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Isaiah 36 Teaching Notes / Biblical Summary

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Isaiah 36 Teaching Notes / Biblical Summary

Historical narrative begins as Assyria threatens Jerusalem. The Rabshakeh mocks Judah’s faith and ridicules trust in God. The people remain silent, reflecting the gravity of the crisis.

Christ-Foreshadowing

Christ remains faithful under mocking and opposition, trusting fully in God’s purpose.

Isaiah 36 — “The Voice at the Wall” (HISTORICAL NARRATIVE — COMBINED STYLE)

🎯 Core Message: Faith is tested when loud threats challenge quiet trust. Whose voice will you believe?

Song Lyrics (Narrative + Clear)

Verse 1

In Hezekiah’s faithful reign,

Assyria came with iron claim.

Strong cities fell, the land laid bare,

Jerusalem felt tightening air.

From Lachish marched the king’s command,

Rabshakeh stood with threats in hand.

He raised his voice by the city wall,

So all could hear, so faith might fall.

Chorus

Whose voice will rule your heart today?

The threat you see, or what God says?

When fear speaks loud and truth feels small,

Will you trust the Lord—or fear the wall?

Verse 2

“Don’t trust Egypt, weak and frail,

A splintered reed that always fails.

And don’t trust God—He won’t defend,

Where are the gods that couldn’t stand?”

He mocked their faith, their hope, their king,

Spoke fluent truth mixed with poison sting.

He offered peace at the price of trust,

A lie wrapped well in promise dust.

Chorus

Whose voice will rule your heart today?

The threat you see, or what God says?

When fear speaks loud and truth feels small,

Will you trust the Lord—or fear the wall?

Bridge

He spoke in words the people knew,

To plant his doubt where fear already grew.

But silence stood where panic pressed—

The king had said, “Do not confess.”

Final Chorus

When enemies shout, when lies sound wise,

When faith is tried before all eyes,

Hold your peace, don’t answer fear—

The Lord still reigns, He still is near.

The battle’s voice may shake the land,

But victory rests in God’s own hand.

Outro

The threat was loud… the silence strong.

The answer comes—but not yet spoken.