What steps can we take to recall God's works, inspired by Isaiah 63:11? Isaiah 63:11—A Call to Remember “Then His people remembered the days of old, the days of Moses: Where is the One who brought them through the sea with the shepherds of His flock? Where is the One who set His Holy Spirit among them?” Isaiah pictures Israel deliberately looking back—rehearsing God’s dramatic rescue at the Red Sea so that present faith could rise again. That simple act of remembrance still fuels our walk today. Why Remembering Matters • Forgets leads to fear. When we lose sight of past deliverance, current challenges loom larger (Deuteronomy 8:11–14). • Memory stirs worship. “Bless the Lord, O my soul, and forget not all His benefits” (Psalm 103:2). • Recalling builds trust for the future (Romans 15:4). Practical Steps to Recall God’s Works • Keep a personal “Red Sea journal” – Write down answered prayers, providential meetings, timely Scriptures. – Date each entry so you can watch the thread of God’s faithfulness unfold (Psalm 78:4). • Revisit landmark Scriptures aloud – Read Exodus 14, Joshua 4, and other rescue narratives regularly. – Speaking the text reinforces memory and anchors the heart (Romans 10:17). • Set up visible reminders – Israel stacked twelve stones from the Jordan “so that this would be a sign among you” (Joshua 4:6–7). – Frame a verse, place a symbol on your desk, or mark a family calendar with spiritual anniversaries. • Tell the next generation – “Make them known to your children and grandchildren” (Deuteronomy 4:9). – Storytelling cements truth both for the listener and the teller. • Celebrate at the table – Take Communion thoughtfully, linking the bread and cup to the greater exodus Jesus accomplished (Luke 22:19–20). – Share testimonies over meals; ordinary fellowship becomes a memory‐factory. • Sing the stories – Many hymns and worship songs are miniature theology lessons (Exodus 15:1–2). – Melody fixes truth in the mind where mere prose sometimes slips away. • Pray Scripture back to God – Use passages like Psalm 136, repeating the refrains of His steadfast love. – Prayerful recitation engraves the works of God on both head and heart. • Mark transitions with gratitude – New job, new home, new school year—pause and dedicate the season, naming how the Lord brought you here (1 Samuel 7:12). Living in Continuous Remembrance Intentional remembering isn’t nostalgia; it is fuel for present obedience. As Isaiah’s audience looked back to Moses, we look back to the Cross and empty tomb, confident that “Jesus Christ is the same yesterday and today and forever” (Hebrews 13:8). The God who once parted the sea still parts obstacles today—and every deliberate act of remembrance keeps that truth ringing in our souls. |