Lesson 121:
Isaiah 24–28
Introduction
Isaiah
prophesied that the wicked will be destroyed and the righteous will receive
great blessings at the Savior’s Second Coming. Isaiah also testified that the
Savior is the only sure foundation on which to build our lives.
I. Isaiah 24–27
Isaiah describes the
destruction of the wicked and praises the Lord for blessing the righteous
---Explain
that in the 1970s a professor conducted an experiment in which he showed three-
to five-year-old children a marshmallow. He told them that they could eat that
one marshmallow right away, or they could get two marshmallows if they waited
20 minutes. (You might consider giving students the same challenge.)
---What do you think most of the children
did?
---Do you think you would have waited 20
minutes when you were that age? Why or why not?
---What are some things the Lord
has asked us to wait for? (Write students’ responses on the board. You will
refer to this list later in the lesson.)
---Invite
students to look for principles as they study Isaiah 24–27 that will help them understand
why it is important for them to be patient as they wait for the Lord to deliver
the blessings He promises.
---Summarize
Isaiah 24 by explaining that it records a
prophecy of the destruction of the wicked at the Second Coming. Then explain
that Isaiah 25 contains a poetic celebration of
the blessings the Lord will give to the righteous.
---Take
turns reading aloud from Isaiah 25:1–4 and look for what Isaiah said he
Lord had been for the righteous.
---What did Isaiah say the Lord had been for
the righteous?
---Tell
students that Isaiah 25:6–12 includes some of Isaiah’s
prophecies about the joy the righteous will feel when the Lord comes again.
---Invite students to report what they find.
---Explain
that the symbolic feast described in verse 6 represents the idea that people
of all nations will be invited to partake of the blessings of the gospel.
---In what ways is a feast a good
representation of the blessings that people who accept the gospel can receive?
---Point out
the phrase “he will destroy … the veil that is spread over all nations” in verse 7. This prophecy refers to the
time in which we live (see Moses 7:60–61). The “veil” of darkness that
covers the earth refers to widespread lack of knowledge about God and His
gospel and lack of faith in Him. This darkness is dispelled by the light of the
Restoration of the gospel of Jesus Christ, which will eventually penetrate all nations
(see D&C 101:23).
---How did the Savior “swallow up death in
victory”?
---What do you think it means that the Lord
“will wipe away tears from off all faces”?
---Invite
students to read Isaiah 25:9 silently, looking for what the
Lord’s people will say in the Millennium.
---What will the Lord’s people say in the Millennium?
---What principle can we learn
from this verse? (As students respond, help them identify the following truth: If we wait
for the Lord, then we can receive His salvation and rejoice. Consider inviting students to
mark the phrases in verse 9 that teach this truth.)
---Explain
that Isaiah’s prophecy can also apply to waiting on the Lord for promised
blessings.
---What does it mean for us to wait for the
Lord?
---If
possible, provide students with copies of the following statement by Elder
Robert D. Hales of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles. Invite a student to
read it aloud, and ask the class to follow along and look for what it means to
wait for the Lord:
“In the
scriptures, the word wait means to hope, to anticipate, and to trust. To hope
and trust in the Lord requires faith, patience, humility, meekness,
long-suffering, keeping the commandments, and enduring to the end” (“Waiting upon the
Lord: Thy Will Be Done,” Ensign or Liahona, Nov. 2011, 72).
---Refer to
the list on the board of things the Lord has asked us to wait for.
---What are some additional things we may
need to wait for the Lord to bless us with? (Possible answers include faith,
answers to prayers, revelation, help in overcoming temptation, forgiveness, marriage, children, physical or spiritual
healing, testimony, and answers to questions we struggle with.)
---When have you needed to wait for the Lord
before receiving a blessing? What did the Lord require from you before He
blessed you?
---Why was the blessing you received worth
the wait?
---Invite
students to write on the back of the statement by Elder Hales or on another
piece of paper a goal that states how they will more faithfully wait for the
Lord now so that they can rejoice in the blessings that will come later. Ask
them to take the paper home and put it somewhere where they will see it often
to remind them of their goal.
