Today's Scripture Reading (May 22, 2026): Isaiah 28
Tornado
season has arrived. I live in the colder northern part of the world, which
means that for a significant part of the year, tornadoes just aren't a worry.
Blizzards, snow, and cold temperatures are the things we worry about during the
winter months, and those are conditions under which tornadoes don't develop. In
my part of the world, the first tornado of the "tornado season"
usually occurs between late March and May. Usually, these tornadoes aren't very
strong and cause very little damage. Dangerous tornadoes occur when the mercury
rises and the days get hot. One of the worst tornadoes to hit this area
happened on July 31, 1987. The tornado was rated F4 and stayed on the ground
for just over an hour. Twenty-seven people died in the tornado, and it caused
332.27 million dollars in damage (the adjusted value in today's dollars is 796
million). I had a close friend who lived through the tornado. He was in an area
destroyed by it, and he still remembers what sounded like a freight train rumbling
through his neighborhood. Thirty years later, my friend still goes into a panic
whenever he hears a tornado warning during the summer months. I don't blame
him. I can't imagine what it was like to be that close to such a dangerous
tornado.
Nature can
have a powerful effect on our lives. Tornadoes and hurricanes are just the tip
of the dangers nature poses to those of us living on Earth. Isaiah has seen
some of the worst that nature can throw at an area. He speaks of hailstorms,
something else that I see a lot of during the summer months, and destructive
winds. Isaiah knows the power of driving rain and flooding that accompany
various kinds of storms, which still afflict the Earth. Many of the worst
storms are caused by an interaction between the hot and cold air currents. But
the cause doesn't ease the damage these storms inflict on the people of the
Earth.
Isaiah
is speaking to the Northern Kingdom of Israel, which he calls Ephraim. And he
seems to be surprised by the pride of what he calls "Ephraim's drunkards."
Ephraim has benefited from many things that might be considered an accident of
nature, yet they seem to miss that God put them there. Some dangers are
threatening Ephraim, but God is strong enough to handle the threats that are
coming, if only the nation would trust him. And if they need proof, all they
need to do is look at the power of nature. If God can destroy with a hailstorm
or with the wind, if these natural processes are at his command, what more does
Ephraim need to know? He has the power to protect, if only the people would
trust.
Tomorrow's
Scripture Reading: Isaiah 29
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