Isaiah - Verse By Verse

Isaiah - Day 49

versebyverse | July 02, 2008 21:20

Scripture:  Isaiah 2:18 (NIV):  "and the idols will totally disappear."

Thought:  To me, before God can be exalted, all the idols must be annihilated.

Question:  Have all my idols "disappeared"?

Notice how clear the order has been in these verses:  1) verse 12:  the Lord's Day will bring humility to mankind and every element that is "high and lofty."  2) verses 13 - 16:  each arena of man's pride of life is assaulted and "brought low."  Every source of each and every idol is destroyed.  3) verse 17:  "the LORD alone will be exalted."  And 4) verse 18:  "the idols will totally disappear." 

We see that the idols cannot and will not disappear until the stage is set:  the violent judgment of God's destruction upon the earth must take place first, then God will be lifted up.  Once He is lifted up, all the idols will "totally disappear."  God will have purged the world of the offending, competing idols.

If you think about what makes people proud, you can generally trace it back to something God has made.  And if that is so, why do we not worship God all the more?  Why do we applaud ourselves?  Why do we worship what God has made instead of the God Who made all things?  "Every good and perfect gift is from above, coming down from the Father of the heavenly lights..." (James 1:17).  He is Our Source and He deserves all worship. 

In another sense, all idols will disappear at this time because when God's ascendency is completed, the need for idols will "disappear."  Mankind will see the goodness, blessing and power of God's rule and will flourish under it.  Flourishment under God, the Father, will prevent the rise of any other lesser "gods."  That is indeed a great day to look forward to!

Let us give praise and credit where it is due.  Let us praise God!  Let God alone be exalted and no other.

Prayer:  Father in Heaven, thank You for this scriptural promise that one day the idols will disappear.  I rejoice in the knowledge that You will make this happen!  Amen

Isaiah - Day 48

versebyverse | July 01, 2008 19:58

Scripture:  Isaiah 2:17 (NIV):  "The arrogance of man will be brought low and the pride of men humbled; the LORD alone will be exalted in that day,"

Thought:  To me, once man and his world are brought low, God will finally have "room" to be lifted up.

Question:  Is the LORD, alone, exalted in my heart and life?

Man will not possess the props, (see verses 12 through 16), that have aided his self-confidence and man's whole machine will collapse to the ground.  The humbling of mankind removes man from the forefront and allows God to be properly recognized.  God will be lifted up when man realizes that all these things, (verses 12 through 16), existed outside of man's control, either to be created or directed to a good end.  God will be seen and recognized at last as the worthy Creator and Director.  Too bad that deprivation (of all these things) is necessary to the humbling of the proud.  But thank God it works!  Thank God He can salvage the situation at all!  Thank God this is a sure word of prophecy and that God will be exalted in that day!

We ought to welcome this kind of stripping.  A removal of all idol material so that nothing can compete any longer with God.  That would be, truly, a "day" of the LORD and a day of exaltation!

Prayer:  Lord, I thank You that man's arrogance will be broken by You in "Your Day."  How I look forward to Your exaltation, Father.  What a Day that will be!  Amen. 

Isaiah - Day 47

versebyverse | June 30, 2008 19:36

Scripture:  Isaiah 2:16 (NIV):  "for every trading ship and every stately vessel"

Thought:  To me, it is clear that God is in control of all areas of our lives and of the whole globe, including its seas and oceans.

Question:  Will we come to God on His terms?

The tall masts of man-made ships, thrusting out to sea to spread their idol-worship to other lands, will also be brought down.  The reach of God's indignation over idolatry is not confined to forests, mountains and civilized cities, but will also stretch across the seas.  "Every trading ship and every stately vessel" will be affected.  Read, if you will, in Revelation about God's inclusion of the oceans and seas in His judgmental wrath.  No area of our globe will be excluded.  And without ocean-going trade, economies will collapse.  God will truly cut at the core to humiliate mankind.

