prophecy

Old Testament for November 26, 2023

START WITH SCRIPTURE:
Ezekiel 34:11-16, 20-24
CLICK HERE TO READ SCRIPTURE ON BIBLEGATEWAY.COM

OBSERVE:

Ezekiel was writing and prophesying from the perspective of exile in Babylon.  He had been deported from Jerusalem to Babylon in 597 B.C. In 586 B.C.  Jerusalem was destroyed, and the final deportation of the Jews to Babylon took place.  Ezekiel is writing to a demoralized and defeated people.  His purpose is to encourage the exiles.

His imagery is very fitting — the Sovereign Lord is depicted as a Shepherd who is seeking his lost sheep who were:

scattered in the cloudy and dark day.

That terrible, no good, awful day was the day the Babylonians breached the walls of Jerusalem. The flock is the nation of Israel who have been exiled from their homeland.

However, the word that Ezekiel offers is a promise of hope — even though the flock has been scattered among other nations and countries, God is promising to re-collect them and return them to their home pasture in Israel.

But there is also in this message a word of warning — the fat strong sheep who have butted and bullied the weak will be judged and destroyed.  There is a strong ethical element to the prophet’s message — the poor and oppressed will be protected, and the wicked oppressor will be cast out.

Finally, Ezekiel invokes the name and the memory of David, who will be again their shepherd and prince.  Obviously, Ezekiel isn’t speaking literally of David, who lived more than four hundred years earlier. He is speaking of the dynasty of David, and all of the kings who claimed their heritage directly from the idealized Davidic line.

In other words, the restoration will be made complete — the flock of Israel will be back in their own home pastures, and their ideal Davidic shepherd will be in charge again.

APPLY:  

As with all prophetic literature, there are multiple layers to this oracle.  Although these words may not apply literally to us, we may well have felt like exiles emotionally or spiritually.

This then is a word of comfort to us, that the Sovereign Lord will seek us as a Shepherd searches for his sheep, and bring us back home again.

We must also heed the word of warning — the sleek, strong, fat sheep who oppress the weak will be punished.  This is a reminder of the strong theme of social justice that runs through virtually all the writings of the prophets, and that those of us who live as the privileged citizens of a wealthy, powerful superpower should be careful to heed — we dare not neglect the poor or oppress the underprivileged.

There is one more level to this passage that concerns the Davidic line.  David had been promised that the throne of Israel would always be occupied by one of his descendants.  Obviously, this line of succession had been broken by the destruction of Jerusalem — but Christians believe that Ezekiel’s prophecy is fulfilled by the eternal Lordship of Jesus, who is descended from David on his mother’s side. Jesus is ultimately the Son of David who tends the sheep.

RESPOND: 

If and when I wander away from the flock, or even become scattered by circumstances beyond my control, I will look to the Good Shepherd to gather me to himself again.  And I claim that promise on behalf of the flock as well, that even when we seem to stray, the Shepherd will still seek us — and will bring comfort to the weak and justice to the wicked.

Lord, I have been spared the devastation of military defeat and the destruction of my homeland.  I cannot exaggerate any difficulty I have experienced by comparing it to such terror.  But I am still reminded that when I feel lonely or exiled, you are my Shepherd, and I rely on you to return me to the flock.  Amen.

PHOTOS:
Are You His Sheep? (Ezekiel 34:15-16)” by Redeemed & Forgiven is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 2.0 Generic license.

Old Testament for December 25, 2022

 

28127024490_a4663c9dd8_zSTART WITH SCRIPTURE:

Isaiah 52:7-10

CLICK HERE TO READ SCRIPTURE ON BIBLEGATEWAY.COM

OBSERVE:

In ancient times, many kingdoms that were encompassed with mountains had a kind of “early warning system,” long before the radar stations and satellites of our day.

Watchmen were stationed on the mountains, watching the mountain passes and the distant roads, scanning the horizons.  If they saw invaders approaching, they sent messengers to the capital to give warning.  Sometimes there were a series of watch-stations in the mountains.  When an army was sighted, a large bonfire was ignited, and then the next station would ignite their bonfire, and then the next, so that the signal could be seen from miles away.

In this case, however, the “Invader” is not a dreaded enemy.  In this oracle, the news that the watchman brings is good news. It is such good news that the prophet extols even the messenger’s feet!

How beautiful on the mountains are the feet of him who brings good news…

Here in a nutshell is the good news that the messenger proclaims.  He is one who:

publishes peace,
who brings good news,
who proclaims salvation,
who says to Zion, “Your God reigns!”

We are reminded of Isaiah’s times.  He is speaking to people who had been ruled by a succession of kings in Israel and Judah — some of them good and well meaning, but most of them either incompetent or evil. And very likely these are people who have experienced invasion from Assyrian and Babylonian armies, and even exile.  The thought that God would once again reign over them was a source of joy.

Thus the watchmen are described as singing their message!

Your watchmen lift up their voice,
together they sing;
for they shall see eye to eye, when Yahweh returns to Zion.

And Isaiah summons even this devastated city of Jerusalem, which has seen so much suffering, to sing for joy:

Break out into joy,
sing together, you waste places of Jerusalem;
for Yahweh has comforted his people.

Most likely, this oracle celebrates the eventual return of Jews from exile.  God has redeemed Jerusalem from their captivity.  Like hostages, their freedom has been purchased by a God willing to ransom them.

However, Isaiah’s vision is not limited to the Jewish exiles. God’s promise of salvation includes even the nations (the gentiles):

Yahweh has made bare his holy arm in the eyes of all the nations;
and all the ends of the earth have seen the salvation of our God.

APPLY:  

The message of deliverance is immensely welcome to those who have been in captivity.  Of course this was a message of hope to the exiled community of the Jews in Persia.

However, the Christian reader also sees a broader application.  The Apostle Paul applies this oracle to the preaching of the Good News of Jesus Christ.  He asks a series of questions that emphasize the importance of the messenger, and concludes with his quotation from Isaiah 52:7.

How then will they call on him in whom they have not believed? How will they believe in him whom they have not heard? How will they hear without a preacher? And how will they preach unless they are sent? As it is written:
“How beautiful are the feet of those who preach the Good News of peace,
who bring glad tidings of good things!” (Romans 10:14-15).

And Paul also emphasizes the same theme that Isaiah stresses — that this promise of salvation is for all people!

The messengers and the message bring the good news of the coming of Jesus, and his promise of salvation.

