Today's Scripture Reading (May 11, 2026): Isaiah 15 & 16
Have you
ever heard of the Sepik River? What about the Brahmaputra or Guadalquivir
Rivers? Maybe the Indus River? I have to admit that I had never heard of the
first three Rivers. However, I am familiar with the Indus River, maybe just
because I listen to Anita Anand and William Dalrymple's "Empire"
podcast. The Indus River flows through China and India, running the entire
length of Pakistan, and empties into the Arabian Sea. The Indus is so important
that it lends its name to one of the largest countries in the world: India. As
for the Brahmaputra, it flows through Tibet, China, India, and Bangladesh,
while the Guadalquivir River flows entirely within the boundaries of Spain. The
Sepik River is located in Papua New Guinea. Every one of these rivers is
essential to life in its area. Like so many rivers in the world, it was along
the banks of these rivers that the cities of the area began to grow. Rivers
bring life. And while we may not have heard of these rivers, that doesn't mean
they are unimportant. Every city I have lived in has had a river running
through it, and that is no accident.
We don't
know what "the waters of Nimrim" might refer to. It might be a river,
a lake, or even a city. What we know is that "the waters of Nimrim"
were important for life. The word "Nimrim" refers to "pure"
or "wholesome water." It can also indicate "basins of clear
water." Nimrim itself was associated with the Kingdom of Moab: here in
Isaiah, and again in the prophecy of Jeremiah after the fall of Jerusalem.
Jeremiah is also speaking about Moab, and he writes;
"The
sound of their cry rises
from Heshbon to Elealeh and Jahaz,
from Zoar as far as
Horonaim and Eglath Shelishiyah,
for even the waters of Nimrim are dried up (Jeremiah 48:34).
From the context, we know that these waters were necessary
for life and that they had disappeared. Without the water, life disappeared as
well. It is hard to imagine how life could continue in the places where we live
if the rivers or water sources that meander through our towns suddenly
disappeared.
It is
the subject of a conversation that Jesus had with an unnamed woman at a water
source, in this case, a well. And every day, this woman had to come to the well
to get the water that kept her alive. Jesus reminds the woman that while
physical water gives us life, to truly live we need spiritual water as well.
Everyone who drinks this water will be thirsty again, but whoever drinks the water I give
them will never thirst. Indeed, the water I give them will become in them
a spring of water welling up to eternal life (John 4:13-14).
Tomorrow's
Scripture Reading: Isaiah 17
No comments:
Post a Comment