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I was thinking
this week about a very interesting subject I was hoping to study
with you today and I called it "The Man Who Missed His Second
Chance". I still hope I can study that with you sometime when
we have an opportunity. But when I was praying last night, I came
to the conclusion that I should talk about something else. And my
wife used to tell me when I was a young minister that she could
always tell when I had prepared my sermon on Friday night. So I
suppose she will be able to tell this time, too, because you are
not nearly as well prepared when you have changed your mind on Friday
night as if you had changed your mind on Tuesday night or some other
night in the week and you had been thinking about, in the back of
your mind, what you were going to study and what you were going
to say. And so, acknowledging that I am probably not as well organized
for this message as I should be, I still want to invite you to open
your Bibles and we are going to have a Bible study. We will start
our Bible study in 2 Chronicles.
2 Chronicles
is a book that we do not preach from very often. Most of us probably
do not study this book nearly as much as we study some other books
of the Bible; I know that I do not. But in 2 Chronicles 26, I want
to read to you a story that will set the background for what we
are going to study. The stories in the Bible are true and since
they are true, they have anchor points in history. It is not like
a fictitious story that somebody just imagined. The stories in the
Bible are true and so you can anchor them to history. That is one
of the interesting things about studying archaeology. Perhaps some
of you have read the book "The Spade Confirms the Book".
When you study archaeology you find out that the historical evidence
confirms what the Bible says happened. This story in 2 Chronicles
26 provides the historical information and background about what
I want to study with you this morning.
We will read
almost the whole chapter. It starts, "Now all the people of
Judah took Uzziah," he has another name, by the way. He is
also called Azariah, but in 2 Chronicles he is called Uzziah. "Who
was sixteen years old and made him king instead of his father Amaziah."
Amaziah had been murdered; you can read that in the previous chapter.
How would you like to be the king, the governor of a country when
you were sixteen years old? A lot of responsibility. This man Uzziah,
it says, "built Elath and restored it to Judah, after the king
rested with his fathers. Uzziah was sixteen years old when he became
king, and he reigned fifty-two years in Jerusalem." One of
the longest reigns of any of the kings of Judah. "His mother's
name was Jecholiah of Jerusalem. And he did what was right in the
sight of the Lord." Isn't that wonderful? Here was a man who
reigned for a long time and he did what was right. "According
to all that his father Amaziah had done. He sought God in the days
of Zechariah, who had understanding in the visions of God;"
Zechariah was the one who wrote the book of Zechariah, of course,
in the Old Testament near the end. "And as long as he sought
the Lord, God made him prosper." Isn't that interesting? As
long as he did what was right and he sought the Lord, God made him
to prosper.
"Now he
went out and made war against the Philistines, and broke down the
wall of Gath, [that was one of the Philistine cities] the wall of
Jabneh, and the wall of Ashdod; and he built cities around Ashdod
and among the Philistines. God helped him against the Philistines,
against the Arabians who lived in Gur Baal, and against the Meunites.
Also the Ammonites brought tribute to Uzziah. His fame spread as
far as the entrance of Egypt, for he strengthened himself exceedingly."
So were they
living in a time, now, of prosperity? Oh, yes. Outwardly they were
having great prosperity. Now when you read the Bible you find out
that oftentimes our outward prosperity and our spiritual condition
do not coincide at all. Oftentimes, people who are having the greatest
outward prosperity are in the deepest trouble spiritually and people
who apparently are in the deepest trouble in the outside world,
may be very healthy, in very good condition spiritually. You find
that, for instance, in the book of Revelation. You have two examples
in the book of Revelation. You have the church at Smyrna which outwardly
was a persecuted church and was in poverty and in terrible trouble,
but the Lord said, "Really you're rich." You will find
no condemnation, no rebuke to the church of Smyrna. Spiritually
they were in good shape; outwardly they were in terrible condition.
They were being persecuted and tortured to death and they were poor,
but spiritually they were in good shape. There is no rebuke. There
are only two churches of the seven to whom there is given no rebuke.
