,
the helper will stumble, and he who is helped will fall,
and they will all perish together.
4 For thus the LORD said to me,
“As a lion or a young lion growls over his prey,
and when a band of shepherds is called out against him
he is not terrified by their shouting
or daunted at their noise,
so the LORD of hosts will come down
to fight on Mount Zion and on its hill.
5 Like birds hovering, so the LORD of hosts
will protect Jerusalem;
he will protect and deliver it;
he will spare and rescue it.”

There are certain places we associate with particular things. For fine watches, we think of Switzerland. For leather goods, Italy. For camera lenses, Germany once held the highest reputation, though today Japan may be the world’s leading center of photographic optics. Barbecue? Texas. Financial advice? Wall Street – or perhaps Omaha. Country music? Nashville.
For horses and chariots in Isaiah’s day, the place to go was Egypt. Egypt had the reputation, the resources, and the military strength. The problem was not that Egypt had excellent horses. The problem was that Judah looked to Egypt instead of looking to the Holy One of Israel.
It’s easy to understand why. Assyria was the great military superpower of Isaiah’s day. It conquered the northern kingdom of Israel and destroyed Samaria in 722 BC. Later, under King Sennacherib, it invaded Judah, captured many fortified cities, and threatened Jerusalem itself.
That is the immediate background to Isaiah 31. With the Assyrian army seemingly unstoppable, Judah was tempted to trust Egypt’s horses and chariots instead of the LORD.
I don’t want to draw a straight line between Judah and us today. Nor am I willing to equate Israel with the United States. But I will make this connection: the Church is under constant attack. Changing moral standards, a worldview that excludes God, and the misuse of science or philosophy to deny the Creator have drawn many away from the fellowship of believers. Add to that the Church’s own self-inflicted wounds – clergy abuse, infighting, disunity, judgmentalism, complacency, and the temptation to measure success by worldly standards – and it becomes easy to trust human ingenuity more than the Lord himself.
And what about you and me? Do we reach beyond God’s commands for the sake of convenience? In moments of fear or desperation, do we give in to temptation? Do we choose what is easy instead of what is faithful? Where do we instinctively turn when life seems to be closing in around us?
God did not choose the easy path. He did not set aside justice, nor did he abandon love. In Jesus Christ, he satisfied both. The Son of God bore our sin, died our death, and rose again in victory over sin, death, and the devil. Then the Lord entrusted the mission of carrying this Gospel to the ends of the earth to a band of ordinary disciples – a motley crew who, by the power of the Holy Spirit, turned the world upside down.
That mission continues today. We still face the temptation to trust the “horses and chariots” of our own age. Yet our strength is found where it has always been found – not in Egypt, not in human wisdom or power, but in the Lord, who is faithful to save. As Isaiah says:
“The Egyptians are man, and not God, and their horses are flesh, and not spirit.” (Isaiah 31:3)
In Jesus Christ we have everything Egypt could never provide – life, forgiveness and salvation. He is our Savior, and he will not fail those who trust in him.






