What The Church Needs: Isaiah
There
are many examples in Scripture of godly men fulfilling their call and
glorifying God. They serve as models; albeit, they are imperfect
ones. However, they can teach us many truths both by their positive
and even their negative actions. We look to these men only in an
effort to project their emulative characteristics back onto us,
realizing all the time that they are mere men, and sinful men at that
(except, of course, Christ Jesus). We can learn; we must learn from
those who have gone before. We look at these men and examples of the
past in order to reform the present. Ultimately, however, we must
look to Christ. We know looking back throughout the Bible that
Christ was active within his people. As we look back on them, we are
actually focused on Christ and his work then to better our now. So,
what do we need?
Isaiah
(Isaiah 6:8-13)
We
need an Isaiah-like willingness to go and preach despite the
blindness and deafness of the people.
Oh, to see and hear what the prophet Isaiah experienced. He saw the
Lord high and lifted up. He witnessed Christ seated on his throne
ruling and reigning; he saw his glory filling the temple. He saw the
seraphim and had his sin removed by a coal from the altar. But, all
was not well. Isaiah saw this and more; he experienced a dramatic
calling and heard audibly from the Lord, but his ministry is not
something that we would desire. Why?
The
prophetic ministry of Isaiah was characterized by hardness of hearts
and no repentance. God revealed to the prophet that he would not be
successful. The people would hear, but they would not understand.
They would see, but they would not perceive. The hearts of the
people would be made dull, their ears heavy, and their eyes blind.
This is not the kind of people that we would want to preach to, but
this was Isaiah's calling and ministry. God told Isaiah that the
people would be in this state and condition so that they would not
see, hear, understand, and turn back to him in order to be healed.
It was the will of the Lord for his people to be judged and punished.
This is a frightening example of judicial hardening.
What
was the response of Isaiah? He cried and wondered, “How long, oh
Lord?” He wanted to know the duration of time that the Lord
intended to harden, blind, and punish his people. Notice, he did not
complain, question God or his motives, say that God was being unfair,
or that the people did not deserve this. No, he knew that they
deserved this. He deserved it also, but he received grace from God.
This was to be the ministry of Isaiah. It was not successful in the
people's eyes or numerically. Isaiah did not win any popularity
contests. I am willing to bet that nobody invited him over for
dinner. He was hated and despised because of his message.
Notwithstanding,
Isaiah was willing to go and preach. He obeyed God in spite of the
circumstances, and he was faithful to his calling. He sought to
please the Lord and fulfill his will, so he was successful. Maybe
not in the eyes of the world, but in the eyes of his Lord, he
succeeded.
This
attitude is needed today. We need preachers to proclaim the word of
God simply because that is what he has commanded. We are not to
worry ourselves with popularity or try to win the hearts of men.
There are plenty of occupations where somebody can be a
people-pleaser. A pastor or preacher is not one of them. If you
proclaim the truth, not everyone is going to love you for it. People
will be offended and cause division and strife. We must remember
that it is God's message and not ours. We do not have the right to
change it in an attempt to make it more palatable or acceptable to
sinful and carnal men. We must not water the message down, shave off
the rough edges, sugar-coat it, leave parts of it off, or add to it
in any way. As the prophet before us, we have to be willing to go
and preach no matter the condition of the hearts of the people in
which we are called to minister.
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