One of them is Smyrna. There is another church called Laodicea and
outwardly they were prosperous and rich. What was their spiritual
condition? "Oh," the Lord says, "you are poor, wretched,
miserable" And the church of Laodicea is one of the two churches
of the seven churches to whom no commendation is given. Smyrna is
one of the two churches to whom no reproof or rebuke is given. Laodicea
is one of the two churches to whom no commendation is given. You
see what is happening to you on the outside, your prosperity, may
have nothing to do with your spiritual condition.
Now keep that
in mind while we read this story. These people were in good shape
financially, militarily, and economically. Notice what happens.
It says here in verse 9, "And Uzziah built towers in Jerusalem
at the Corner Gate, the Valley Gate, and at the corner buttress
of the wall; then he fortified them." So they were ready for
a siege. They were ready for trouble. They were fortified.
Verse 10, "Also
he built towers in the desert. He dug many wells, for he had much
livestock, both in the lowlands and in the plains; he also had farmers
and vine-dressers in the mountains and in Carmel, for he loved the
soil. Moreover Uzziah had an army of fighting men who went out to
war by companies, according to the number on their roll as prepared
by Jeiel the scribe and Maseiah the office, under the hand of Hananiah,
one of the king's captains. The total number of chief officers of
the mighty men of valor was two thousand six hundred. And under
their hand was an army of three hundred and seven thousand five
hundred, that made war with mighty power, to help the king against
the enemy. Then Uzziah prepared for them, the entire army, shields,
spears, helmets, body armor, bows, and slings to cast stones. And
he made devices in Jerusalem, invented by skillful men, to be on
the towers and corners, to shoot arrows and large stones. So his
fame spread far and wide, for he was marvelously helped till he
became strong." Things were in good shape, weren't they? They
were strong. They had a good army. It is not like it was in the
time of Gideon when they had no swords or spears. They were well-equipped
and they had forts and towers and their agricultural program was
well-developed.
And you know
what happened when they became so prosperous and strong? He became
presumptuous. They knew they were God's people. They knew that they
were God's children and the Lord was prospering them, and the king
became presumptuous. Notice what happens next. Now this is the sad
part of the story. It says, "But when he was strong his heart
was lifted up, to his destruction, for he transgressed against the
Lord his God by entering the temple of the Lord to burn incense
on the altar of incense. And Azariah the priest went in after him,
and with him were eighty priests of the Lord, who were valiant men.
And they withstood King Uzziah, and said to him, 'It is not for
you, Uzziah, to burn incense to the Lord, but for the priests, the
sons of Aaron, who are consecrated to burn incense. Get out of the
sanctuary, for you have trespassed! You shall have no honor from
the Lord God.' Then Uzziah became furious."
You see he was
an absolute monarch, he was used to absolute power, and he was not
used to anybody questioning his authority. "He had a censor
in his hand to burn incense. And while he was angry with the priests,
leprosy broke out on his forehead, before the priests in the house
of the Lord, beside the incense altar. And Azariah the chief priest
and all the priests looked at him, and there, on his forehead, he
was leprous; so they thrust him out of that place. Indeed he also
hurried to get out, because the Lord had struck him. King Uzziah
was a leper until the day of his death. He dwelt in an isolated
house, because he was a leper; for he was cut off from the house
of the Lord. Then Jotham his son was over the king's house, judging
the people of the land. Now the rest of the acts of Uzziah, from
first to last, the prophet Isaiah the son of Amoz wrote."
It was during
this time that Uzziah had leprosy and everybody knew why he had
leprosy. He had leprosy because he had transgressed; he had disobeyed.
Now those people lived in the time of the old covenant. In the time
of the old covenant judgment was brought against sin immediately.
In the time of the new covenant, in which we are living, judgment
is not normally brought against sin immediately. It comes at the
end. I have often wondered if the Christian world wouldn't be a
completely different place if we were living in the time of the
old covenant and judgment against our sins came instantly and everybody
knew, "Well, this fella, he used to be the president, he used
to be the king, but he's got leprosy now because he did what was
wrong. The Lord struck him." Do you suppose we would live any
different?
