Finished up 1st & 2nd Thess in my morning reading & turned back to the OT. (I go back & forth between the two) In Amos today. Remember, 1 reason among many to read the OT prophets is the enormous insight they lend into what greatly pleases & displeases our very attentive God.
Amos 4 lists a series of circumstances God brought upon His people so they’d look to him. In each case, he repeats the words “yet you did not return to me.” (5X) So he says the chilling words, “Israel, prepare to meet your God! He is here: the one who forms the mountains, creates
the wind, & reveals his thoughts to man, the one who makes the dawn out of darkness and strides on the heights of the earth. The Lord, the God of armies, is his name...Seek Me and live!” Listen carefully: God is not just calling them back to church! He’s calling them back to HIM.
He’s not calling them to write great sermons, books & worship songs. He’s calling them to return to HIM. In times of unbelief, carnality, idolatry & worldliness among the people of God, our bringing all our best religious performances to Him doesn’t distract Him. It sickens Him.
“I hate, I despise, your feasts! I can’t stand the stench of your solemn assemblies... take away from Me the noise of your songs! I won’t listen to the music of your harps. But let justice flow like water & righteousness, like an unfailing stream.” This is the word of the Lord.
Our God is so gracious and merciful. So anxious to show compassion and to restore us. But He is looking for us to return to Him. He is looking for repentance. We have sinned greatly. We, the church, have aligned ourselves with political parties & flesh & blood who cannot save us.
We have compromised our witness from every side. Who among us can claim absolute innocency before God? Yes, Jesus called us to render to Caesar what is Caesar’s. We pay our taxes, pray for our leaders, vote our convictions, etc. But we align ourselves with CHRIST ALONE.
We are in bed with politicians & parties. Let that sink in. WE are the adulterers. Neither party carries all our gospel values. Hear again: yes, we vote carefully, prayerfully but we remain aloof from politicians, we counsel but owe them NOTHING, so we keep our heads on straight.
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Isaiah 61 today. I’ll never be able to read it without turning to Luke 4. Jesus returns from the wilderness of temptation in the power of the Spirit (that’ll preach right there) and heads to Nazareth where he grew up. Enters synagogue as usual on the Sabbath. Stood up to read.
Now, several practices would’ve already taken place in the order of synagogue service by this time. The congregation would’ve recited the Shema then a set of prayers including the 18 Benedictions. Someone then would’ve read from the Torah (the Law) in Hebrew translated to Aramaic
THEN would’ve come a reading from the Prophets followed by an exposition ordinarily connecting that day’s section from the Law & Prophets. This is where Jesus takes center stage. He’s standing, as was the practice for the reading. Scroll of Isaiah is handed to him. He unrolls it
Do not even try to make me unhappy this morning. It is 56° on a cloudless morning in my corner of Houston Texas and I have greeted every tree, every vine, 2 dogs, 1 hawk, 1 owl, 8 cows and 1 fine donkey in the happy name of Jesus on my before-work walk in the country already.
Of course, some of you don’t think Jesus is happy. You’re gonna be shocked 1 of these days when you enter into your Master’s happiness. We’ve never once been miserable enough to wreck his day. This is the day the Lord has made. This 1 right here.I’m gonna rejoice & be glad in it.
And, anyway, if this calf does nothing for you, I can’t help you.
Isaiah 53 this morning. 1st chapter of Scripture I ever memorized. Recited it in the 6th grade in a church service as part of the completion of a girls’ missions course. Didn’t fully understand it, of course, but this I knew: the OT foretold Christ’s suffering in alarming detail.
This masterpiece actually begins in Is 52:13. That section’s needed because the poem contrasts the Servant’s exaltation & humiliation. There we are told he would be “successful” & greatly exalted but only after grotesque disfigurement. Think of Is.52:13-53:12 as the OT’s Phil 2.
Shelves of books are written about this poem. I’ll stop at quoting some verbal phrases this AM.
He, our Christ, our one and only, was
...so disfigured he did not look like a man...despised & rejected by men... pierced because of our rebellion, crushed because of our iniquities.
A word to Jesus-followers this morning. I’m not talking to those who’d simply check the Christian box on a questionnaire about religious beliefs. I’m talking today to people who regularly seek to walk in obedience to Jesus Christ. We are in colossal need of wisdom from above.
A thick cloud of confusion, chaos, deception & seduction has settled on this nation. We need to be able to see through it & we cannot do so without seeking the Lord urgently & diligently. It’s election season when “we the people” notoriously beg to be bought, flattered & lied to.
Behold the madness of the situation before us when gospel people -followers of the same Jesus Christ revealed by the Spirit in the canonical Gospels- are faced with choosing between the unborn & the born. It’s absurd. We value ALL life or we are utterly clueless about the gospel.
Isaiah 47 this AM. In the Old Testament, Babylon is, of course, an actual city-state & a rising & falling empire but it also becomes symbolic of human decadence, of a society given over to self. Chillingly, Babylon’s slogan in Isaiah 47:8,10 is,
“I am, and there is no one else.”
To fully appreciate the audacity of Babylon’s motto, peruse the previous chapters of Isaiah in which God declares emphatically, repeatedly, “I am God, & there is no other.” The thing about God is that, when we insist long & hard enough on having it our way, sometimes He lets us.
We are flagrantly indoctrinated in our worldly culture to live by exactly the same slogan: “I am, & there is no one else.”
I am who I say I am. Don’t tell me what to do. Don’t infringe upon any of my rights. Don’t get in my way. Don’t even get in my selfie.
I am the Great I am.
The juxtaposition of God’s immensity & tenderness in Is 40 is breathtaking. Your God “who has measured the waters in the hollows of His hand” & “marked off the heavens with the span of His hand” protects His flock like a shepherd, carrying His lambs “in the fold of His garment.”
“Do you not know? Have you not heard?” (Is 40:28)
Oh yeah, many of us have heard 1000X what follows those questions but right about now we may be just exactly exhausted, undone & desperate enough to let them sink all the way from our heads to our hearts then to our actual feet:
“The Lord is the everlasting God, the Creator of the whole earth. He never becomes faint or weary; there is no limit to His understanding.
He gives strength to the
FAINT
& strengthens the
POWERLESS.
Youths may become faint & weary, & young men stumble & fall,