
Isaiah 43:3b “I give Egypt for your ransom, Cush and Seba in your stead. Since you are precious and honored in my sight, and because I love you, I will give men in exchange for you, and people in exchange for your life.”
This is a humbling expression of God’s grace. Let me give you a little history behind Isaiah’s words. The people of Judah were taken into captivity by the Empire of Babylon. They were exported from their homeland and forced to live in a foreign country for seventy years. In order to bring them home, a couple of things had to happen. The Babylonian Empire had to be fall to a stronger empire with different policies for the people it ruled, one that would let the Jews go home to Jerusalem.
That was the Persian Empire. And the nations that filled the vacuum when the Jews were taken away had to be defeated and subjugated by the Persians so that they wouldn’t stand in the way of the Jews going home. That was Egypt, Cush, and Seba.
So, in order to take care of his people, the Lord brought defeat on these other countries. He let them lose their freedom. Wars were fought. People died. In a sense, he traded their welfare for that of his people Israel. He preserved Israel as his distinct people at the expense of these other nations.
That was not because the Jews were better people. The Lord was constantly struggling with them and trying to get them to behave. It was because the Lord chose to show them grace. “Since you are precious and honored in my sight, and because I love you,” he says through Isaiah here. That’s how he deals with the people he has redeemed.
You are his redeemed today. And the Lord himself hasn’t changed. It is inevitable in our world that not everyone is going to be a friend of the Lord and his redeemed. What serves your best interests, especially your spiritual needs, may not serve the interests of other nations, institutions, or even individuals. It’s not that we are better people. We sin like everyone else.
But if there is a conflict between what serves the faith and salvation of the people he has redeemed for himself, and what serves the welfare of those who have no particular interest in him, no relationship with him in faith, then he knows what he will do. “I will give…people in exchange for your life.” God will intervene for us and against them.
So don’t be troubled by what you see happening on the international stage, or in the halls of political power, or in the movements that seem to oppose Christianity and its beliefs. They can’t hurt you, even if they should kill you. The redeemed don’t have to be afraid. The Lord will preserve them, even at other’s expense.







