Lessons from Isaiah with Jen Brockmeier

Grace Between Pit Stops: Lessons from Isaiah on the Road with Two Boys

By Jennifer, Mom of Two Adventurers

🚗This summer, we loaded up the car—snacks, audiobooks, questionable playlists, and two boys bursting with energy—and set off on a long road trip. The goal? Travel Route 66 from Texas to California, then head north to San Francisco. What unfolded was more than just a journey—it was a mosaic of laughter, lessons, and Isaiah-style insights.

🧭 Starting Point: Chaos & Correction (Isaiah 1–5)

Just like Judah, my little “nation” (read: backseat occupants) didn’t always act justly. Crumbs flew, tempers flared, and justice for stolen headphones had to be served. Isaiah opens by calling out Israel’s rebellious heart—a wake-up call about the need for course correction.

Isaiah 1:18 offered me a parenting pause: “Though your sins are like scarlet, they shall be as white as snow.” God isn’t calling for perfection—He’s inviting transformation. I found hope in that, even when I had to give the third lecture on respecting personal space.

📸 Side Stops and Sweet Nostalgia

Along Route 66, we hit towns that felt frozen in time—nostalgic storefronts, faded signage, and vintage diners. One of our favorite stops was the birthplace of Route 66, where we posed with quirky “Cars”-themed art from the beloved Pixar movie. Mater, Lightning McQueen, and Radiator Springs vibes brought huge smiles (and about 76 photos).

It was a reminder that beauty exists in the worn and well-traveled—just like God’s enduring patience with us.

🌟 Divine Interruptions and Hope (Isaiah 6–12)

Isaiah’s vision in chapter 6 shook me. He sees the Lord in His holiness and responds with humility. My “God encounter” came tucked in an air-conditioned diner on a particularly hot California afternoon—110 degrees, to be exact.

Our youngest, overwhelmed and hangry, crossed his arms and refused to speak or eat. Every suggestion—fries, fruit, chicken tenders—was rejected with fierce silence. That’s when a kind waitress took a gentle detour from her shift and stepped in. With warmth and patience, she asked him questions, cracked a quiet joke, and helped him pick something off the menu. Slowly, he thawed. And when the food came, he finally smiled.

She didn’t just serve us a meal—she served grace. In that small gesture, I saw Isaiah’s “Immanuel”—God with us—in real time. Sometimes His presence looks like a stranger with a notepad and a calming voice.

🌉 Detours and Consequences (Isaiah 13–23)

These chapters read like a GPS warning of “speed traps ahead.” They’re prophecies against arrogant nations—Babylon, Assyria, Egypt. God is patient but not passive; consequences arrive when pride rules.

Parenting parallels, anyone? I watched my 13-year-old wrestle with independence while my 10-year-old discovered the power of sarcasm. Their “nations” collided. But God’s justice in Isaiah is paired with hope. Even Egypt—once a symbol of oppression—is told it will someday worship beside Israel. That’s the mercy I leaned into when I chose grace over grounding at mile 713.

🌁 Fog, Whales & Homecoming

As we cruised up the coast and reached San Francisco, the temperature dropped—from California’s sizzling 110°F to the city’s breezy 60°F. We wrapped ourselves in jackets and headed to the Golden Gate Bridge, where fog curled around the towers like a quiet metaphor.

We saw whales cresting in the waves, stood by lighthouses, and breathed in the salty air. Isaiah doesn’t end with doom—it unfolds a vision of peace, redemption, and homecoming. Just like the journey we took, from desert heat to cool ocean winds, restoration was waiting.

Whether you’re deep in prophecy or deep in the passenger seat with trail mix in your lap, Isaiah reminds us: God meets us on the journey, not just the destination. And sometimes, a road trip with two boys is the perfect place to see that unfold.

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