One of the amazing
things I have learned in studying the Old Testament is that when
the Lord did bring judgments instantly upon people, so often, now
it affected the person who got the judgment all right, but so often,
the rest of the people just went on. And apparently it was this
way in Judah. And it was during this time, Jotham was taking most
of the responsibilities of state because his father, who would have
still been the king and who was technically still the king, actually
was not reigning because he was a leper living in an isolated house.
And the year came that Uzziah died.
I want you to
turn to Isaiah 6 and look at what happened in the year that Uzziah
died. Isaiah, here, is called to be a prophet. And he says, "In
the year that King Uzziah died, I saw the Lord sitting on a throne,
high and lifted up, and the train. . ." Now the New King James
Version says "the train of His robe", but it would be
more accurate to say the "train of His glory filled the temple".
When Isaiah received this revelation, he was in a state of depression.
He was discouraged. Did you know that? Have you ever been discouraged?
Have you ever been depressed because there was a whole series of
events that happened and you just did not know how you were going
to weave your way out of all this?
Isaiah was depressed
and he was discouraged. Let me read to you from the pen of Ellen
White a few of the reasons why Isaiah was so depressed and so discouraged.
First of all, Assyria, at this time, was a world power and very,
very cruel; and armies of Assyria were threatening both Israel and
Judah at this time. In fact, during his lifetime he was going see
the ten tribes totally destroyed and scattered among all the nations.
Not only that, during the lifetime of Isaiah, he was going to see
the Assyrian armies invade the nation of Judah over and over and
over again. When you read the first 20 chapters or so of Isaiah,
he talks about these Assyrian invasions, repeatedly. During his
lifetime, Jerusalem itself was going to besieged by the Assyrian
armies. And if God had not especially intervened, that would have
brought the end to Judah right then. It was going to be a terribly
trying time. And worst of all, maybe we should read it from Isaiah
22:8, it says, "He removed the protection of Judah." Terrible,
terrible thing. Ellen White comments on that and she says the divine
protection was being removed from the Southern Kingdom; and the
Assyrian forces were about to overspread the land of Judah.
So right at
this time when Isaiah was called to be a prophet, the divine protection
was starting to be removed from God's chosen people and they were
going to suffer terrible calamities. We will not go into that right
now; how awful it was to be invaded by the Assyrian army. Isaiah
says that they were cruel and I want to tell you, that is not an
overstatement. But there was something worse than that; worse than
the fact of all of these outward dangers and God was removing His
protection, there was something even more dangerous than that. Let
me read from the pen of Ellen White what she said was even more
dangerous than that. She says, "But the dangers from without"
now she is talking about this period in Isaiah 6 when Isaiah was
called to be a prophet, "overwhelming though they seemed, were
not so serious as the dangers from within."
What! All these
Assyrian armies, all these calamities that are about to take place.
There is something worse than that? Yes, there is something worse
than that. And where is the danger within? "Oh," somebody
says, "it's those people out there." No, friend, it is
not those people out there. It is this heart in here. That is where
the real danger is. It says, "The perversity of his people
brought to the Lord's servant the greatest perplexity and the deepest
depression." See, he was depressed. "By their apostasy
and rebellion, those who should have been standing as lightbearers
among the nations were inviting the judgments of God. The outlook
was particularly discouraging as regards to the social conditions
of the people. In their desire for gain, men were adding house to
house and field to field. [See Isaiah 5:8] Justice was perverted.
There was no pity shown to the poor. The Lord declared, 'The spoil
of the poor is in your houses. You have beaten My people to pieces
and grind the faces of the poor.' Isaiah 3:14, 15. The magistrates
whose duty it was to protect the helpless turned a deaf ear to the
cries of the poor, the needy, the widows, and the fatherless. With
oppression and wealth came pride and love of display."
