Isaiah, 64

New Jerusalem Bible

1 as fire sets brushwood alight, as fire makes water boil -- to make your name known to your foes; the nations would tremble at your presence,

2 at the unexpected miracles you would do. (Oh, that you would come down, in your presence the mountains would quake!)

3 Never has anyone heard, no ear has heard, no eye has seen any god but you act like this for the sake of those who trust him.

4 You come to meet those who are happy to act uprightly; keeping your ways reminds them of you. Yes, you have been angry and we have been sinners; now we persist in your ways and we shall be saved.

5 We have all been like unclean things and our upright deeds like filthy rags. We wither, all of us, like leaves, and all our misdeeds carry us off like the wind.

6 There is no one to invoke your name, to rouse himself to hold fast to you, for you have hidden your face from us and given us up to the power of our misdeeds.

7 And yet, Yahweh, you are our Father; we the clay and you our potter, all of us are the work of your hands.

8 Yahweh, do not let your anger go too far and do not remember guilt for ever. Look, please, we are all your people;

9 your holy cities have become a desert, Zion has become a desert, Jerusalem a wasteland.

10 Our holy and glorious Temple, in which our ancestors used to praise you, has been burnt to the ground; all our delight lies in ruins.

11 Yahweh, can you restrain yourself at all this? Will you stay silent and afflict us beyond endurance?




Versículos relacionados com Isaiah, 64:

Isaiah 64 is a chapter that talks about the cry of God's people for their intervention and redemption in the face of their situation of sin and removal from the Lord. The verses selected below deal with topics such as God's righteousness and mercy, the importance of prayer and pursuit of God, and the promise of restoration.

Psalm 85:10: "Mercy and truth have met; justice and peace kissed." This verse talks about the union between righteousness and the mercy of God, who are found in the redemptive work of Christ, who paid the price for our sins and granted us forgiveness and salvation.

Isaiah 65:24: "Even before crying out, I will answer; still speaking, I will answer." Here God promises to respond to the cry of his people even before they express him in words, showing his attention and love for each of his children.

Psalm 80:3: "O God, restore us and make your face shine, that we may be saved." This psalm expresses the plea of ​​God's people for its restoration and salvation, and reflects the cry presented in Isaiah 64.

Isaiah 63:7: I will celebrate the mercies of the Lord and their many benefits, according to all that the Lord has granted us and according to the great kindness to the house of Israel, a goodness that has granted him according to his mercy and according to the multitude of the its benefits. " In this verse, Isaiah recalls the many blessings that God has already granted to his people, and highlights the importance of celebrating and thanking these blessings in prayer.

Isaiah 65:17: "For behold, I create new heavens and new earth, and there will be no memory of past things, will never be remembered." This verse brings God's promise that he will do a completely new work in the lives of his people, restoring everything that was lost by sin and bringing a new time of peace and joy.





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