New Beginning in God: How to Recognize & Step Into a New Season | Isaiah 43:18-19 & Lamentations 3:22-23

If you’re asking God for a new beginning, you’re not alone. Discover what Isaiah 43:18-19 and Lamentations 3:22-23 teach about recognizing and stepping into the new thing God is doing in your life today.

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New Beginning in God: How to Recognize & Step Into a New Season | Isaiah 43:18-19 & Lamentations 3:22-23
40 Days of Prayer · Week 2: Spiritual Renewal · Day 13

New Beginning: How to Recognize and Step Into God's New Thing

"Behold, I will do a new thing, now it shall spring forth; shall you not know it?"
— Isaiah 43:19

📅 Published April 25, 2026 ✍ Sanmi Dawodu Ministries 📖 Isaiah 43:19

How do you step into a new beginning with God?

To step into the new beginning God is offering, the Bible gives a 5-step pathway:

  • Forget the former things — refuse to be defined by past failures or losses
  • Receive God's mercies new every morning (Lamentations 3:22-23)
  • Recognize the new thing God is announcing — He always announces before He acts
  • Trust the road in the wilderness — God makes a way where there is none
  • Take the first practical step today — new beginnings start with one obedient action

Key Scripture: Lamentations 3:22-23"Through the Lord's mercies we are not consumed, because His compassions fail not. They are new every morning; great is Your faithfulness."

"Do not remember the former things, nor consider the things of old. Behold, I will do a new thing, now it shall spring forth; shall you not know it? I will even make a road in the wilderness and rivers in the desert."

Isaiah 43:18-19 (NKJV)

A Word from Sanmi Dawodu

If you're asking God for a new beginning, you're not alone. The Bible insists that no past — no failure, no loss, no closed door — disqualifies you from the new thing God is springing forth. New beginnings are God's specialty.

There are few things the human heart longs for more profoundly than a genuine new beginning — the authentic sense that the past no longer defines the future, that yesterday's failures do not determine today's possibilities, that the story is not over but is in fact just beginning. God's entire redemptive narrative is structured around new beginnings: a new covenant after the old one failed, a new heart given in place of the old one, a new creation emerging from the ruins of the fallen one, a new Jerusalem descending from heaven to replace the broken old order.

New beginnings are not God's plan B. They are His specialty. The God who created light from darkness, life from death, and order from chaos is the God who delights in making roads in wilderness and rivers in deserts. He is not limited by our history, frightened by our failures, or constrained by our past. He is the God of the new thing — and today, Day 13 of 40, He is declaring a new thing over your life.

His Mercies Are New Every Morning: Lamentations 3:22-23 Explained

Jeremiah wrote Lamentations from the rubble of Jerusalem after Babylon had destroyed the city. In the depths of national catastrophe, he declared one of the most stunning theological truths in Scripture: "His mercies are new every morning" (Lamentations 3:22-23). New beginnings are not occasional gifts from God — they are daily gifts.

For a deeper study of Isaiah 43:19 specifically, see the full guide on Behold I Am Doing a New Thing — Meaning & Life Application. Yesterday in Day 12 we sharpened spiritual hearing; today we step into what God has been announcing. The full 40 Days of Prayer series carries the new beginning forward.

The Command to Forget: Why God Tells You to Release the Past

Isaiah 43:18 contains one of the most radical commands in all of Scripture: 'Do not remember the former things, nor consider the things of old.' This command is given in the context of Israel's captivity — a people with every reason to be defined by their past, by the trauma of exile, by the memory of Jerusalem's destruction, by decades of collective grief and shame. And God says: do not remember. Do not consider. Stop defining yourself by your history.

This is not a command to practice historical amnesia or to pretend the past did not happen. It is a command of priority — do not be so occupied with what was that you miss what is. The verb 'consider' — 'biyn' in Hebrew — means to meditate upon, to dwell on, to give sustained attention to. God is saying: stop meditating on the old thing. Stop giving it your sustained attention. Because the sustained attention you give to your past is the capacity you are withholding from your future.

What 'Former Things' Must Be Released

💔 Former Failures: The mistakes, the moral failures, the ministry disasters, the relational breakdowns — all the things that make you think 'I am not qualified for what God wants to do next.' God does not disqualify based on past failure. He qualifies through redemption.

😢 Former Grief: The losses, the betrayals, the disappointments, the unanswered prayers, the dreams that died. Grief is legitimate and must be processed — but there is a season for grieving and a season for moving. God calls us forward.

🏅 Former Glory: This may be the most surprising thing to release: the former season of blessing, the previous anointing, the last great move of God that we keep trying to recreate instead of positioning ourselves for what He is doing NOW. Nostalgia for the former rain can prevent us from receiving the latter rain.

God Announces Before He Acts: How to Recognize the Announcement

Isaiah 43:19 opens with 'Behold, I will do a new thing, now it shall spring forth.' The word 'behold' — 'hinneh' in Hebrew — is an attention-getter: pay attention, look carefully, something significant is about to be said. God is making an announcement. And the announcement precedes the action. God regularly declares His intentions before He fulfills them — giving His people the opportunity to align their faith with His purpose before the manifestation.