The Lord rebuked
that in Isaiah 2,and the prevailing pride of the daughters of Zion,
with their tinkling ornaments described in Isaiah 3:18-23. And Isaiah
knew about these things and he was perplexed and discouraged and
did not know what to do. How would you feel if you were supposed
to be a prophet under conditions like that?
You know, God
knew how he felt. Friend, God knows just how you feel when you are
discouraged and when you are perplexed and you do not know which
way to turn and you do not know what to do. And God did something
for him. And I realized that God wants to do this same thing for
me and He wants to do it for you. God let him see something and
he said in verse 1, "I saw the Lord sitting on a throne, high
and lifted up, and the train of His glory filled the temple."
And he saw a picture of innumerable angels around this throne, below
it.
Ellen White
says it was like the veil to the Most Holy Place was just lifted
and he could see right in there, where he could not go. He saw the
angels and they were saying, "Holy, holy, holy is the Lord
of hosts; the whole earth is full of His glory!" What did he
see? Do you realize that what he saw that day changed his whole
life? And I am not going to try to construct something in any organized
way. I am just going to try to think it through in my mind and I
want you to think it through in your mind and try to understand
and say, "What did he see?" And what he saw that day became
the burden of his message and everything that he wrote.
I want to read
to you a few things that he wrote after he saw this vision. In Isaiah
40:9 it says, "O Zion, you who bring good tidings, get up into
the high mountain; O Jerusalem, you who bring good tidings, lift
up your voice with strength, lift it up, be not afraid; say to the
cities of Judah, 'Behold your God!' " Isaiah believed that
if you could get a glimpse of what God was like, it would change
your life because it changed his life. That vision that day changed
his life. He was never the same again. Ellen White says he was transformed,
he was changed by what he saw. And so he started to tell the people,
"You need to behold your God." What will happen if you
behold Him?
Look in Isaiah
45:22, "Look to Me, and be saved, all you ends of the earth!
For I am God, and there is no other." So often, friends, when
we are in situations like Isaiah was in and there is trouble on
the outside and worse trouble on the inside, we have a tendency
to look at the problem and then try to figure out the solution from
just studying the problem. That is a human thing to do. Look what
Isaiah said would happen to you if you do that. Look in Isaiah 8:22.
It says, "Then they will look to the earth, and see trouble
and darkness, gloom of anguish; and they will be driven into darkness."
What will happen if you concentrate your mind on the human imperfections
that are all around? Isaiah said there was going to be trouble;
there was going to be darkness. And you "will be driven to
darkness."
You do not dare,
friend, study your own heart and your own emotions and your own
mind. You will not find a saviour within. You do not dare concentrate
your mind on the imperfections that are all around you because you
will be driven to discouragement and despair. That was Isaiah's
condition already. And what was the solution to it? The Lord lifted
the curtain and he saw something else. He saw the glory of God.
And when he saw that, when he got his mind fixed on that, it changed
his life. We read in Isaiah 6:4, "And the posts of the door
were shaken by the voice of him who cried out, and the house was
filled with smoke." Why was it filled with smoke? What does
that mean?
Turn to Revelation
15:8. It says, "The temple was filled with smoke from the glory
of God and from His power, and no one was able to enter the temple
till the seven plagues of the seven angels were completed."
What was it that filled the temple with smoke? It was from the glory
of God and from His power. We need to understand both. Isaiah was
discouraged because of all the trouble that was coming in on the
outside. Do we find people today who are discouraged because all
the trouble is coming on the world and we can read in the Bible
about the time of trouble such as never was since there was a nation
and we know it is coming and people are scared of it.
Friend, what
we need to get a glimpse of and a vision for today, we need to understand
the power of God. The thing that will make you fearless in time
of trouble is when you are connected to that kind of power and you
know Who you are connected to. But what caused the temple to be
filled with smoke was not just the power of God, it was the glory
of God. That is what it says in Revelation 15:8. The smoke is the
result of the power of God and the glory of God. And Isaiah saw
this glory. And I want to understand what he saw.
I want to read
to you a few statements from the pen of Ellen White about what he
saw. Prophets and Kings, 307, it says, "As Isaiah
beheld this revelation of the glory and majesty of his Lord, he
was overwhelmed with a sense of the purity and holiness of God.