RESPOND: 

There is an old Negro Spiritual that has become identified as a Christmas carol:

Go, tell it on the mountain,
Over the hills and everywhere
Go, tell it on the mountain,
That Jesus Christ is born.

The carol describes the shepherds who watched their fields by night.  And we are reminded by Luke’s Gospel that after the shepherds received their visitation from the heavenly hosts, and then hastened to see this newborn child, this is what they did:

When they saw it, they publicized widely the saying which was spoken to them about this child.  All who heard it wondered at the things which were spoken to them by the shepherds (Luke 2:17-18).

Receiving the Good News of Jesus Christ makes us his messengers as well.  When we receive good news, the most natural thing in the world is for us to share that good news with others.  That is why every Christian is an evangelist.

Lord, thank you for the Good News of Jesus Christ and his salvation.  And thank you for the ‘beautiful feet’ of those who shared that Good News with me long ago.  Enable me in turn to share that Good News as well.  Amen. 

PHOTO:
Submitted by Naomi Green” by WELSTech Podcast  has been dedicated to the Public Domain.

Old Testament for October 2, 2022

tissot_the_flight_of_the_prisonersSTART WITH SCRIPTURE:
Lamentations 1:1-6
CLICK HERE TO READ SCRIPTURE ON BIBLEGATEWAY.COM

OBSERVE:

Lamentations is traditionally attributed to the prophet Jeremiah, although there are some difficulties with that theory.  This book is a series of five laments that follow upon the destruction of Jerusalem in 586 B.C. (although some scholars date the destruction at 587 B.C.) by the Babylonians.  Jeremiah was essentially ‘kidnapped’ by Johanan, one of the last governors of Jerusalem, and carried off to Egypt soon after the fall of Jerusalem.  So the jury is out on how much of the events described in Lamentations he might have witnessed.  On the other hand, Jeremiah would have been present to see the horrific events of the last days of Jerusalem, and certainly might have written his reflections even in exile in Egypt at a later date.

One thing is certain — Lamentations is a vivid poetic account of a grieving people as they see their capital city, its temple, and their very civilization in ruins.

The author of Lamentations personifies Jerusalem as a lonely widow who now sits solitary.  She is described as a princess who:

weeps bitterly in the night, and her tears are on her cheeks;
among all her lovers she has no one to comfort her:
All her friends have dealt treacherously with her; they are become her enemies.

Historically, we are reminded of the alliances into which Judah’s kings entered at various times with kingdoms and empires.  Where were her allies now?  She had been betrayed and oppressed by her former lovers.

The writer then explores the exile of Judah, while continuing to maintain the imagery of the widow/princess:

she dwells among the nations, she finds no rest:
all her persecutors overtook her within the straits.

There is a contrast between Judah (those who have gone into exile) and the desolation of Jerusalem left behind.  Where once there had been a bustling city and temple full of people, now there is desolation:

The ways of Zion do mourn, because no one comes to the solemn assembly;
all her gates are desolate, her priests do sigh:
her virgins are afflicted, and she herself is in bitterness.

And then the author of the Lamentation says something rather daring — he draws a parallel between Judah’s enemies and Yahweh: 

Her adversaries are become the head, her enemies prosper;
for Yahweh has afflicted her for the multitude of her transgressions:

Here, the writer implies that there is almost another feeling of betrayal — that Yahweh himself is somehow in league with Judah’s adversaries!

We are reminded that the kings and kingdoms are used by Yahweh to accomplish his purposes.  Assyria was called the rod in the hands of God when the Northern Kingdom of Israel was destroyed, almost 150 years (721 B.C.) before the conquest of Judah (Isaiah 10:5).  And after Jerusalem has been destroyed and thousands carried off into exile in Babylon, it is the Persian king, Cyrus, who will be used by God in 537 B.C. to return the Jews to their homeland (Isaiah 45:1).

The author of Lamentations returns to his guiding metaphor — the widow/princess has lost even her children:

her young children are gone into captivity before the adversary.
From the daughter of Zion all her majesty is departed:

And finally, the writer shifts into another analogy, a simile comparing the royal sons of Jerusalem to deer who have been run down by the hunters:

her princes are become like deer that find no pasture,
they are gone without strength before the pursuer.

APPLY:  

One of the greatest strengths of the Holy Bible is its honesty about the human experience.  Suffering, whether deserved or undeserved, raises questions about the love and the goodness of God.  And the Biblical authors don’t shy away from raising the question about God’s justice.

We see this in Job, who declares in the face of his suffering:

Therefore I will not keep silent.
I will speak in the anguish of my spirit.
I will complain in the bitterness of my soul (Job 7:11)

We see this in the Psalmist, who asks where the justice of God is when the wicked prosper and the righteous suffer:

But as for me, my feet were almost gone.
My steps had nearly slipped.
For I was envious of the arrogant,
when I saw the prosperity of the wicked (Psalm 73:2-3).

There is a difference in the suffering experienced by Judah at the hands of the Babylonians.  Judah has been warned repeatedly about her offenses against God — idolatry, oppression of the poor, social injustice, violation of the Law of Moses.

Whatever the cause of suffering, our reaction to its scourge will be the same. And we are likely to experience the stages of grief that follow a terrible tragedy, even when it is our own fault — denial, anger, bargaining, depression and acceptance.

What the Scriptures help us to do as we read of such horrors as the fall of Jerusalem is to work through our own grief as we move toward renewed faith in God.

RESPOND: 

Years ago I visited a grieving church member who blamed God for the death of her husband.  He was, she said, “such a good man! Why did God take him?”  I thought of my previous visits with them, and remembered the volume of cigarettes that he smoked.  He had died of lung cancer.

I didn’t doubt that her husband was a good man.  But I thought it rather unfair to blame God for his death when the Surgeon General has clearly established that the use of tobacco is a likely cause of cancer.  In my opinion, God didn’t cause his cancer.

I have a personal view of God’s judgment.  It is not so much that God wishes to punish us for our sins — rather, we punish ourselves by our sins.  God doesn’t wish anyone to suffer.  Even here in Lamentations, we read:

For he does not afflict willingly, nor grieve the children of men (Lamentations 3:33).

However, God does permit us to suffer the consequences of our own willful sin.  That may cause us to grieve as much as the suffering — realizing that we are responsible for our own plight.

Let me be clear — the Bible doesn’t teach that all suffering is our fault. Sometimes the innocent suffer along with the guilty.  But in today’s Lectionary reading, the people of Judah are experiencing the consequences of their sin.

God may use our suffering to turn us back toward our dependence on him, but I don’t believe he causes it.