The question that follows the announcement is searching: 'Shall you not know it?' — literally, 'Will you not perceive it?' The new thing that God is doing is already in motion — it is 'springing forth.' The Hebrew verb 'tsamach' — to spring up, to sprout, to bud — is a present tense active verb. The new thing is already happening. The question is whether we have the eyes to see it, the faith to receive it, and the flexibility to cooperate with it. The old wineskin cannot contain the new wine.

A Road in the Wilderness, Rivers in the Desert: Isaiah 43:19 Explained

The specific nature of God's new thing in Isaiah 43:19 is deeply instructive: He makes a road in the wilderness and rivers in the desert. Both of these images speak of provision in impossibility — a way where there is no way, water where there is no water. The wilderness is the season that feels directionless, purposeless, and devoid of progress. The desert is the season that feels dry, barren, and unable to sustain life. And God says: in THOSE specific conditions — in your wilderness season, in your desert season — I will make My greatest provision.

This is the nature of the God of new beginnings: He does not wait for favorable conditions to act. He creates favorable conditions out of unfavorable ones. He does not make the road where the path was already clear — He makes it in the wilderness. He does not give rivers where rain was already falling — He gives them in the desert. The most unlikely season of your life is often the season God chooses for His most remarkable new beginning.

"Then He who sat on the throne said, 'Behold, I make all things new.' And He said to me, 'Write, for these words are true and faithful.'"

Revelation 21:5 (NKJV)

New Every Morning: Lamentations 3:22-23 in Daily Practice

Lamentations 3:22-23 was written in the immediate aftermath of Jerusalem's destruction — one of the darkest, most grief-saturated books in the entire Bible. And from within that darkness, Jeremiah discovers the most luminous truth: 'Through the Lord's mercies we are not consumed, because His compassions fail not. They are new every morning.' New. Every. Morning. Not once a year. Not after extended seasons of demonstrated improvement. Every morning.

The newness of God's mercies is not conditional on yesterday's performance. The sun does not calculate whether yesterday deserved today's light before it rises. God's compassions rise with the same sovereign reliability as the dawn — not because of what we did but because of who He is. 'Great is Your faithfulness' — the greatness of His faithfulness is measured not by the grandeur of our lives but by the consistency of His character. Every morning is a new beginning because every morning the mercies are new.

Practical Steps Into the New Thing God Is Doing

New beginnings require more than a declaration — they require deliberate, practical steps of faith. Joshua had to step into the Jordan River before God parted it (Joshua 3:13-15). The disciples had to launch their boats into deep water before the miraculous catch came (Luke 5:4-6). The lepers had to begin walking toward the priests before their healing manifested (Luke 17:14). God regularly calls His people to take a step of faith before the new thing becomes visible.

What step of faith is God calling you to take toward the new thing He has declared over your life? It may be writing the business plan for a God-given vision you have dismissed as impossible. It may be making the call of reconciliation you have been putting off. It may be applying for the ministry position that feels beyond your qualification. It may be beginning to pray for something you had given up on. The new thing of God is not experienced passively — it is entered actively, through the obedience of faith.

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Altar Call: How to Recognize and Step Into a New Beginning

Day 13 of Week 2 calls you forward — not into intellectual agreement with what you have read, but into actual surrender. The New Thing is not a topic to study; it is an invitation to receive.

The new thing is springing forth. Tomorrow we close Week 2 with Day 14: How to Develop a Deeper Prayer Life — because every new beginning needs a deeper prayer life to sustain it.

Receive what God has been speaking to you today. Pray the prayer below from your heart.

A Prayer for The New Thing

Father, I release the former things. I forget the failures You have already forgiven. I forget the disappointments I have been carrying as identity.

I receive Your mercies — new this morning. I receive the new thing You are doing. Open my eyes to perceive it. Give me courage to step into it.

Make a way in my wilderness. Bring streams to my desert places. Let today be the start of the new chapter. In the name of Jesus, Amen.

Frequently Asked Questions

What does Isaiah 43:18-19 mean?

Isaiah 43:18-19 calls God's people to release the past so they can perceive what He is doing now. The verse is set against the backdrop of exile — when Israel needed to know that God's past faithfulness was not the limit of His future faithfulness.

What does Lamentations 3:22-23 mean?

Lamentations 3:22-23 declares that God's mercies are renewed every morning — even in seasons of disaster. New beginnings are daily, not occasional. Every sunrise is a fresh delivery of mercy.

How do I forget the former things?

Biblical forgetting is not amnesia — it is choosing to no longer let the past define your future. Practically: confess what needs confession, forgive what needs forgiveness, release what God has released, and choose to expect new mercy each morning.

How do I know if God is doing something new in my life?

Common signs include unexpected open doors, scriptures that suddenly come alive, godly counsel pointing the same direction, a holy restlessness with the status quo, and a growing sense of clarity even amid uncertainty.

What does "a road in the wilderness" mean?

Wilderness is a season of disorientation, where normal routes fail. God's promise to make "a road in the wilderness" (Isaiah 43:19) means He provides supernatural direction precisely where natural means have run out.

Today is a new morning. Today is a new mercy. Step into the new thing. It is already springing.

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new beginning BibleIsaiah 43:18-19 meaningLamentations 3:22-23 meaningnew every morning meaningforget the former thingshow to step into a new seasonGod's new thinga way in the wildernessrivers in the desert meaningbehold I am doing a new thing

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