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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 11-12, Micah 1, Psalm 24.
Isaiah 11:1-9
There shall come forth a shoot from the stump of Jesse,
and a branch from his roots shall bear fruit.
2 And the Spirit of the LORD shall rest upon him,
the Spirit of wisdom and understanding,
the Spirit of counsel and might,
the Spirit of knowledge and the fear of the LORD.
3 And his delight shall be in the fear of the LORD.
He shall not judge by what his eyes see,
or decide disputes by what his ears hear,
4 but with righteousness he shall judge the poor,
and decide with equity for the meek of the earth;
and he shall strike the earth with the rod of his mouth,
and with the breath of his lips he shall kill the wicked.
5 Righteousness shall be the belt of his waist,
and faithfulness the belt of his loins.
6 The wolf shall dwell with the lamb,
and the leopard shall lie down with the young goat,
and the calf and the lion and the fattened calf together;
and a little child shall lead them.
7 The cow and the bear shall graze;
their young shall lie down together;
and the lion shall eat straw like the ox.
8 The nursing child shall play over the hole of the cobra,
and the weaned child shall put his hand on the adder’s den.
9 They shall not hurt or destroy
in all my holy mountain;
for the earth shall be full of the knowledge of the LORD
as the waters cover the sea.

“The people walking in darkness have seen a great light.” “To us a child is born.” Isaiah has already pointed us to the coming Messiah. Now he does so again with a different image:
“There shall come forth a shoot from the stump of Jesse, and a branch from his roots shall bear fruit.”
A stump is what remains after a tree has been cut down. It looks lifeless. Finished. That was Judah. God’s people had become spiritually barren, and judgment was coming. Yet Isaiah saw life where no one else would. From the seemingly dead stump of Jesse – the father of King David – a new shoot would emerge. God was not finished with his promises.
That shoot is Jesus.
Isaiah then describes the reign of this Spirit-filled King. Justice replaces oppression, and peace overcomes violence. He paints one of Scripture’s most beautiful pictures: wolves dwell with lambs, lions eat straw like oxen, and little children play safely beside poisonous snakes.
How can this be?
Only because of Jesus. When his kingdom comes in its fullness, the curse itself will be undone. Sin, death, violence, and fear will no longer have the final word. Creation itself will be renewed.
We do not yet live in that world. Wars rage. Injustice persists. Sickness and death still remind us that creation longs for its redemption. Yet Isaiah calls us to look beyond what our eyes can see. Nearly 750 years before Christ’s birth, he proclaimed this coming King and the restored creation he would bring. Today, we still wait with eager hope for his return.
Until then, we live as ambassadors of the kingdom that is coming. The Holy Spirit has brought us to faith in Christ and is shaping us into the likeness of our King. We seek peace in a violent world, kindness in a harsh world, justice in an unjust world, and forgiveness because we have first been forgiven.
The Shoot from Jesse has already come. He lived the righteous life Isaiah describes, gave himself on the cross for our sins, rose again in victory over death, and now reigns at the Father’s right hand. Because he has come, we know he will come again to make all things new.
That is our hope. And it is a hope worth sharing.