Lord, we have seen so many tragedies and crises that cause us to weep — from the destruction of the Twin Towers in New York on 9-11, to personal tragedies in families around us.  So often these events are impossible to understand — and so we process them as grieving people comforting other grieving people.  You are our “Comforter” and our “Counselor.” Help us find our hope and healing in you.  Amen. 

PHOTOS:
The Flight of the Prisoners” by James Tissot is in the public domain.

Old Testament for September 25, 2022

jeremiah-32-verses-7-and-8START WITH SCRIPTURE:
Jeremiah 32:1-3a, 6-15
CLICK HERE TO READ SCRIPTURE ON BIBLEGATEWAY.COM

OBSERVE:

This passage from Jeremiah has a very definite context and historical setting.  The empire of Babylon, under King Nebuchadnezzar, is no longer a remote threat to Jerusalem.  Babylon has already brought one king of Judah, Jehoiachin, to his knees.

In 598 B.C., Jehoiachin had been forced to surrender Jerusalem after a Babylonian siege of three months.  Jehoiachin, along with his mother, wives, officials and others, was deported in the first Babylonian exile.

Zedekiah, who was Jehoiachin’s uncle and the son of King Josiah, was made king by Nebuchadnezzar.  But he was obviously intended to be a “vassal” king, subservient to the edicts from Babylon.

Zedekiah is ruling over a disintegrating kingdom.  When the word of the Lord comes to Jeremiah in this passage, Zedekiah has been king for ten years — which makes it about 588 B.C.  And Nebuchadnezzar’s forces are once again at the walls of Jerusalem.  Zedekiah had attempted to assert the independence of Judah, encouraged by some of the false court prophets who assured him Judah would prevail.

Jeremiah, meanwhile, has been incarcerated in the court of the guard.  Jeremiah’s “crime” has been telling the truth.  He has warned King Zedekiah that the Babylonians would indeed conquer Jerusalem, and Zedekiah would see an angry Nebuchadnezzar face-to-face.

While Jeremiah is cooling his heels under guard, the word of Yahweh comes to him in the guard house.  The Lord tells Jeremiah that his cousin Hanamel is about to approach him with a real estate deal!  Hanamel has a piece of property in Anathoth that he wants to sell.  Anathoth was one of the cities set aside as a Levitical City for the descendants of Aaron (Joshua 21:13–18); it was only about three miles north of Jerusalem — no doubt already captured by the Babylonians.

According to the Levitical law, if a person wished to sell ancestral land they first had to offer it for sale to a relative so that the land remained in the family (Leviticus 25:23-38).  This was called the right of redemption.

So why would Jeremiah want to invest in land that was already likely under Babylonian control, knowing full well that Jerusalem was about to fall to Nebuchadnezzar as well?

Like other prophetic “sign-acts,” this was intended by the Lord to be a prophetic sign.  On several occasions, Yahweh used dramatic “sign-acts” to illustrate his prophecies concerning Judah.

  • The Lord instructs Jeremiah to bury a linen loincloth to illustrate that Judah had become good for nothing due to their idolatry (Jeremiah 13:1-11).
  • The Lord tells Jeremiah not to marry or have children to demonstrate the joyless future that Judah will experience because of their sins (Jeremiah 16:1-4).
  • The Lord commands Jeremiah to go the potter’s house and watch him mold and rework clay in order to illustrate God’s sovereign power over nations, and calls Judah to repentance (Jeremiah 18:1-11).
  • Jeremiah is told to break an earthenware jug as a sign of coming judgment (Jeremiah 19:1-13).

These, and several other examples, reveal that Jeremiah’s prophecies were often dramatically enacted in his life and deeds.

But here, the act of buying a field from his cousin is a sign of hope!  Even though Judah is in the grip of Babylon, and the enemy is besieging the city, the Lord is assuring Jeremiah and the people of Jerusalem that after they have endured their punishment there will be hope.  Jeremiah carries out the legal requirements for the purchase in front of witnesses and gives instructions to his secretary:

I commanded Baruch before them, saying,  Yahweh of Armies, the God of Israel says: Take these deeds, this deed of the purchase which is sealed, and this deed which is open, and put them in an earthen vessel; that they may continue many days.  For Yahweh of Armies, the God of Israel says: Houses and fields and vineyards shall yet again be bought in this land.

The rest of the story is that Jeremiah asks God why he has been instructed to buy land in the midst of a siege.  And the Lord confirms that in fact Jerusalem will fall to Babylon, and its inhabitants will be driven into exile. Worse than that, this time Nebuchadnezzar would order the destruction of the Temple, the city and its walls.

However, he also promises that their children will return to the land:

Behold, I will gather them out of all the countries, where I have driven them in my anger, and in my wrath, and in great indignation; and I will bring them again to this place, and I will cause them to dwell safely:  and they shall be my people, and I will be their God (Jeremiah 16:37-38).

APPLY:  

Sometimes we may think that we live in the worst of times — 9/11, hurricanes, exotic viruses that no one has ever heard of before, climate change.  This is one reason we should read history, for the sake of perspective.  Compared to wars, pestilences and catastrophes of the past, our times are reasonably mild.

God’s message to Jeremiah is definitely a word of comfort and encouragement in the face of inevitable disaster.  God is not saying to Jeremiah “there there, it’ll all be fine.”  No, Jerusalem will fall to Babylonian armies, and the consequences will be serious.

But judgment and disaster are never God’s final word.  The most frequent refrain throughout Scripture is grace, mercy and hope.  Jeremiah is instructed to buy this land because some day the Jews would return to this land.

When we are faced with disaster — personal and national — we need to remember that God’s word is always ultimately a word of hope for those who believe.

RESPOND: 

I have been involved in a few real estate deals in my life, usually involved with buying or selling a home, or observing nervously as my wife negotiated for a property she planned to rent out.   I certainly am no great realtor.

But I think I’m astute enough not to buy property in a swamp or a flood plain.  We did look at a three-story house in a lovely canyon on a creek that fed into the Kentucky River.  But a quick tour revealed that this little “creek” had been known to become a torrent during the flood season.  There were water stains on this old home up to the third floor!

So, when I read of Jeremiah’s real estate deal, I feel a little queasy.  His cousin was obviously eager to unload this piece of property for a low offer, given the fact that all of the real estate in the immediate vicinity of Jerusalem was about to change hands — to the Babylonians!

And yet, Jeremiah is instructed to buy the land — redeem is the appropriate word.  This is a concrete witness to the promises of God — that he would bring back his people after their exile:

and I will bring them again to this place, and I will cause them to dwell safely:  and they shall be my people, and I will be their God (Jeremiah 16:37-38).

