“The sun shall no longer be your light by day, nor the moon by night; the Lord will be your everlasting light, and your days of mourning shall be ended.” (Isaiah 60:19,20)
Read Isaiah 60:19–22.
We cannot live without light. Our days are governed by the sun, our nights softened by the moon. Even rest depends on some form of light to guide and steady us. Yet Isaiah dares to proclaim a future in which neither sun nor moon is necessary, because God himself becomes the light. This is not poetic exaggeration but a theological promise of new creation.
Isaiah 60:19–22 stands at the “end of times” climax of the chapter. It does not merely describe restoration after exile, but the fulfilment of God’s saving purpose, where created lights give way to the uncreated Light. The text assumes the reality of sorrow. “Your days of mourning shall be ended” only makes sense because mourning has been real, persistent and heavy. Law is spoken honestly: Human life is marked by fragility, loss and limits. We depend on rhythms that fail, bodies that weaken and hopes that dim.
Into this reality, the gospel is announced. The Lord does not simply provide light; He is the light. Salvation here is not improvement of circumstances but the gift of divine presence. In Lutheran terms, this is grace in its purest form: Donum Dei. God gives himself. Verse 21 deepens the promise. “Your people shall all be righteous.” This righteousness is not achieved but bestowed, a status granted by God’s own faithfulness. The future of God’s people rests not on their strength but on God’s promise.
For those in later life, or those who walk alongside them, this word speaks with particular tenderness. The promise is not that life will become brighter in visible ways, but that it will never fall into final darkness. When memory fades, strength diminishes, and productivity ceases, dignity remains, because God Himself is their glory. The light that does not fade is already given, hidden now under the cross, but certain in hope.
Prayer
Pray in encouragement to our everlasting God who is our Light, that when all other lights fail, He will abide with us in our weakness, and let His presence be our glory through Jesus Christ, who is the Light of the World!
Pray, praise, give thanks, and stay encouraged!
Pastor Mike



