Fulfillment of God’s Promises (Daily Refresh 12-04)
Hundreds of years before Jesus, the people of God were in trouble.
They were stuck in life, unable to help themselves, and perhaps beginning to doubt that God would save them. Have you ever felt the same way? If so, you might relate to the original audience of this verse—the exiles in Babylon.
The Babylonians conquered God’s people and land, sending them hundreds of miles away. Maybe they thought that God had abandoned them, or that He couldn’t hear their cries. But God is always close—especially when His people call on His name.
Isaiah let his people know that God would provide a way out of Babylonian captivity. And God kept His promise, allowing His people to return home.
Generations later, many of God’s people saw themselves as being in a new exile. They were home, but all was not well. So they remembered this verse and its promise—that no matter how dark or desperate our situation might be, God is able to provide a path out of brokenness, heartbreak, and despair into a whole, healthy future.
Little did they know that an even more permanent solution to the darkness they lived in was coming. Isaiah 40:3 is a prophecy that was not only fulfilled when the exiles left Babylon and went home, but was also fulfilled in the coming of the Messiah. Through Jesus, God paved a permanent path for people to come out of darkness and find hope, strength, and peace. God provided a permanent way out of darkness and into light.
So what are you going through? What’s your “Babylon?” It might be a habit you can’t break, a loved one who keeps making self-destructive decisions, or a mental health challenge that feels overwhelming. No matter what it is, God can make a way out of brokenness and into life.
My Thoughts
Honestly, until I read this devotional, I never thought about it before. What is my Babylon? I think it is my health challenges and how discouraged I get sometimes because of them. But I also think it is being distant from children and grandchildren and feeling lonely at times. So, can God move me out of Babylon? I think He does that for me daily as I spend time with Him and have my soul refreshed by His Spirit and power. The aches and pains and illnesses don’t immediately disappear, but I am more able to cope with them and know that one day I will no longer have pain and that I will be able to breathe well without the help of nebulizer and inhalers. Jesus gives me that hope. The loneliness of not having grandchildren nearby doesn’t go away either, but God reassures me that He is close and that He will always be there. When I am feeling alone, I only have to speak His name.
So, what is your Babylon? What is holding you captive in the darkness of everyday life and its challenges. I would like each of you to think about it and release it to God so that it’s not a place of captivity but it becomes a place of looking up to the One who always offers hope. He has a plan for each of us, just as He did for captive Israel, and His plans are always good.