Sometimes our common sense is in conflict with faith.  We are reminded that God will keep his promises, and restore us.

And we are particularly advised to invest time, energy and resources in those things that last:

Don’t lay up treasures for yourselves on the earth, where moth and rust consume, and where thieves break through and steal; but lay up for yourselves treasures in heaven, where neither moth nor rust consume, and where thieves don’t break through and steal; for where your treasure is, there your heart will be also (Matthew 6:19-21).

Lord, investing time and money in something that seems doomed to fail looks foolish to most people.  But investing ourselves in your kingdom is always a sure thing.  Guide me in the investment in those things that last.  Amen.

PHOTOS:
Jeremiah 32 verses 7 and 8” uses the following photo:
Honey Island Swamp (Louisiana)” by Shubert Ciencia is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 Generic license.

Old Testament for September 18, 2022

there-is-a-balm-in-gileadSTART WITH SCRIPTURE:
Jeremiah 8:18-9:1
CLICK HERE TO READ SCRIPTURE ON BIBLEGATEWAY.COM

OBSERVE:

The sense of foreboding and disaster that loomed over Jerusalem and Judah during Jeremiah’s time came from two sources,  the two opposing superpowers that hemmed in Judah from North and South — Babylon and Egypt.  But in Jeremiah’s mind, these forces were merely the weapons in God’s hands to carry out his judgment against unfaithful Judah.

Jeremiah is often called the weeping prophet because no matter how earnestly he warns Judah and its kings and priests about the need to repent, they do not heed him.  He declares:

Oh that I could comfort myself against sorrow!

Jeremiah knows that Judah is placing their trust in Yahweh.  After all, the people declare:

“Isn’t Yahweh in Zion?
Isn’t her King in her?”

Ever since the time of Isaiah, many years before, Jerusalem in particular has been assured that they are invincible because it is the city where the temple of Yahweh is established, and where the eternal dynasty of David reigns.

But Jeremiah recognizes that they have a false sense of assurance.  While God did establish Jerusalem and the Davidic line, Judah and Jerusalem have broken covenant with God.  They have not been faithful to worship him alone and adhere to his law:

“Why have they provoked me to anger with their engraved images,
and with foreign vanities?”

Now, Jeremiah discerns, there is a growing sense of apprehension among the people of Judah in particular.  An invading force from Babylon is drawing closer from the North, as their armies enter the northernmost cities of what was once Israel:

The snorting of his horses is heard from Dan:
at the sound of the neighing of his strong ones the whole land trembles;
for they have come, and have devoured the land and all that is in it;
the city and those who dwell therein (Jeremiah 8:16).

Now Jerusalem is beginning to realize that it may be too late to be delivered from the Babylonians:

“The harvest is past,
the summer is ended,
and we are not saved.”

Jeremiah finds no satisfaction at all in this impending disaster.  He grieves for his city and his people:

For the hurt of the daughter of my people am I hurt:
I mourn; dismay has taken hold on me.

Jeremiah asks plaintively if there is no source of help and healing for his sick nation:

Is there no balm in Gilead?
is there no physician there?
Why then isn’t the health of the daughter of my people recovered?

Gilead was a region East of the Jordan River named for the grandson of the Patriarch Joseph, and settled by some of the tribes of Israel.  In Joseph’s time it had long since been overrun by Assyria and had become a vassal state.

But Jeremiah’s reference is to a highly valued balsamic ointment that was used as a medicine. The trade and use of this balm in ancient times could be traced back for centuries.  Jeremiah seems to be asking why people who were so sick from their idolatry could not find the antidote in seeking their God.

Jeremiah’s lamentation continues as he reflects on the suffering that Judah has already experienced, and no doubt anticipates what is to happen in the future:

Oh that my head were waters, and my eyes a spring of tears, that I might weep day and night for the slain of the daughter of my people!

APPLY:  

Throughout history there have been times that a sense of impending doom hung heavy over nations:

  • In 1775 in the American Colonies, there was the growing sense of resentment toward the British homeland for perceived injustices.
  • In 1860 in the United States, it was the regional division between North and South over slavery.
  • In 1936 in both Germany and Japan, there was the menace of growing territorial ambitions.

We may wonder sometimes if our times are any different.  What is the apprehension and tension that makes the air of our times feel as though it is thick and heavy with growing storm clouds?

Jeremiah is aware of the storm clouds gathering over Jerusalem, but he senses his own helplessness to avert disaster.  He knows that his people are placing their trust in past platitudes and phony gods.  And yet they can’t seem to understand why they are not delivered from impending catastrophe.

Jeremiah knows that there is a balm in Gilead, and that healing is only to be found in repentance and return to the God of Israel.

This spiritual principle was true in Jeremiah’s time, and it is still true today.

RESPOND: 

There is a deep sadness to be the one who can see that disaster is coming, and yet be unable to avert it.  I am reminded of Cassandra, the Trojan prophetess in Greek mythology who could foresee the destruction of Troy by the Greeks, and the eventual murder of the Greek Agammenon who became her captor.  To be a Cassandra is to be one who is always right, but never heeded.

That was Jeremiah’s sad lot also.  And sometimes it is ours when we can see the eventual consequences of immoral or unwise behavior in our family, friends, or countrymen and women.

Yet we still have a responsibility to warn and to weep for them, even when they don’t listen.

The good news is that there is a remedy to the moral sickness that so many suffer today.  It is found only in the one whom T.S. Eliot describes in East Coker IV, from Four Quartets:

The wounded surgeon plies the steel
That questions the distempered part;
Beneath the bleeding hands we feel
The sharp compassion of the healer’s art
Resolving the enigma of the fever chart.

Then there is the famous African-American Spiritual, that reminds us that Christ is the source of healing:

There is a balm in Gilead
To make the wounded whole;
There is a balm in Gilead
To heal the sin sick soul.

Our Lord, sometimes we do sense storm clouds rising in our times. Thank you for the reminder that there is a balm in Gilead to make the wounded whole.  Amen. 

PHOTOS:
There Is a Balm in Gilead” is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license.

Old Testament for September 11, 2022

5232147254_93aa77c206_zSTART WITH SCRIPTURE:
Jeremiah 4:11-12, 22-28
CLICK HERE TO READ SCRIPTURE ON BIBLEGATEWAY.COM

OBSERVE:

Jeremiah has the sad distinction of prophesying on the Lord’s behalf in a chaotic and foreboding time.

