
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Share a comment
Fear makes quick plans; faith makes quiet choices. We walk through Isaiah 28–31 as Judah eyes Assyria and sprints toward an alliance with Egypt, only to hear Isaiah’s piercing call to stop scheming and return to a sure foundation. The thread is bold and deeply practical: God lays a precious cornerstone in Zion, offers real rest to weary people, and protects like a hovering bird who sees everything below. We contrast the rush for chariots and horses with the slow power of trust, exploring how control habits form and how they’re unlearned.
We also unpack one of the more debated themes in church life: tongues as a sign. Drawing a line from Isaiah’s prophecy to Pentecost and Paul’s clarity in 1 Corinthians 14, we explain why foreign languages functioned as a temporary sign for unbelieving Israel rather than a spiritual badge. That insight reframes cravings for spectacle and recenters us on the gospel’s aim—clear truth, changed hearts, and rest in Christ.
History gives this message muscle. When Sennacherib’s army encircled Jerusalem, no treaty saved the city. One night, the angel of the Lord swept through the camp, and 185,000 soldiers did not wake up. The point isn’t that planning is bad; it’s that plans without God become panic with paperwork. Isaiah’s counsel lands with hopeful weight: in quietness and trust is your strength, and blessed are those who wait for him. If you’re tempted to lean on bank accounts, networks, or health reports, this conversation invites you to shift your weight back onto the cornerstone.
If this helped you trade hurry for hope, follow the show, share it with a friend who needs courage, and leave a review so others can find it. What scheme do you need to lay down today?
Support the show
By Stephen Davey4.9
195195 ratings
Share a comment
Fear makes quick plans; faith makes quiet choices. We walk through Isaiah 28–31 as Judah eyes Assyria and sprints toward an alliance with Egypt, only to hear Isaiah’s piercing call to stop scheming and return to a sure foundation. The thread is bold and deeply practical: God lays a precious cornerstone in Zion, offers real rest to weary people, and protects like a hovering bird who sees everything below. We contrast the rush for chariots and horses with the slow power of trust, exploring how control habits form and how they’re unlearned.
We also unpack one of the more debated themes in church life: tongues as a sign. Drawing a line from Isaiah’s prophecy to Pentecost and Paul’s clarity in 1 Corinthians 14, we explain why foreign languages functioned as a temporary sign for unbelieving Israel rather than a spiritual badge. That insight reframes cravings for spectacle and recenters us on the gospel’s aim—clear truth, changed hearts, and rest in Christ.
History gives this message muscle. When Sennacherib’s army encircled Jerusalem, no treaty saved the city. One night, the angel of the Lord swept through the camp, and 185,000 soldiers did not wake up. The point isn’t that planning is bad; it’s that plans without God become panic with paperwork. Isaiah’s counsel lands with hopeful weight: in quietness and trust is your strength, and blessed are those who wait for him. If you’re tempted to lean on bank accounts, networks, or health reports, this conversation invites you to shift your weight back onto the cornerstone.
If this helped you trade hurry for hope, follow the show, share it with a friend who needs courage, and leave a review so others can find it. What scheme do you need to lay down today?
Support the show

2,536 Listeners

8,676 Listeners

1,429 Listeners

1,381 Listeners

3,105 Listeners

7,160 Listeners

2,013 Listeners

21,326 Listeners

6 Listeners

5,441 Listeners

248 Listeners

6 Listeners

40,847 Listeners

1,328 Listeners

13,238 Listeners

27 Listeners

13 Listeners

9 Listeners

0 Listeners