Does God speak this, through Isaiah's writings, to totally dishearten mankind?  Is God irreversably angry--to the point of our annihilation?  How can we tolerate this harsh message?  If the whole message of Isaiah, or all of the prophets, major and minor, for that matter, is openly heard and taken in, one cannot help but hear the call to repentance and the extended, open hand of God's large offer of love, forgiveness and mercy.  Will we hear?  Will we respond?  Will we repent, that is, turn away from wrong and idolatrous choices?

Prayer:  Sovereign Lord, turn my heart to You every day, in every way.  Show me in what areas I need to repent and empower me to yield up my will to You always.  Amen. 

Isaiah - Day 46

versebyverse | June 29, 2008 19:17

Scripture:  Isaiah 2:15 (NIV):  "for every lofty tower and every fortified wall,"

Thought:  To me, earth's great cities are temporary displays of man's "pride of place".

Question:  How much of my heart is in awe of what man has built?

The "Day of the Lord" is "for every lofty tower and every fortified wall."  "All that is exalted" (Isaiah 2:12) will be brought low.  Not just mankind, but all the features of man's world must come crashing down.  Why is this?  Man is so "tied up" in his world, so wrapped up in its elements.  To me, God must work a great separation.  He must violently strip man away from those things he has trusted in the place of God.  Idolatry is the worship of things in place of God.  To dismantle idolatrous hearts God must tear down the very things that men, over time, have worshipped in place of God.  Idols have been carved out of wood, or worshipped in the groves, and so we see verse 13 and the destruction of the cedar and oak trees.  Idols have been chiseled out of stone or worshipped in the high places, and so we see verse 14 and the collapse of every mountain and hill.  Idols have been created and erected in the cities and walled towns, and so we see verse 15 and the tearing down of "every lofty tower" and "fortified wall."

The Day of the Lord is "for" every one of these arenas.  It is there to eliminate the chaff of false gods and to replace each with the Great, Omnipotent and Worthy God and Father, our LORD Almighty, Maker of heaven and earth, and Him alone.

Prayer:  Great God of All, I pray that I will never bow to any idol.  Lord, You have the ability to level us all down to the ground.  You are an awesome God!  Amen. 

Isaiah - Day 45

versebyverse | June 28, 2008 13:53

Scripture:  Isaiah 2:14 (NIV):  "for all the towering mountains and all the high hills,"

Thought:  To me, the levelling of the prominent and "permanent" mountains strikes at the essence of man's pride and confidence in how things are around him.

Question:  Do I rely on things around me or God's presence within me?

Looking back at verse 12 we see that the Lord "has a day in store for all the proud and lofty."  This "day of the Lord" will level, or flatten, mankind.  The essence of pride will be hard struck.  What man has begun to trust in--what he calls enduring--will be wiped away.

In each of these 4 verses in series following verse 12, key words describe pride and loftiness.  These words include, "tall", "lofty" (verse 13); "towering", "high" (verse 14); "lofty", fortified" (verse 15); and "stately" (verse 16).

God is making a point:  man has become high-minded and arrogant!  Webster defines arrogant as "offensively exaggerating one's own importance."  Man has flaunted his self-made importance in God's face and now God will bring down everything that is elevated, including, here, the mountains and hills.  To me, this will most logically be done by earthquake activity.  Revelation records the future incidence of many earthquakes, five to be exact, but verse 14 of Revelation 6 is applicable especially:  "the sky receded like a scroll rolling up, and every mountain and island was removed from its place."

Prayer:  High King of Heaven, help me, in reading these words today, to humble myself before You!  You have my attention:  I pray that others would turn and listen to You as well.  Amen.

Isaiah - Day 44

versebyverse | June 27, 2008 18:01

Scripture:  Isaiah 2:13 (NIV):  "for all the cedars of Labanon, tall and lofty, and all the oaks of Bashan,"

Thought:  To me, destruction of the earth as we know it should awaken mankind to the power of God--maybe.

Question:  Do I hear God's voice through natural disasters?

The Day of the LORD will strip mankind of all those elements that contribute to man's ability to be independent.  The forests will be destroyed, perhaps by the fires mentioned in II Peter 3:10:  "But the day of the Lord will come like a thief.  The heavens will disappear with a roar; the elements will be destroyed by fire, and the earth and everything in it will be laid bare."

