The Dead Sea in Israel is a one-of-a-kind place to take a dip. Tourists who enter its waters immediately realize that swimming aids aren’t necessary. Yep, there’s no need to tread water in the Dead Sea. Due to its exceptionally high concentration of salt, people simply float on its surface like apples bobbing in a barrel of water.
The Dead Sea is also the lowest land-based point on earth. The Jordan River empties into it, but nothing flows out of it. And due to its toxic blend of minerals, nothing lives in it. Needless to say, the fishing stinks!
But one day the Dead Sea will undergo a radical change.
The last book of the Bible reports that once Jesus returns, God will send the “holy city, the new Jerusalem” down to earth from heaven (Revelation 21:2). The Old Testament prophet Ezekiel received a vision of the temple area in the new Jerusalem. He saw a river flowing from the temple toward the Dead Sea. Ezekiel was told that the waters from the river “will make the salty waters of the Dead Sea fresh and pure. . . . Fish will abound in the Dead Sea, for its waters will become fresh. Life will flourish wherever this water flows. Fishermen will stand along the shores of the Dead Sea. . . . Fish of every kind will fill the Dead Sea, just as they fill the Mediterranean” (Ezekiel 47:8-10).
Ezekiel’s vision is a picture of the great restoration we look forward to—the time when even the deadest of waters will come back to life.
In the new Jerusalem, look for me fishing by the banks of the “Live Sea” (no longer Dead), camping out with my family and friends. According to Ezekiel’s report, the fishing should drastically improve.
NLT 365-day reading plan passage for today: Matthew 7:1-12
More:
Read Revelation 22:1-7 and consider what’s in store for those who believe in Jesus.
Next:
What other pictures of restoration does the Bible give us? What do you look forward to in God’s new heaven and new earth?
Gary Shultz on July 3, 2014 at 6:38 am
Save a spot for me….. Is it not great that the water of God’s spirit does the same for a life. God’s Spirit running into a dead soul bringing it to life.
Tom Felten on July 3, 2014 at 10:24 am
Jeff, having floated in the Dead Sea with you and others and having fished many times with you, I’m definitely looking forward to future adventures when “all things are made new.” Press on my fishing-loving friend!
Winn Collier on July 4, 2014 at 1:06 am
I’ve been there. What a place. What a new place it will be.
Mike Wittmer on July 7, 2014 at 2:49 pm
I am looking forward to visiting Israel for the first time next year. I’m told that the desert that is widespread there is a result of Israel’s disobedience. What a promise that the obedience of the True Israelite will lead once again to a land flowing with milk and honey.