Today’s Scripture Reading (January 9,
2014): Isaiah 66
Admirable James Stockdale spent eight years
as a prisoner of war during the Vietnam War. He survived incredible hardship
when many others simply gave up and died. In researching Stockdale for his book
“Good to Great”, Jim Collins remarked that he got depressed just reading
Stockdale’s book “In Love and War” – a book written in alternating chapters by
Admiral Stockdale and his wife, Sybil. When Collins asked Stockdale how he
survived his time as a captive and Stockdale replied that “I
never lost faith in the end of the story.
I never doubted not only that I would get out, but also that I would
prevail in the end and turn the experience into the defining event
of my life, which, in retrospect, I would not trade.” Stockdale somehow maintained throughout his captivity that
somehow, in the end, all of the pain that he suffered would be finally worth
it. When Stockdale was finally released on February 12, 1973 he could not stand
upright and he could barely walk as he returned home with his ordeal behind
him. And yet he still clung to the idea that all of his pain, and the eight
years that he spent separated from his family and friends, were somehow all worth
it.
There are a
couple of ways that verse has been interpreted. And the first is to simply say
that this verse speaks of a metaphorical rebirth of Israel from out of the
Babylonian exile, and that rebirth would be without pain. It looks back to the
rise Cyrus the Great and the Persian Empire, and Cyrus sudden release of the
captives sending them once again for home, as being a process that was absent
of pain. But the problem is that that assumes that the 70 years of captivity
were without pain – and that does not seem to make much sense. Any removal of a
people from their home would definitely cause a certain amount of pain – even if
their captors were intending no harm.
Maybe a
better interpretation might to be to understand the passage to be speaking of
the pain of the exile which will end quickly. The prophecy of the end of the captivity
would fill the captives with hope – and in the end the pain of the captivity
would provide a benefit to Israel that would be worth all of the pain that the
nation had to go through – that somehow all of that pain would eventually be worth
it.
Isaiah
likens the process to a mother giving birth to a child. It is not that the mother
does not go through any pain; the pain of childbirth is great. And yet somehow
when you emerge on the other side and you are finally holding that new life in
your arms, the pain seems inconsequential. And in the end, the pain is minor
when compared to the immense joy that is gained in the child that is born.
Tomorrow’s Scripture Reading: Hosea 1
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