How sharp the contrast between the matchless perfection of his Creator,
and the sinful course of those who, with himself, had long been
numbered among the chosen people of Israel and Judah!" So,
he saw the matchless perfection of the character of his Creator.
Oh, friend,
the apostle Paul taught, you can read it in 2 Corinthians 3:18,
Ellen White wrote about it over and over again, we've read about
it already in the book of Isaiah, it says, "Look unto Me and
be saved." You become like what you look at and what you think
about all the time. What are you looking at and what are you thinking
about and what effect is it having on your mind?
When Isaiah
saw this matchless perfection of the divine character and he saw
the glory of God, his own character was transformed. I want to read
to you a statement about this from Christ's Object Lessons,
250, it says, "When one turns away from human imperfections
to behold Jesus, a divine transformation takes place in the character."
Friend, I need it. One of our biggest problems is that we do not
realize what we are dealing with in here in our hearts. The Bible
says that the heart of man is deceitful above all things and is
desperately wicked. We do not realize our condition and that is
one of our biggest problems. You cannot help a sick person that
does not know they are sick. Try it. But when Isaiah saw the perfection
of the divine character, all of a sudden in contrast to what he
saw, he understood something about himself he had never understood
before. What did he understand about himself? Look at verse 5, "Then
I said: 'Woe is me, for I am undone! Because I am a man of unclean
lips, and I dwell in the midst of a people of unclean lips; for
my eyes have seen the King, the Lord of hosts.' "
Oh, when he
saw what God was like, all of a sudden he realized what he was like.
Has that ever happened to you? Has the Holy Spirit ever revealed
to you anything, or to me, have we seen our own inward defilement?
When Isaiah saw that picture, when he saw that reality, all of a
sudden he realized that inside he was defiled and his defilement
stood out in startling clearness and he was alarmed. He was no longer
concerned about the Assyrian armies. He was not even concerned,
now, about the awful things in the social condition of the people,
although he recognized that he dwelt in the midst of a people of
unclean lips. Now, it was not just the others, it was me. "I
am a man of unclean lips." "Oh," somebody says, "Wasn't
he a prophet?" Yes, he was a prophet. By human standards, he
would have been judged one of the most holy of men. But when he
saw the divine perfection, he said, "I'm undone. I'm a wicked
man. My heart is defiled with sin."
Oh, friend,
if you are going to be saved and if I am going to be saved, something
is going to have to happen to us inside. Anyone who has been an
Adventist preacher for a while can get up in this pulpit and we
could preach you a sermon on the signs of the Second Coming without
any notes. We have preached it so many times that we could just
open the Bible and go from text to text and we could give you all
the information. Anybody that has been an Adventist preacher for
a while can get up and open from the book of Daniel and Revelation
and they could preach you a sermon instantly right out of the Bible
without any notes. But, friend, having a knowledge of prophecy and
of the signs of the times and of theology and even of the law of
God, will not save you or me if we do not have a transformation
inside. And it is so easy to think, "I have been going to church
for so long and I have been associating with Christian people so
long, well it's rubbing off." Friend, it is not enough to have
something rub off. Something has to change inside deeper than you
can rub off.
Commenting on
this vision, Ellen White has the following to say in the Pacific
Union Recorder, July 17, 1902. She says, "The Holy Spirit
will work with power through all who realize that a deep and thorough
transformation must take place in the heart." The Holy Spirit
will work with power upon who? "Upon all", do you like
the word "all" there? That includes you, doesn't it? That
includes me. The Holy Spirit will work with power on who? On every
person who realizes that they have to have "a deep and thorough
transformation" take place in their heart. Now the problem
is, do you realize that you need to have a deep and thorough transformation
take place in your heart? Or are you still blind? I do not think
we are going to get there, but that is what it talks about in the
last part of Isaiah 6. The people are blind, their hearts are hard.
What is their problem? They are religious. These people went to
church every Sabbath, by the way, and they paid tithe. But they
were still a people of unclean lips.