It is difficult to determine an exact chronology of most prophetic writings in part because they are written as poetic oracles.  However, Jeremiah’s mention of King Josiah in Jeremiah 3:6 may help us narrow down the dire warnings of this week’s Old Testament lectionary reading.

King Josiah reigned in Judah between 640 and 609 B.C.  We remember him from the book of 2 Kings as a good king, even great, and a religious reformer who sought to turn his people back to the Lord.

Unfortunately, from Jeremiah’s perspective, it was too little too late.  His message here seems to be that the hot wind that blows in from the desert won’t just separate wheat from chaff (as at the harvest), or cleanse the land.  This hot wind will destroy.

Hot winds in desert climates are common.  In Israel, the hot, suffocating winds of the spring and summer are known as khamsin, and are known for bringing with them violent sandstorms.  This may suggest the season in which Jeremiah writes his oracle.

The question is, if this hot wind symbolizes the judgment that is to come, does it signify an invasion by Egypt to the south, or Babylon to the east?  It is Pharaoh Neco of Egypt who would defeat and kill Josiah in battle in 609 B.C.  This wind blows from the desert, and the khamsin does blow from the south.  But the greater existential threat to Jerusalem will prove to be Babylon.  Jerusalem falls to Babylon in 587 B.C., while Jeremiah is still very active as a prophet.

In either case, the charges against Judah are clear.  The Lectionary Scripture picks up the thread at verse 22, in the voice of the Lord:

For my people are foolish,
they do not know me;
they are stupid children,
they have no understanding.
They are skilled in doing evil,
but do not know how to do good.

Jeremiah seems stunned by the vision of the future that the Lord discloses to him — the earth is wasted, there is no light, there are violent earthquakes, all living creatures have sought refuge elsewhere, the fertile fields are now desert, and the cities are ruined.

Nevertheless, there is a measure of hope amidst even this despair:

For thus says the Lord: The whole land shall be a desolation; yet I will not make a full end.

This is a common refrain in the prophets.  There will be judgment and dire consequences — however — there will also be grace.  In the prophetic literature, this grace is usually found in the promise that a remnant of Israel will survive the destruction and exile to come:

For thus says the Lord:
Sing aloud with gladness for Jacob,
and raise shouts for the chief of the nations;
proclaim, give praise, and say,
“Save, O Lord, your people,
the remnant of Israel.”(Jeremiah 31:7).

Nevertheless, the judgment that is coming is dire, and inevitable:

Because of this the earth shall mourn,
and the heavens above grow black;
for I have spoken, I have purposed;
I have not relented nor will I turn back.

APPLY:  

When we read prophecies such as this from Jeremiah, we can react in several ways.

One is simply to avoid such doom and gloom altogether, and tell ourselves that Jeremiah was writing to a particular nation (Judah) at a particular time.  We can tell ourselves that these words applied only to the context of the 7th and 6th century B.C., and only to the last remaining segment of the people of Israel.

Or, we can find parallels between Jeremiah’s jeremiads and our own time, in all of the usual suspects of sin.  Identifying the various social sins of our time probably will say more about our own perspective than God’s Word.  For example, some might denounce the factors contributing to global warming, pollution, racial injustice, and income inequality.  Others might rail against abortion and same-sex marriage.  Some would look at these issues and declare, “why not both/and?”

Of course it is ultimately God who determines what is just and unjust, good and evil.  And we believe his will is most clearly revealed in Scripture, although there are some issues that we face today that require careful thought and prayer.

The bigger question is — does God raise up nations and humble them today because of their moral choices?

Again, I return to the one paradigm I know reasonably well — the United States of America.  One might say that racism in general and slavery in particular were the “original sin” of our nation.  This was an original sin that created enormous national tension between North and South, and ended in a horribly violent war.  One might say that this war was an expiation in blood for the sins of our fathers.

If Thomas Jefferson could say, almost 80 years before the Civil War “I tremble for my country when I reflect that God is just” — what moral blindness, decadence and injustices do we see around us today that deserve justice?

The Bible teaches us that the Lord is a God of justice as well as mercy, and that as there are personal consequences for sin, so there are also national consequences for injustice.

The message is just as applicable today as it was more than 2,500 years ago — justice will be done — and yet there is still time to repent and change.

RESPOND: 

There have been times in history when we have paused and said, “where is God in this?”  We are certainly filled with nauseous wonder when we consider the gross injustice of slavery in the “Land of the Free;” or the Holocaust of millions of Jews and others by the Nazis; or the displacement of millions of families in the Middle East because of ongoing war and atrocities.

Sometimes the answers to these injustices have been glacially slow and unsatisfying.  But wars were fought to free the oppressed; and peaceful protest has been employed to bring justice nearer.  Honestly, both have been methods of working for justice.

I take some comfort in the Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr.’s observation:

The arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends towards justice.

Ultimately, it bends toward the coming Kingdom of God, when wrongs will be right, evil banished, and death destroyed.

Lord, like Thomas Jefferson, I sometimes tremble when I consider that you are just.  But I place my hope in your gracious mercy, that seeks to redeem and renew all of your world.  May we heed the warnings, and repent.  Amen. 

PHOTOS:
Indeed I tremble for my country…” by Jim McIntosh is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 Generic license.

Old Testament for September 4, 2022

Throwing Clay

Throwing Clay

START WITH SCRIPTURE:
Jeremiah 18:1-11
CLICK HERE TO READ SCRIPTURE ON BIBLEGATEWAY.COM

OBSERVE:

The Old Testament prophets were inclined to use concrete and sometimes very dramatic illustrations in their preaching.  In this case, Jeremiah is instructed to watch a potter at work on his wheel.  The pot that was being made collapsed in the potter’s hand and he remade the clay into a different form.

Jeremiah gets the point.  The clay represents the house of Israel in the hands of their potter, the Lord.  Israel is the passive object being shaped and worked by God for his own purposes.

As we see in the verses following today’s Lectionary Scripture passage, Israel is hankering after self-determination.  They will hear Jeremiah’s words and declare:

“It is no use! We will follow our own plans, and each of us will act according to the stubbornness of our evil will.” (Jeremiah 18:12).

In contrast, in the Scripture the Lord’s freedom to act as he chooses is axiomatic:

Can I not do with you, O house of Israel, just as this potter has done? says the Lord. Just like the clay in the potter’s hand, so are you in my hand, O house of Israel.

