William Faulkner once wrote, “The past is never dead. It's not even past.” Events from the past often intrude into the present in some way. History seems to repeat itself.
Isaiah’s people were on the verge of a new future. They had been prisoners of war in Babylon for a whole generation. Now they were finally on their way home, but they worried about repeating mistakes from the past that had led them to exile. Some even believed their imprisonment was punishment from God for sins of the past.
God spoke through Isaiah to assure them this was indeed a new day. In the tenderness of God, the past was not only dead, it was also truly past. Whatever the circumstances that had led them to exile, whatever they feared they had done to merit God’s punishment, it was over. God offered them a brand new start.
God offers the same new start to us each day. The past is both dead and past. Behold, God is making all things new.
By Grace Burton-Edwards from D365