There is a symbol
given here in Isaiah 6 of what the Holy Spirit wants to do to people
who have unclean lips. Jesus said, "Out of the abundance of
the heart, the mouth speaketh." The reason we have unclean
lips is because we have unclean hearts. And when the heart is changed,
the lips will be changed. And notice what it says here in verses
6 & 7, "Then one of the seraphim flew to me, having in
his hand a live coal which he had taken with the tongs from the
altar. And he touched my mouth. . ." I always used to be apprehensive
about this when I was a boy because all I could think of was getting
burned. But this is a symbolic representation of what God wants
to do in my heart. When He brings a live coal something is going
to burn; something is going to change. It says, "He touched
my mouth with it, and said: 'Behold, this has touched your lips;
your iniquity is taken away, and your sin is purged.' " What
does that represent?
Let me read
it to you. "The Holy Spirit will work with power through all
who realize that a deep and thorough transformation must take place
in the heart. A transformation represented by the touching of the
lips of God's servant with a live coal." What does that represent?
That represents the transformation in the heart that the Holy Spirit
wants to do for everybody who realizes that they have to have a
deep and thorough transformation in their heart. Oh, friend, have
you had that experience? Have you been touched with a coal? Has
the Holy Spirit worked a change in your heart that has changed everything
about your life, what you say is different, what you think is different?
Now after this
vision Isaiah understood something better than anybody else in the
whole nation. Now there is a principle of moral responsibility here.
If I understand something that you do not understand and what I
understand affects your physical or mental or spiritual well-being,
do I have a responsibility to you? Yes I do. If you have a sickness
and you have no way out and I know of some way that you can be relieved,
do I have a responsibility to inform you? Yes I do. If you have
a spiritual sickness and I know of a remedy, do I have a responsibility
to inform you? Yes I do. That is what witnessing is about; that
is what evangelism is about. If I know something that can help you
and you do not know about it, I have a responsibility to you. I
want no one in the city of Wichita to be able to say, "You
knew that the judgments of God were coming. You knew that the end
of the world was coming and you didn't tell us." I do not want
anyone to be able to say that.
When Isaiah
was touched with this live coal, he knew two things. The first thing
that he knew was how bad the people were and they did not understand
it because they had not seen the vision he had seen.
Let me read
to you what Ellen White says about that. She says, "None knew
better than Isaiah the depths of sin into which Judah had fallen.
None knew better than he their need of a Saviour." Nobody knew
as well as he knew how bad they were and how much they needed help,
but after this vision, he was a transformed man. It changed his
life. Because what did he see? Oh, friend, I want to talk a little
bit about what he saw of the glory of God. Part of the glory of
God was that live coal that touched his lips; that came right out
from the glory of God. And he realized that even though he was a
sinner and that his heart was desperately wicked and deceitful and
that he was a man of unclean lips, he realized that God had a remedy
for his problem. And he realized that the same remedy that God had
provided for him, God would provide for anybody else that was willing
to look. That is why he said, "Behold your God." If you
could ever see Him, if you could ever see His spiritual character,
it would change your life. Get your eyes off all the problems in
your families, in your own heart, and all around you, in the church
and get your eye where there is help to transform your life.
He had caught
a glimpse of the loveliness of the divine character. And, friend,
I want to see it. How about you? Have you caught a glimpse of the
loveliness of the divine character? After this time, Isaiah could
go and give a testimony to the people about what would happen to
them if they beheld the love of God. It would change their lives.
And he went out to speak and to write to the people and to show
them a God that would save them clear to the uttermost no matter
how defiled they were, God would save them and work a change in
their heart. So he went out to these people of unclean lips.
