Read Isaiah 15.
Moab was the son of Lot (Genesis 19), the result of incest with one of his
daughters. The Moabites settled on the southeast side of the Dead Sea.
Spiritually, they worshiped Baal, not the God of Abraham.
During the Exodus, the Moabites refused passage to the traveling Jews.
The LORD prevented Moses from attacking them. Ruth was a Moabite.
She married into a family from Bethlehem. When her husband died,
she moved to Israel and embraced the true and living God. She then became
the great-grandmother of King David. Saul and David warred against the
Moabites and defeated them.
At the time of Isaiah's writing some of Moab's key cities had already been
destroyed. Those not killed fled in humiliation looking for a place of
safety. Even Isaiah was impacted emotionally (v.5) by what had happened.
The rest of this story continues into chapter 16.
There is an old saying, "The wheels of justice turn slowly, but grind
exceedingly fine."
Because the LORD chooses not to immediately strike a person dead over their
sin, some believe they got away with it. Or, worse, they come to believe
there is no God who is holding them accountable. Moab learned this lesson
the hard way.
The beauty of God's grace is that He has taken the initiative to deliver us.
"For there is no distinction: for all have sinned and fall short of
the glory of God, and are justified by his grace as a gift, through the
redemption that is in Christ Jesus." (Romans 3:23-24)
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