How desperate God must be to reach the mind and soul of rebellious mankind by resorting to the destruction of His own hand of creation:  the majestic cedars and strong oaks!  What a sad day when the humiliation of man must be accomplished this way.

Note:  Bashan is another name for the modern day Golan Heights.  Historically, the oaks here were used to create oars for sea-going ships, among other things.  But no doubt the offending idols were carved from these trees as well, and so, God will wipe them out!

Prayer:  Almighty God, I bow before Your power and Your wisdom:  power to create and to destroy at will; wisdom to bring down the proud at the proper time--in Your Day--as You see fit.  Have Your way, Lord.  Amen. 

Isaiah - Day 43

versebyverse | June 26, 2008 21:19

Scripture:  Isaiah 2:12 (NIV):  "The LORD Almighty has a day in store for all the proud and lofty, for all that is exalted (and they will be humbled),"

Thought:  To me, we do not take seriously enough the coming of "the Day of the LORD."

Question:  Am I among the "proud and lofty"?

God holds His Day in store.  He will display His anger only then.  For now He waits.  He continues to extend opportunities of repentance to all of us in the meantime.  We ought to understand this; that God is extremely patient.  He forbears with us decade after decade, even century after century.  But one day He will "let us have it"!  Then we will be humbled in a way we do not understand now, that is, as God deals "blows" to our worldly systems, causing economy, environment, infrastructure, etc., to collapse, man will finally be stripped of all "supports" and will have to accept the truth that something, Someone, bigger is in charge.  This is what we have forgotten.  We have forgotten because we are proud.  Our pride blinds us to the loftiness of God.  God's Day is reserved for the purpose of blasting away our pride and everything that exalts itself against God.

Our nation has witnessed the beginning, and today, the slight acceleration of, the kinds of "blows" against society that culminate in the events of The Great Tribulation, as described in the book of Revelation.  We currently see an increase in earthquakes, floods, forest fires, famine, disease, immorality and the like all over our globe.  These are the beginning of "birth pangs"--the "labor" to bring forth God's complete Lordship over the earth.  The LORD's "Day" will mark the end of the period of "labor" and the "birth" of the exaltation of God.  When mankind is brought low, God will be exalted. 

God has a purpose in striking out against man's pride.  He draws as many as will come, to repentance.  Do we see God at work in the natural disasters around us?  Are we willing to acknowledge our Creator's power and yield to His righteousness, forsaking our sin?

Prayer:  Lord, help me always to realize, and live every moment in, the acknowledgment of Your Lordship.  Amen. 

Isaiah - Day 42

versebyverse | June 25, 2008 17:53

Scripture:  Isaiah 2:11 (NIV):  "The eyes of the arrogant man will be humbled and the pride of men brought low; the LORD alone will be exalted in that day."

Thought:  To me, Americans could improve their lives by adding more humility and subracting more pride.

Question:  Have I humbled myself in the eyes of God?

This is speaking of the "Day of the LORD."  It is a (future) time when God will enter the scene in power and set things straight as far as Who is in control.  Man needs to see God's "splendor" with his eyes, instead of viewing his puny idols with his arrogant eyes.  He will at this time, and those idolaters will finally be knocked "down to size"--the "size" of their own idols!

God has, all through scripture, announced His dislike for the "arrogant."  God hates a "proud look."  Pride battles for a higher position; even as Lucifer wanted to exalt himself "above the stars of God", (Isaiah 14:13), so man often becomes arrogant against God and the position God has assigned him.  But in "that day" God will put each and every one of us in our proper place:  lowly creatures under the omnipotent Creator!  

The exaltation of God is so needed today!  And I, for one, am so happy that God alone will be exalted in that day.  He deserves it. 

Prayer:  All powerful Father, I eagerly await Your Day of exaltation when, at last, You will be lifted up and honored properly.  I pray today that I may remember my true and humble position as one of Your needy creatures.  Amen.   