The Lord points out that he can destroy a nation or a kingdom if he chooses — however, he grants nations and people the freedom to repent and turn from evil if they choose:

but if that nation, concerning which I have spoken, turns from its evil, I will change my mind about the disaster that I intended to bring on it.  And at another moment I may declare concerning a nation or a kingdom that I will build and plant it, but if it does evil in my sight, not listening to my voice, then I will change my mind about the good that I had intended to do to it.

God’s freedom is absolute — although it is based on his righteousness — whereas human freedom is completely contingent on God’s permission of freedom.

Ultimately, this is a call to repentance for Judah and Jerusalem before it is too late.  The chain of cause and effect has already begun, but there is still time for them to turn.  Jeremiah completes his metaphor:

Thus says the Lord: Look, I am a potter shaping evil against you and devising a plan against you. Turn now, all of you from your evil way, and amend your ways and your doings.

APPLY:  

The imagery of the potter molding clay while spinning his wheel seems charming — except that Jeremiah doesn’t intend it to be a cozy sermon illustration.

The imagery of the potter and the clay is intended to convey the message of God’s absolute power in our lives.  We belong to him, and he can shape us in whatever form he wishes, and use us for whatever purpose he designs.

However, Jeremiah also makes it clear that God’s compassion for us is such that he does offer the freedom to turn to him in repentance.

This is one of the key arguments against double-predestination (the notion that God destines some to salvation and some to condemnation).  Jeremiah’s description of the clay and the potter supports the idea that all are given the opportunity to turn to God, even up until the last moment:

The Lord is not slow about his promise, as some think of slowness, but is patient with you, not wanting any to perish, but all to come to repentance (2 Peter 3:9).

RESPOND: 

Those of us who have been to the beach, or even to a sandbox, may have had the experience of building a sandcastle, or some other structure of sand.  I’ve watched children diligently working on their architecture, brows furrowed and tongues slightly stuck out between their lips in their intense concentration.

I didn’t have the heart to tell them that their work would soon be dissolved — either by wind or water, or even a bully’s footprint!

This is a reminder that nothing that I build will last.  The clay pottery of my life will collapse, no matter how much effort I put into it — unless my life and work are totally in the hands of the Potter.

His work will endure.  Mine will not.  Therefore I repent of my own efforts to establish my own kingdoms and achievements, and turn them over to God.

Lord, my life is like so much clay in your hands.  Shape me and mold me into your likeness, for your purposes I pray.  Amen. 

PHOTOS:
Throwing Clay” by Johnson Earls is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 2.0 Generic license.

Old Testament for August 28, 2022

6789435601_47f1d986d1_z

“Idol Worship” [photo by Zack Detwiler]

START WITH SCRIPTURE:
Jeremiah 2:4-13
CLICK HERE TO READ SCRIPTURE ON BIBLEGATEWAY.COM

OBSERVE:

Jeremiah’s prophetic word is framed as a debate between the Lord and his people.  God is asking a rhetorical question of Israel that they cannot answer.  They cannot answer because there is no good answer — and the Lord’s complaint is that they have not stayed in dialogue with him:

Thus says the Lord:
What wrong did your ancestors find in me
that they went far from me,
and went after worthless things, and became worthless themselves?

The worthless things no doubt relate to the false gods and goddesses of the Canaanites, and the idols that represent those gods.  But the question is made more poignant by the observation that when they seek what is worthless they themselves became worthless.

Of course there is no good answer — the Lord had done no wrong to them, only blessing them.  And they have chosen that which cannot satisfy.

The Lord points out that Israel didn’t even bother to trump up false charges against him: 

They did not say, “Where is the Lord
who brought us up from the land of Egypt,
who led us in the wilderness,
in a land of deserts and pits,
in a land of drought and deep darkness,
in a land that no one passes through,
where no one lives?”

Had they said all these things about their sojourn in the wilderness, he could have reminded them of the rest of the story: 

I brought you into a plentiful land
to eat its fruits and its good things.

The truth is, though, that no sooner had Israel been given this land of abundance, they corrupted it:

But when you entered you defiled my land,
and made my heritage an abomination.

God’s intention had been to make Israel his heritage.  Solomon’s prayer before the altar after his coronation, more than 300 years earlier, reflects this sense of a special relationship between the Lord and Israel:

For you have separated them from among all the peoples of the earth, to be your heritage, just as you promised through Moses, your servant, when you brought our ancestors out of Egypt, O Lord God (1 Kings 8:53).

Jeremiah’s prophecy moves on and becomes more particular.  He next addresses the priests, rulers and prophets who have a unique responsibility to remain faithful to the Lord.  Like the people of Israel, they also have failed to engage the Lord in the debate that he seeks:

The priests did not say, “Where is the Lord?”
Those who handle the law did not know me;
the rulers transgressed against me;
the prophets prophesied by Baal,
and went after things that do not profit.

The priests who handle the sacrifices in the temple and the interpretation of the law have no personal relationship with the Lord; ergo they cannot guide the rulers who transgress against God.  And even worse, it is the prophets, who normally represent the more “inspired” aspect of Hebrew faith, who are seeking inspiration from Baalism!  They are the very ones leading Israel to seek meaning in worthless things.

So the Lord ratchets up his debate with them:

 Therefore once more I accuse you,
says the Lord,
and I accuse your children’s children.

The Lord then demands that they investigate other nations, such as the island of Cyprus in the Mediterranean Sea to the west, and Kedar which is in the deserts to the east of Judah.  (They are to look as far to the west and as far to the east as they can to discover that other nations don’t treat their gods the way Israel has treated Yahweh.)  They are charged to ask:

Has a nation changed its gods,
even though they are no gods?

His point is that even though these other nations worship false gods, at least they are loyal to them!  This is a contrast to Israel: 

But my people have changed their glory
for something that does not profit.

The Lord finally calls upon even the heavenly court to witness Israel’s infidelity to him:

Be appalled, O heavens, at this,
be shocked, be utterly desolate,
says the Lord,

And the Lord sums up his lover’s quarrel with Israel with two charges against them:

for my people have committed two evils:
they have forsaken me,
the fountain of living water,
and dug out cisterns for themselves,
cracked cisterns
that can hold no water.

The wickedness of Israel’s behavior is self-apparent.  Their first sin was abandoning the God who had led them out of Egypt, guided them through the wilderness to the Land of Promise, and also given them the Law.  Their second sin was seeking to create their own cisterns that are cracked and leaky.  In other words, they have attempted to create their own syncretistic religion, blending Yahwism with the nature and fertility religions of Baal and Asherah that already existed in the land of Canaan.