Now were those
people in that generation the only people of unclean lips? Do you
know what it means to be people of unclean lips? It is actually
very simple. Let me read to you an inspired comment on that. The
prophet says, "'Woe is me, for I am undone! Because I am a
man of unclean lips, and I dwell in the midst of a people of unclean
lips', a people who do not practice what they say." Who are
people of unclean lips? They are people who do not practice what
they say. That is who the people of unclean lips are. Friend, we
need to have the coal touch our lips just like those people back
there needed the coal to touch their lips. We need a transformation
in heart. Sometimes when we first become Christians and we first
study the wonderful story of salvation, and we realize that we are
sinners and we come to the Lord and ask for salvation and we give
our hearts to Him, we have the mistaken idea that the conversion
process is something that happens when you first come to the Lord.
And that is true all right, but it is not something that stops then.
It is something that is supposed to continue on. In fact, Ellen
White says you need to be converted how often? Every day.
Let's look at
one other phrase in this passage in verse 3, "And one cried
to another and said: 'Holy, holy, holy is the Lord of hosts; the
whole earth is full of His glory!'" Now that, by the way, friends,
is a prophecy. It is a prophecy that was first given to Moses. Moses
was told by the Lord in Numbers 14:21, after Moses interceded for
the children of Israel that they would not be destroyed, the Lord
said to Moses, "but truly, as I live, all the earth shall be
filled with the glory of the Lord." When is that going to happen?
Well, it has not happened yet, but that does not mean it is not
going to. It is going to happen. And we are hoping and praying and
believing that it will happen in our time. Isaiah had a lot to say
about that. It was revealed, by the way, to Isaiah. You can look
in the latter part of chapter 6 and the prophet asks, "How
long is this going to go on?" When he was told that the people
were so hardhearted and they were blind and he asked how long it
would go on. The Lord revealed to him that it would go on for a
lot longer than his lifetime. The Lord revealed to him that not
during his lifetime could all the evil that had been developing
for generations be turned around and stopped, it would not happen
in his lifetime. But the Lord said that the time would come and
a remnant would be saved.
And so Isaiah
began his mission, undaunted by the discouraging prospect, knowing
that God's church was eventually going to triumph. In fact, some
of the most wonderful prophecies in all the Bible about the future
triumph of God's people come from the pen of Isaiah. He knew it
would not happen in his lifetime. In fact, one time he wrote, "Your
dead men are going to sing with my dead body" speaking of the
resurrection. And he began to talk to people about beholding God
and telling them that if they would get their eyes fixed on His
spiritual, moral character, it would change their life. God's glory,
His character, His merciful kindness and tender love was to be revealed
to all mankind. That is what it means for the glory of God to cover
the earth. The Bible says as surely as God lives and reigns His
glory shall be declared among the heathen, His wonders among all
the people. (See Psalm 96:3.)
The people of
Isaiah's day did not understand the character of God and that is
what they needed to see so that their hearts could be changed by
the Holy Spirit, so that they would realize their own unclean lips,
their own defilement and ask for a transformation of character.
There were some people in Isaiah's time that had gone into such
depths of wickedness that when the prophet went to speak to them
they were afraid that God would not receive them if they turned
back. Have you ever met somebody like that? Felt they had sinned
so much and for so long and so bad that the Lord would not receive
them. To them, Isaiah said the following, "Why do you say,
O Jacob, and speak, O Israel: 'My way is hidden from the Lord, and
my just claim is passed over by my God'? Have you not known? Have
you not heard? The everlasting God, the Lord, the Creator of the
ends of the earth, neither faints nor is weary. There is no searching
of His understanding. He gives power to the weak, and to those who
have no might He increases strength. Even the youths shall faint
and be weary, and the young men shall utterly fall. But those who
wait on the Lord shall renew their strength; they shall mount up
with wings like eagles, they shall run and not be weary, they shall
walk and not faint." Isaiah 40:27-31
Oh, friend,
Isaiah taught that the heart of the infinite God yearns over people
who feel powerless to free themselves from the snares of Satan.
Have you ever felt that way? Have you ever felt that you were on
a toboggan run down to the bottom of the hole of sin and there was
no way out? Isaiah taught that there is a way out. If you look to
the Lord, the Lord says, "Fear not, for I am with you; be not
dismayed, for I am your God. I will strengthen you, yes I will help
you. I will uphold you with My righteous right hand." Isaiah
41:10. "Fear not, you worm Jacob." Ever feel like a worm?
