Today's Scripture Reading (May 14, 2026): Isaiah 19 & 20
Coming
out of World War I, the Western Powers decided that soldiers who were taken
prisoner during a conflict should retain their fundamental human rights. Those
rights included protection from torture, access to health care, fair treatment,
communication with family, eventual release, and not to be discriminated
against, despite the inherent limitations of being a prisoner. Some might argue
that these are universal rights, not just something dreamed up by Western
Powers. But that is not quite true.
For
instance, we know that in World War II, Prisoners of War detained by the
Japanese were not provided with these rights. Actually, a lot of prisoners were
killed outright. The death rate in Japanese prison camps was 27 percent. Or,
seeing it from the reverse, if the Japanese took you prisoner, you had a 73
percent chance of surviving the experience. If the Allied forces took you
prisoner, you had a 96 percent chance of living through the experience. And
that is a significant difference.
We know
that prisoners were tortured by the Japanese, both physically and mentally, and
sometimes worked to death. But there was a reason for this difference. In
Japanese thinking, being taken prisoner was considered dishonorable. And the
dishonored had no rights, so they could be treated any way that their captors
wanted to treat them. Allied prisoners had no rights, nor were any protections
expected for Japanese prisoners taken by Allied forces.
In
ancient times, this was true as well. What we miss about the story of Sodom and
Gomorrah was that, at that time, homosexual sex was simply one way of
dishonoring a captive. Another method of dishonoring an enemy was to make them march
without clothes.
God
instructs Isaiah to go without clothes, not just for a day or a month, but for
three years. It is amazing that we don't remember Isaiah as the naked prophet.
He walked on stony ground with no protection for his feet and under the hot sun
with no protection for his body. And this nudity, regardless of how much Isaiah
had actually taken off, was to send a message that the Assyrians would take the
inhabitants of Egypt and Cush prisoner. When they did, they would be marched
out of the country in humiliation with no clothes.
There
might have been another message. Judah would leave their nation the same way,
although it wouldn't be the Assyrians that would take them captive, but the
Babylonians. Regardless of who their captives would be, the people would be
marched out of their nation in disgrace because they refused to follow their God.
Tomorrow's
Scripture Reading: Isaiah 21