In this one-sided argument between God and his people, Jeremiah is building the case against Israel.  Obviously, the Northern Kingdom known as Israel fell at the hands of Assyria almost 100 years earlier in 721 B.C.   Jeremiah is speaking to the only tribe of Israel that remains, which is Judah.  And he will build to a crescendo as he warns of the coming doom at the hands of the Empire of Babylon.

Judah will not be able to say, “Nobody warned us!”

APPLY:  

No modern nation has quite the unique relationship with God that Israel has.  Some Americans would like to believe that the United States is God’s favored nation today, but there is no Biblical evidence for that claim. And the state of Israel is a secular state, not a theocracy.

However, I think we can apply Jeremiah’s prophecy in a general way to all nations, and to all cultures that have been influenced by Judeo-Christianity.  Have we not departed from Biblical truths and our personal knowledge of God?  Have we not departed from classical, Scriptural Christianity and sought after worthless things?  In so doing, have we not established value systems on the false gods of pleasure, treasure, fame, and self-interest?  Do our priests and prophets — our pastors and religious leaders — who are charged with interpreting the Scriptures actually know God? Do they really understand the Scriptures?  Do those who govern politically adhere to a moral code that reflects the moral law of God? Is it possible that we have exchanged our faith in the God who reveals himself in Scripture for those things that are idols?

A quick scan of newsfeeds over the past several decades suggests that there has been — at least in the United States, and also in many other traditionally Judeo-Christian nations — an increase in moral and spiritual decadence.

Have we forsaken God, and tried to dig our own cisterns of meaning and purpose that are cracked and leaking?

What God is seeking from us, just as he did with Judah, is dialogue that ultimately leads to relationship with him.

RESPOND: 

One of the truths that strikes me in this passage is what happens when we worship and pursue things that are worthless.  We discover that they are worthless, and that our lives have become worthless as well.

It has become a cliche to say, “On their deathbed, no one says to themselves: ‘I wish I’d spent more time at the office.'”  That cliche may have transitive properties in other areas as well.  On their deathbed, who will say to themselves, “I wish I’d made more money so that I could take it with me.” “I wish I’d watched more t.v.”  “I wish I had spent less time developing my relationship with God.”

I have a theory that we become more and more like whatever, or Whomever, we worship.  And if we worship worthless things, we become more like them.  And if we worship God, we become more like God.

Lord, may my worship be focused only on you — not my “ideas” of you, but truly on you.  Wean me away from those things that are useless and worthless, and give my life your purpose!  Amen.

PHOTOS:
Idol Worship” by Zack Detwiler is licensed under a Creative Commons
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 2.0 Generic license.

Old Testament for August 14, 2022

Isaiah 5 verse 1START WITH SCRIPTURE:
Isaiah 5:1-7
CLICK HERE TO READ SCRIPTURE ON BIBLEGATEWAY.COM

OBSERVE:

Isaiah uses a technique that will be very familiar to readers of the Gospels — he tells a story.  His parable of the vineyard does two things at once.  First, it initially conceals his message.  Isaiah uses his story-telling technique much the way Jesus uses parables — he “hooks” his audience. Second, he “sets the hook” with lovely descriptions, and then “reels” them in, making a rather disturbing application through his metaphor of the vineyard.

Vineyards were an important symbol of prosperity and abundance to the people of Israel.  Micah (a contemporary of Isaiah’s) describes the time of God’s future reign with this image:

…they shall all sit under their own vines and under their own fig trees,
and no one shall make them afraid (Micah 4:4).

Psalm 80 uses language very similar to that of Isaiah when it describes Israel.  The Psalmist addresses God and says:

You brought a vine out of Egypt;
you drove out the nations and planted it.
 You cleared the ground for it;
it took deep root and filled the land (Psalm 80:8-9).

In Isaiah’s vivid metaphor, he offers a similar description of Israel:

Let me sing for my beloved
my love-song concerning his vineyard:
My beloved had a vineyard
on a very fertile hill.
He dug it and cleared it of stones,
and planted it with choice vines;
he built a watchtower in the midst of it,
and hewed out a wine vat in it;

So far, so good.  Everybody loves a well-planted and well-tended vineyard.  The audience in Jerusalem, hearing this lyrical love-song, is surely drawn in, congratulating themselves on all that God has done for them and for their prosperity.  This is a very positive image.

And then comes the twist.  Isaiah is singing the song on behalf of his beloved — the Lord.  But the Lord is surprised that despite all of his efforts on behalf of his vineyard, the yield is unacceptable:

he expected it to yield grapes,
but it yielded wild grapes.

Then, the Lord himself speaks directly through Isaiah to the people, and challenges them to a debate.  This seems to be a pattern.  We saw in Isaiah 1:18, that the Lord challenges his people to:

Come now, let us argue it out…

Here, he demands that the citizens of Jerusalem and Judah arbitrate his case with the vineyard that yielded wild grapes:

And now, inhabitants of Jerusalem
and people of Judah,
judge between me
and my vineyard.
What more was there to do for my vineyard
that I have not done in it?
When I expected it to yield grapes,
why did it yield wild grapes?

And now God begins to reveal what he plans to do, and this is very very bad news for them:

And now I will tell you
what I will do to my vineyard.
I will remove its hedge,
and it shall be devoured;
I will break down its wall,
and it shall be trampled down.
I will make it a waste;
it shall not be pruned or hoed,
and it shall be overgrown with briers and thorns;
I will also command the clouds
that they rain no rain upon it.

Just in case there is any confusion, Isaiah finally reveals the “punch-line” when he makes it clear just who the vineyard represents:

For the vineyard of the Lord of hosts
is the house of Israel,
and the people of Judah
are his pleasant planting;
he expected justice,
but saw bloodshed;
righteousness,
but heard a cry!

Given the historical context of Isaiah’s time, the people of Judah would do well to heed the warning.  The Assyrians were already beginning to uproot the vineyard in the Northern Kingdom of Israel, and would complete their destruction by 721 B.C.

Isaiah is warning the Southern Kingdom of Judah that they will be next unless they practice justice and righteousness.

APPLY:  

What happens when people are given every opportunity to succeed, and they squander that opportunity?  This is one application of this Song of the Vineyard.

Is it not true that God has given human beings every opportunity to succeed, to prosper, to thrive?  He has given us a world with oxygen, plentiful food and resources — ample enough to share with everyone.

What has been our response?  Where God expected justice, he saw bloodshed; and where he expected righteousness, he heard a cry!

