God offers His people quiet streams of trust, but rejecting those streams invites waters that sweep away. The message becomes a sober reminder that when God’s people choose their own way over His, the consequences often rise like a flood: powerful, unstoppable, and deeply revealing. Yet even in the surge of judgment, the text whispers the name Immanuel, reminding Judah that the land still belongs to the Lord, and that His purposes will stand even when the waters rise.
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God offers His people quiet streams of trust, but rejecting those streams invites waters that sweep away. The message becomes a sober reminder that when God’s people choose their own way over His, the consequences often rise like a flood: powerful, unstoppable, and deeply revealing. Yet even in the surge of judgment, the text whispers the name Immanuel, reminding Judah that the land still belongs to the Lord, and that His purposes will stand even when the waters rise.
Write It Down-God's Warning Is Clear - Isaiah 8:1-4
TBC Glassboro Sermons and More
54 minutes 19 seconds
1 week ago
Write It Down-God's Warning Is Clear - Isaiah 8:1-4
Isaiah 8:1-4 stands as a solemn reminder: God still speaks clearly, but His people must be willing to listen, record, and respond. The written Word of God, the Scriptures, remains His permanent revelation, etched in human language for eternal impact. The clarity of His warnings and promises leaves humanity without excuse. As Isaiah’s generation discovered, to disregard what God has clearly written is to invite the very judgment He sought to prevent. As this passage unfolds, believers are called to consider the weight of God’s Word, not as a distant echo, but as a present command: Write it down. Remember it. Believe it. Live by it. God’s warnings are not meant to alarm for the sake of fear, but to awaken hearts to faith, obedience, and trust in the One whose Word never fails.
TBC Glassboro Sermons and More
God offers His people quiet streams of trust, but rejecting those streams invites waters that sweep away. The message becomes a sober reminder that when God’s people choose their own way over His, the consequences often rise like a flood: powerful, unstoppable, and deeply revealing. Yet even in the surge of judgment, the text whispers the name Immanuel, reminding Judah that the land still belongs to the Lord, and that His purposes will stand even when the waters rise.