---Summarize
Isaiah 26–27 by explaining that Isaiah
testified that we can trust in the Lord forever.
--- You may
want to suggest that students mark Isaiah 26:4, which teaches about the
importance of trusting in the Lord. Isaiah also used the imagery of a vineyard
to show how the Lord cares for His people.
II. Isaiah 28 Isaiah prophesies of the
destruction of Ephraim and testifies that Christ is the sure foundation
---If
possible, bring to class a ladder, a stone, a clod of dirt, and a seed (or draw
these items on the board). Display these items, and invite students to look for
how they relate to gospel principles they study Isaiah 28.
---Invite
students to imagine trying to climb the ladder by skipping four rungs at a
time.
---Why would it be difficult to climb a
ladder by skipping four rungs at a time?
---Explain
that in Isaiah 28 we read that Isaiah taught a
truth that the wicked Northern Kingdom of Israel needed to understand.
---Take
turns reading aloud from Isaiah
28:9–10, 13 looking for
a principle we can learn about receiving knowledge and understanding from the
Lord.
---To help
students better understand the content of these verses, direct them to also
read the information in Isaiah 28:9,
footnote b, and Isaiah 28:13,
footnote b.
---What principle can we learn from these
verses about how the Lord reveals truth? (Students may suggest several
principles, but make sure they identify the following truth: The Lord
reveals truth to us precept upon precept and line upon line. You may want to suggest that
students mark the phrases in verses 10
and 13 that teach
this truth.)
---What are precepts? (Laws or teachings.)
---What does it mean that the
Lord reveals truth “precept upon precept” and “line upon line”?
---How does this truth relate to the ladder?
(The Lord reveals truth to us one step at a time.)
---Ask the
class to listen for reasons why the Lord reveals truth line upon line.
“It is not
wisdom that we should have all knowledge at once presented before us; but that
we should have a little at a time; then we can comprehend it.
“When you
climb up a ladder, you must begin at the bottom, and ascend step by step, until
you arrive at the top; and so it is with the principles of the gospel—you must
begin with the first, and go on until you learn all the principles of exaltation”
(Teachings of Presidents of the Church: Joseph Smith [2007], 268).
---Why do you think the Lord reveals truth to
us one step at a time?
---Summarize
Isaiah 28:14–15 by explaining that the people
did not think they needed the word of the Lord because they believed other
things would save them from the problems they would experience.
---Show
students the stone.
---Ask
students why builders use stone in the foundations of buildings.
---Read Isaiah 28:16 aloud and look for how Isaiah
described the stone that Zion, or the Church, would be built on.
---How did Isaiah describe the stone?
---In what ways is the stone a representation
of the Savior? (After students respond, write the following principle on the
board: The Savior is the only sure foundation upon which to build our
lives.)
---Summarize
Isaiah 28:17–20 by explaining that the Lord told
the inhabitants of the Northern Kingdom of Israel that they would be swept away
because they believed they could build on something other than the Savior.
---Show
students the dirt clod.
---According to verses 24–25, why does the plowman plow his
fields? (To break the dirt clods and prepare the soil for the seeds.)
---Explain
that just as a plowman breaks apart clods of dirt to soften the soil before
planting seeds, the Lord often gives us experiences that will help soften our
hearts to prepare us to receive His word.
---Show
students the seed.
---Read Isaiah 28:27–29 aloud and look for what Isaiah
said about seeds. Explain that fitches, cumin, and bread corn (wheat) are types
of seeds and that threshing is a process of removing the seed from its pod or
stalk.
---What did Isaiah say about how the fitches
and cumin seeds are threshed? (They are not threshed with a threshing
instrument; rather, they are beaten out with a staff or rod, which is a more
gentle process.)
---Why do you think some seeds need to be
threshed in a gentle way?
---What did Isaiah say about how the wheat is
threshed? (It can be “bruised,” or crushed, which is a rougher process.)