This has been the human situation throughout history, when the resources that are available to all have been greedily acquired by the few — usually through warfare or financial manipulation.

Isaiah has already made it crystal clear what his definition of justice includes:

Wash yourselves; make yourselves clean;
remove the evil of your doings
from before my eyes;
cease to do evil,
learn to do good;
seek justice,
rescue the oppressed,
defend the orphan,
plead for the widow (Isaiah 1:16-17).

These are the good grapes that the vineyard was meant to yield.  Isaiah warns us that the consequences of injustice will be judgment.

RESPOND: 

I have had so many wonderful opportunities in my own life.  I had a good, solid family.  I was given a good foundation that prepared me for college and seminary.

However, I am also aware of the many opportunities that I’ve squandered.  My family lived in Spain when I was young, and I didn’t learn to speak Spanish.  My family later lived in Japan, and I didn’t learn to speak Japanese.  I’ve thought many times over the years how useful it might have been to be reasonably fluent in those languages today.

That scarcely scratches the surface of all the other “gifts” I’ve been given by God — talents untapped, or breaks that I didn’t take advantage of.  And even more than that, the grace and mercy and spiritual gifts that God has lavished on me — I become ashamed that I have been so ungrateful and un-enterprising.

Thus I am all the more grateful for God’s abundant grace that continually “replants” me where I have borne wild grapes.  But I dare not continue to presume on that grace.  When I repent, I must also heed the warning of another prophetic figure, John the Baptist:

 Bear fruits worthy of repentance… Even now the ax is lying at the root of the trees; every tree therefore that does not bear good fruit is cut down and thrown into the fire (Luke 3:8,9).

Lord, you have planted a fruitful vineyard in our lives. Please continue to supervise and guide us so that we may bear abundant fruit for you.  Amen.   

PHOTOS:
Isaiah 5 verse 1” uses the following photo:
Flying over vineyards #fromwhereidrone” by Dirk Dallas is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 2.0 Generic license.

Old Testament for August 7, 2022

8663048941_6d8e1618e4_zSTART WITH SCRIPTURE:
Isaiah 1:1, 10-20
CLICK HERE TO READ SCRIPTURE ON BIBLEGATEWAY.COM

OBSERVE:

Isaiah is one of the most prominent prophets in the Old Testament.  The book of Isaiah is sometimes called the “Fifth Gospel” because it is quoted more frequently in the New Testament than any other Old Testament book.

Isaiah’s years of active prophetic ministry stretch from the death of King Uzziah, around 740 B.C., to the reign of Hezekiah, which ended in 687 B.C.

There is evidence that Isaiah was related through his father Amoz to the royal house of Judah, which would explain his residence in Jerusalem and his proximity to the court.

However, if any such relationship existed, it didn’t prevent Isaiah from speaking forthrightly to the kings about issues of social justice and injustice, and God’s judgment.

In today’s lectionary Scripture selection, he is taking the current administration to task, and he doesn’t pull any punches.  He demands that they listen to the word of the Lord, and calls them rulers of Sodom and people of Gomorrah!

This reference to the two cities destroyed in the time of Abraham and Lot is serious.  The sexual sins and cruel inhospitality of their citizens were punished with “extreme prejudice” — they were totally annihilated (Genesis 19).  Only Lot and his two daughters were spared.

What is the nature of Judah’s crimes?  God is fed up with their insincere worship, sacrifices, festivals, Sabbaths, and empty prayers:

    I will not listen;
your hands are full of blood.

Instead, he calls upon them to purify themselves not merely by washing, but by reforming their actions:

cease to do evil,
learn to do good;
seek justice,
rescue the oppressed,
defend the orphan,
plead for the widow.

Ritual worship without moral reform and social justice for the oppressed and the most vulnerable among them is futile.

Nevertheless, God is eager for Judah to encounter him and to work through what it means to truly belong to him.  The language that he uses is like that of a judicial court proceeding:

Come now, let us argue it out,
says the Lord:

However, there is the clear offer of mercy even for a people compared to Sodom and Gomorrah:

though your sins are like scarlet,
they shall be like snow;
though they are red like crimson,
they shall become like wool.

Isaiah has already accused them of having their hands bathed in the blood of their victims — this is why their sins are scarlet and crimson. Still, God’s grace is able to wash away the bloodstains of sin.

Isaiah offers them two choices — blessing or curse:

If you are willing and obedient,
you shall eat the good of the land;
 but if you refuse and rebel,
you shall be devoured by the sword;
for the mouth of the Lord has spoken.

This was no idle threat. In Isaiah’s time, the Northern Kingdom of Israel was already experiencing the beginning of judgment at the hand of Imperial Assyria.  Eventually, Israel was conquered in 721 B.C.  And by 700 B.C., the Assyrians invaded the Southern Kingdom of Judah and even besieged Jerusalem.  Although the Assyrians did not destroy Judah, they were a constant threat.

APPLY:  

One of the constant refrains from the prophets and the Psalmists is that worship without justice and sincerity is empty.  The height of hypocrisy is to worship on the Sabbath and then oppress the poor, cheat others in the marketplace, and engage in sin of any kind.

The goal of worship is not merely ritual righteousness, but right relationship with God.  And right relationship with God must be grounded in true holiness of heart and life.

God’s appeal to us is transformative.  The NRSV translation suggests God wants to argue with us, as though we are in court. Older translations, like the RSV, offer a gentler perspective:

Come now, let us reason together,
says the Lord (Isaiah 1:18).

The implication is that it is not the blood sacrifices of the temple that will wash away the scarlet sins that stain our hands, but a God who wishes to penetrate our very hearts and minds with his lovingkindness.

RESPOND: 

I am an amateur student of the American Civil War.  I have ancestors who fought and shed blood for the Confederacy.  I understand the importance of not judging the choices of one’s ancestors by modern standards.

However, as Abraham Lincoln once said:

If slavery is not wrong, then nothing is wrong.

In my opinion, the injustice and oppression of slavery received its due penalty in the bloodbath of a terrible war.  The “Original Sin” of our Founding Fathers was expiated in blood. Isaiah might have said to them:

…if you refuse and rebel,
you shall be devoured by the sword;
for the mouth of the Lord has spoken.

In the times in which we live, when racial tensions and inequality still exist, we must also hear the Lord say to us:

Come now, let us reason together,
says the Lord (Isaiah 1:18).

Lord, may my worship and my works be in harmony. Amen. 

PHOTOS:
Isaiah 1:17” by Lisa Hall-Wilson is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 2.0 Generic license.