Lifespring! One Year Bible Rewind

Hosted BySteve Webb

Read through the Bible in one year with the OG Godcaster, Steve Webb. This is a rewind series of the award winning daily podcast in which Steve reads a section of the Bible and then shares thoughts on the day's reading.

S3E047-Isaiah 34-39: The King Who Prayed…and Lived

Context: In this Prophecy Friday episode of the Lifespring One Year Bible Rewind, we walk through Isaiah 34–39 and watch a proud empire crumble while a king on his deathbed prays and lives. This episode explores judgment on the nations, joy for the redeemed, a siege that never succeeds, and a healing that seems impossible.

Lifespring One Year Bible Rewind cover art

Entities: Steve Webb; King Hezekiah (The King Who Prayed); Sennacherib; Isaiah; Assyria; Jerusalem; Lifespring One Year Bible Rewind; Lifespring WhyChristmas; William Paterson; Dwight L. Moody; Billy Sunday; Helen Sunday; New English Bible.

Why this episode matters: Isaiah 34–39 shows us that world events, military threats, and even our personal health crises are not random. God is at work in history, in nations, and in the private moments when one believer turns to the wall and cries out in faith.

Today’s Reading

  • Prophecy Friday: Isaiah 34–39
  • Judgment on the nations and on Edom
  • The Highway of Holiness and joy for the redeemed
  • The Assyrian siege under Sennacherib and his threats against Jerusalem
  • Hezekiah’s prayer and God’s rescue of the city
  • Hezekiah’s sickness, tears, and healing with fifteen more years added to his life
  • Hezekiah’s misstep in showing everything to the Babylonians and Isaiah’s sober prophecy

To follow along in your own Bible, you can read Isaiah 34–39 on BibleGateway.

Episode Summary

We begin with some fun: it is National Ninja Day, and you probably did not see that coming. Then we dive straight into the heaviness of Isaiah 34, where God’s judgment on rebellious nations is described in graphic detail. The imagery is not meant to scare believers, but to remind us that God takes evil seriously and that no empire is beyond His reach.

Isaiah 35 answers the darkness with hope. The desert bursts into bloom, the weak are strengthened, and the Highway of Holiness appears for the redeemed. This is a picture of God’s kingdom breaking in, where sorrow and mourning give way to joy and gladness.

In Isaiah 36–37 we move into the historical narrative of King Hezekiah and the Assyrian threat. The field commander mocks Judah’s trust in the Lord and boasts that no god has ever stopped Assyria. The people on the wall stay silent, obeying the king’s command, while Hezekiah humbles himself, tears his clothes, goes to the temple, and seeks Isaiah’s counsel. God responds with a clear word: do not be afraid. The Lord Himself will handle Sennacherib. He does exactly that, striking down the Assyrian army and sending Sennacherib home, where he eventually dies in his own temple.

Isaiah 38 takes us from national crisis to personal crisis. Hezekiah is told he will not recover. Instead of giving up, he turns to the wall, prays honestly, and weeps. God listens, responds, and grants him fifteen more years. Hezekiah’s song shows the emotional journey he has been on: fear, sorrow, reflection, and finally praise for a God who turns His face away from sin and restores life.

In Isaiah 39, however, we see Hezekiah’s vulnerability. When visitors arrive from Babylon, he shows them everything. Isaiah warns that one day these treasures and even some of his descendants will be taken away. The king is grateful for peace in his own time, but the prophecy hangs over the future of Judah.

In the commentary, we talk about how Sennacherib thought he was unstoppable, yet God says that even his conquests were part of a plan written long before. The proud king was only a pawn. We also look at Hezekiah’s healing as a picture of why it matters to walk with God day by day. When the bad report comes, the believer can pray with confidence, knowing that God hears, even if the answer is different from what we hope for.

On This Date in Church History

Our “On This Date in Church History” segment for December 5 highlights several very different servants of God. We remember missionary and Bible translator William Paterson, whose quiet work with literacy and Scripture helped plant Bible-centered communities in Southern Africa. We look at Dwight L. Moody’s ministry to soldiers during the American Civil War and the Soldiers’ Library Fund that put Bibles and gospel literature into the hands of thousands of men on the front lines.

We hear about the marriage of Billy Sunday and Helen Thompson, a partnership that turned his preaching into a highly organized evangelistic movement, and we touch on the early release of the New English Bible, which helped open Scripture in fresh language to post-war readers. If you are curious about that translation, you can learn more on the New English Bible page.

Key Themes

  • God is sovereign over nations and empires, even when they seem unstoppable.
  • Judgment and mercy sit side by side in Isaiah. Deserts bloom and joy returns after devastation.
  • Prayer is not a last resort. Hezekiah’s honest, tearful prayer changes the story.
  • Powerful people are not as powerful as they appear. God sets the limits on their reach.
  • Faithfulness in everyday life matters when crisis comes. A life walked with God prepares us to pray with confidence.

Links And Next Steps

Connect And Comment

I would love to hear what stood out to you from Isaiah 34–39. Did Hezekiah’s prayer encourage you? Did the picture of the Highway of Holiness give you hope? Share your thoughts, questions, praises, or prayer requests.

Value For Value

If the Lifespring One Year Bible Rewind helps you stay in the Word, please consider returning some value in the form of time, talent, or treasure. You can learn about all the ways to support the show at lifespringmedia.com/support. Your giving helps keep the Bible going out every day without advertisers setting the agenda.

Thank you for listening, praying, and standing with the Lifespring family as we read the Word together and trust the King who still hears when His people pray.

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