The Lord said to people who felt like worms and felt that the Lord
would not take them back because of how awful they were, He said,
"Don't fear because I'm going to help you."
"Turn you
again now everyone from his evil ways," Jeremiah said. Oh,
friend, have you chosen your own way instead of God's way? As I
visit with people I find many people who realize that they have
chosen their own way. Sometimes they are past the meridian of life
and have wandered far from God and have feasted on the fruits of
transgression and they find that they turn to ashes on their lips.
And then have you ever met somebody whose life plans were thwarted?
Ever met somebody like that? Ever meant somebody who had no hope
anymore; their hope was dead? And so they seem alone and desolated.
Oh, friend, you need to see what Isaiah saw. You need to hear that
voice speaking to your heart that perhaps you would not listen to
before, coming to you distinct and clear and saying, "Arise
and depart, for this is not your rest; because it is defiled, it
shall destroy you, even with utter destruction." Micah 2:10.
Return to your Father's house. He is inviting you right now. He
says, "Return unto Me." No matter how bad you have been,
no matter what you have done, no matter what mistake you have made.
If your life seems thwarted, all your dreams have disappeared and
your hope is gone and it just seems like nothing is working out
right, the Lord says, "Return to Me, for I have redeemed you."
Isaiah 44:22. "Incline your ear," the Lord says, "and
come to Me. Hear, and your soul will live; I will make to you an
everlasting covenant--the sure mercies of David." Isaiah 55:3
Do not listen
to the enemy's suggestions telling you to stay away from Christ
until you have made yourself better, until you think you are good
enough to come to God. Let me tell you, friend, if you wait until
you are good enough, you will never come. Come just the way you
are. Say, "Lord, help me to see Your character and to be transformed
into an image of that by the Holy Spirit." Oh, if the devil
is telling you that your garments of character are filthy, you tell
him, Jesus said, "The one who comes to Me I will by no means
cast out." John 6:37. That is emphatic speech. Make the prayer
of David your own. Say to the Lord, "Purge me." That is
what God did for Isaiah. He touched him with a coal and He said,
"Your iniquity is purged. You are clean now."
"Purge
me," David said, "with hyssop, and I shall be clean; wash
me, and I shall be whiter than snow." Psalm 51:7. Oh, friend,
Isaiah tried to get the eyes of the people fixed on the person who
was altogether lovely. Have you seen Him? He is described as the
"Chiefest among ten thousand". He is spoken of as "The
King in His beauty". Isaiah said, "You are going to see
the King in His beauty."
Have you seen
that beauty? Oh, friend, the day is coming when the people who see
this are going to say, "The majestic Lord will be for us a
place of broad rivers and streams . . . (For the Lord is our Judge,
the Lord is our Lawgiver, the Lord is our King; He will save us)."
Isaiah 33:21, 22
What was this
vision all about--the turning point in Isaiah's life that turned
him around and made him a different person, transformed his life
and transformed the life of everyone that would listen to what he
said. It was because of what he saw and because of that coal that
touched his lips and that hope that was given to him. Oh, friend,
have you seen His glory? That is the whole theme, by the way, of
the gospel of John. John says, "We beheld His glory."
Have you seen it? Is it changing your life? Have you been touched?
Is the Holy Spirit working in your heart? Do you want this experience?
Do you want to be changed? Salvation, friend, is not something that
just happens instantaneously. It is a process of the Holy Spirit
working on the heart of somebody that has submitted. Do you want
this experience yourself? If you do, I have said many times, I am
just a simple Christian. I just read what it says in the Bible and
then ask the Lord to make it happen. And, friend, it can happen
to you. I believe it can happen to you and I believe it can happen
to me. And if you want this experience, if you want to see the One
that is altogether lovely and be transformed in character and if
you want your iniquity and sin to be purged and your heart to be
changed, I want to invite you to kneel down with me and let's ask
the Lord to work that miracle in our lives.
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