Isaiah - Day 41

versebyverse | June 24, 2008 18:41

Scripture:  Isaiah 2:10 (NIV):  "Go into the rocks, hide in the ground from dread of the LORD and the splendor of his majesty!"

Thought:  To me, it is truly a sad day when mankind must hide from God's splendor.

Question:  Am I afraid of God's splendor (glory)?

The context has shown man's idolatry, God's "happy ending" in spite of idolatry, man's rebellion against a loving Creator, God's pain over His wayward people and His call, as ever, to repentance.  Now at the point where man is "abandoned" by God to "wallow" in his idolatry, God urges them to prepare for the worst:  an onslaught that requires them to hide for protection.  The "onslaught" at this point is merely the appearance of God's Holy greatness coming at them in glory and splendor, yet it will destroy in its power because of their abject unholiness.

We see similar descriptions of "hiding in the rocks" in passages elsewhere in scripture, particularly in Revelation 6:15 and 16, where men actually ask the rocks and mountains "fall on us, and hide us from the face of him who sits on the throne, and from the wrath of the Lamb."  The wording here in Isaiah implies that God has ordered men to hide in the rocks, while the Revelation and Isaiah 2:19 and 21 (coming up later!) verses are a response to that very order where we see mankind doing exactly what God has prophesied!  We see in this so clearly that God is in sovereign control!

The two factors causing people to hide are: 1) dread and 2) God's splendor, or simply a combination:  dread of His splendor!  I would say, "dread" of punishment from God's anger over sin is logical, but a desire to avoid exposure to God's "splendor" is the unfortunate result.  

Adam and Eve went into "hiding" because of shame and guilt of sin but it was a temporary escape.   Later they accepted God's provided covering for their sin.  But here in Isaiah is a deeper "hiding", it seems.  These people have rebelled a long time and resisted repentance at every opportunity.  How sad!

Prayer:  God of Splendor, may Your glory be a blessing to me and never a threat.  Help me to be rightly related to You that I may rejoice in Your splendor.  Amen. 

Isaiah - Day 40

versebyverse | June 23, 2008 19:05

Scripture:  Isaiah 2:9 (NIV):  "So man will be brought low and mankind humbled--do not forgive them."

Thought:  To me, as a whole, our nation is blind to the consequences of its own idolatry.

Question:  Have I humbled myself to God already, or will He have to humble me at some point?

God watches us go down into the degradation of unchecked idolatry.  He disapproves of any forgiveness of mankind until the process finishes and full humility is obtained.  Is it that we must go down before we appreciate "up"?  Is it that God's glory, by virtue of contrast, can be desired only after we trample it down?  

To me, it almost seems as if God is talking to Himself here, particularly where He says "do not forgive them."  Who else but God has the power to forgive?  Another view of these words by Matthew Henry, Commentator, states that "some think it may read:  'And thou wilt not forgive them.' "  Whichever translation is more accurate is a minor issue.  The heart of this passage is clear:  idol-worship has brought the Israelites to an all-time low, and mankind right along with them, so much so that God does not offer His forgiveness any longer, only wrathful judgment.  Hence comes the "Day of Judgment", the "time of Jacob's Trouble", "The Great Tribulaion", or, more generically, God's wrath, to be finally let loose upon the earth after long ages of gracious longsuffering on God's part.  Mankind needs humbling.  This is the key message.  

Idolatry is the antithesis of what God desires and plans for us.  No one is farther from God than when he engages in idol worship.  One could say that the "turning point" must be near because man can go no lower.  This must be why God lets us linger "down"--He knows soon we must either turn or die.  And all along God has said there will be joy, there will be happiness, there will be beauty.  Do I believe Him?  Will I forsake my idols?  The work of my own hands...?

Prayer:  Merciful and longsuffering Father, open my eyes to see the necessity to repent of sin!  Cause me to accept Your forgiveness while it is still offered and before I must be "brought low".  Amen. 

 

1 2 3 ... 19 20 21  Next»
 
Accessible and Valid XHTML 1.0 Strict and CSS
Powered by LifeType - Design by BalearWeb - Hosted by New Technologies.