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āāIsaiah⬠ā41:1ā-ā¬29⬠āMSGā¬ā¬
[1] āQuiet down, far-flung ocean islands. Listen! Sit down and rest, everyone. Recover your strength. Gather around me. Say whatās on your heart. Together letās decide whatās right. [2-3] āWho got things rolling here, got this champion from the east on the move? Who recruited him for this job, then rounded up and corralled the nations so he could run roughshod over kings? Heās off and running, pulverizing nations into dust, leaving only stubble and chaff in his wake. He chases them and comes through unscathed, his feet scarcely touching the path. [4] āWho did this? Who made it happen? Who always gets things started? I did. God. Iām first on the scene. Iām also the last to leave. [5-7] āFar-flung ocean islands see it and panic. The ends of the earth are shaken. Fearfully they huddle together. They try to help each other out, making up stories in the dark. The godmakers in the workshops go into overtime production, crafting new models of no-gods, Urging one another onāāGood job!ā āGreat design!āā pounding in nails at the base so that the things wonāt tip over. [8-10] āBut you, Israel, are my servant. Youāre Jacob, my first choice, descendants of my good friend Abraham. I pulled you in from all over the world, called you in from every dark corner of the earth, Telling you, āYouāre my servant, serving on my side. Iāve picked you. I havenāt dropped you.ā Donāt panic. Iām with you. Thereās no need to fear for Iām your God. Iāll give you strength. Iāll help you. Iāll hold you steady, keep a firm grip on you. [11-13] āCount on it: Everyone who had it in for you will end up out in the coldā real losers. Those who worked against you will end up empty-handedā nothing to show for their lives. When you go out looking for your old adversaries you wonāt find themā Not a trace of your old enemies, not even a memory. Thatās right. Because I, your God, have a firm grip on you and Iām not letting go. Iām telling you, āDonāt panic. Iām right here to help you.ā [14-16] āDo you feel like a lowly worm, Jacob? Donāt be afraid. Feel like a fragile insect, Israel? Iāll help you. I, God, want to reassure you. The God who buys you back, The Holy of Israel. Iām transforming you from worm to harrow, from insect to iron. As a sharp-toothed harrow youāll smooth out the mountains, turn those tough old hills into loamy soil. Youāll open the rough ground to the weather, to the blasts of sun and wind and rain. But youāll be confident and exuberant, expansive in The Holy of Israel! [17-20] āThe poor and homeless are desperate for water, their tongues parched and no water to be found. But Iām there to be found, Iām there for them, and I, God of Israel, will not leave them thirsty. Iāll open up rivers for them on the barren hills, spout fountains in the valleys. Iāll turn the baked-clay badlands into a cool pond, the waterless waste into splashing creeks. Iāll plant the red cedar in that treeless wasteland, also acacia, myrtle, and olive. Iāll place the cypress in the desert, with plenty of oaks and pines. Everyone will see this. No one can miss itā unavoidable, indisputable evidence That I, God, personally did this. Itās created and signed by The Holy of Israel. [21-24] āSet out your case for your gods,ā says God. āBring your evidence,ā says the King of Jacob. āTake the stand on behalf of your idols, offer arguments, assemble reasons. Spread out the facts before us so that we can assess them ourselves. Ask them, āIf you are gods, explain what the past meansā or, failing that, tell us what will happen in the future. Canāt do that? How about doing somethingāanything! Good or badāwhatever. Can you hurt us or help us? Do we need to be afraid?ā They say nothing, because they are nothingā sham gods, no-gods, fool-making gods. [25-29] āI, God, started someone out from the north and heās come. He was called out of the east by name. Heāll stomp the rulers into the mud the way a potter works the clay. Let me ask you, Did anyone guess that this might happen? Did anyone tell us earlier so we might confirm it with āYes, heās right!ā? No one mentioned it, no one announced it, no one heard a peep out of you. But I told Zion all about this beforehand. I gave Jerusalem a preacher of good news. But around here thereās no oneā no one who knows whatās going on. I ask, but no one can tell me the score. Nothing here. Itās all smoke and hot airā sham gods, hollow gods, no-gods.ā