---Explain
that this analogy teaches that a farmer knows that different seeds need to be
threshed in different ways.
---What principle can we learn from this
metaphor about how Heavenly Father works with His children? (Students may
identify a variety of principles, including the following truth: Because the
Lord knows each of us individually, He gives us personalized experiences to
help us grow.)
---Invite
students to share experiences they have had that illustrate this principle.
---Consider
sharing one of your own experiences.
Commentary and Background
Information
Isaiah 25:6.
“A feast of wines on the lees”
“The word
lees in this passage refers to the sediments attending the preparation of wine;
thus ‘wine on the lees’ implies a wine that has been preserved for some time
and, less the sediments left on the bottom, is ‘well refined’—symbolic
therefore of the harvest of abundant and supernal blessings awaiting the
faithful and obedient” (Ed J. Pinegar and Richard J. Allen, Unlocking
the Old Testament [2009], 331).
Isaiah 25:9.
“We have waited for him”
Elder
Robert D. Hales of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles shared the following
account of how President David O. McKay had to wait upon the Lord:
“As a young
man, President David O. McKay prayed for a witness of the truthfulness of
the gospel. Many years later, while he was serving his mission in Scotland,
that witness finally came. Later he wrote, ‘It was an assurance to me that
sincere prayer is answered “sometime, somewhere”’ [Teachings of Presidents of
the Church: David O. McKay (2003), xviii].
“We may not
know when or how the Lord’s answers will be given, but in His time and His way,
I testify, His answers will come. For some answers we may have to wait until
the hereafter. This may be true for some promises in our patriarchal blessings
and for some blessings for family members. Let us not give up on the Lord. His
blessings are eternal, not temporary” (“Waiting upon the
Lord: Thy Will Be Done,” Ensign or Liahona, Nov. 2011, 73).
Isaiah
28:10, 13. “Line upon line”
Elder
David A. Bednar of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles clarified the Lord’s
pattern for giving us spiritual knowledge:
“I believe
many of us unknowingly accept a faulty assumption about the Lord’s pattern. And
this faulty assumption then produces erroneous expectations about how we
receive spiritual knowledge. And that faulty assumption and our misinformed
expectations ultimately hinder our ability to recognize and respond to the
promptings of the Holy Ghost. Let me suggest that many of us
typically assume we will receive an answer or a prompting to our earnest prayers
and pleadings. And we also frequently expect that such an answer or a prompting
will come immediately and all at once. Thus, we tend to believe the Lord will
give us A BIG ANSWER QUICKLY AND ALL AT ONE TIME. However, the pattern
repeatedly described in the scriptures suggests we receive ‘line upon line,
precept upon precept,’ or in other words, many small answers over a period of
time. Recognizing and understanding this pattern is an important key to
obtaining inspiration and help from the Holy Ghost” (“Line upon Line,
Precept upon Precept,” New Era, Sept. 2010, 3–4; emphasis in original).
Right margin extras:
PowerPoint:
Old Testament lesson 121—Isaiah 24–28
Line Upon
Line (0:51)
Elder David A. Bednar of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles teaches that in this life, our spiritual development will consist of “small, steady, incremental spiritual improvements.” Consider showing this video to help students understand the following truth: The Lord reveals truth to us precept upon precept and line upon line.
Elder David A. Bednar of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles teaches that in this life, our spiritual development will consist of “small, steady, incremental spiritual improvements.” Consider showing this video to help students understand the following truth: The Lord reveals truth to us precept upon precept and line upon line.
Come unto
Christ: 2014 Theme Song (4:48)
No matter what we may be struggling with, there is always hope if we come unto Christ. Consider showing this video to help students understand how the Atonement of Jesus Christ can help them in their lives.
No matter what we may be struggling with, there is always hope if we come unto Christ. Consider showing this video to help students understand how the Atonement of Jesus Christ can help them in their lives.
Using
objects can be an effective way for teachers to help students understand
principles of the gospel. Objects can help students visualize, analyze, and
understand the scriptures, especially when the objects are used to stimulate a
discussion.
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