After the devastation of a hurricane in 2005, one devastated city worked to slowly rebuild. In one of the most hard-hit areas, residents lacked access to basic resources for years afterwards. Burnell Cotlon worked to change that. In November 2014, he opened the first grocery shop in that part of the city since the destruction. “When I bought the building, everybody thought that I was crazy,” Cotlon recalled. But “the very first customer cried because she . . . never thought the [neighbourhood] was coming back.” His mother said her son “saw something I didn’t see. I’m glad [he] . . . took that chance.”
God enabled the prophet Isaiah to see an unexpected future of hope in the face of devastation. Seeing “the poor and needy search for water, but there is none” (Isaiah 41:17), God promised to “turn the desert into pools of water, and the parched ground into springs” (v. 18). When instead of hunger and thirst, His people experienced flourishing once more, they would know “the hand of the Lord has done this” (v. 20).
He’s still the author of restoration, at work bringing about a future when “creation itself will be liberated from its bondage” (Romans 8:21). As we trust in His goodness, He helps us see a future where hope is possible.