ISAIAH CHAPTER THREE, cont'd
OBSERVATIONS: & INVESTIGATIONS:
To Listen to Post, Click HERE (10:25)
To Print 3:10-15 Study Guide, Click HERE
To Print 3:16-26, 4:1 Study Guide Click HERE
Isaiah 3:10-15 TEXT, Click HERE
ISAIAH 3:10-15 – Good deeds vs. Misdeeds
V. 10 - “Tell the righteous that it shall be well with them, for they shall eat the fruit of their deeds.”
“Tell” is our imperative/command verb in this section. The LORD wants Isaiah to “tell the righteous” that it shall be well with them. This gives HOPE in the midst of woes and ruin! How will it “be well” with them? They shall eat the fruit of their deeds. This idea pictures that there will be a fruitful harvest for the work done in seeking to remain faithful to the LORD.
Here “deeds” connects back to verse 8, that Jerusalem and Judah had stumbled and fallen b/c their “deeds” are against the LORD and foreshadows to a bookend in Isaiah 64:6, where the prophet proclaims, “all our righteous deeds are like a polluted garment” and pleads to the LORD for mercy (64:9 - “Be not so terribly angry, O LORD, and remember not iniquity forever.”)
The LORD responds declaring the sins of His people and demonstrating His mercy - “...so I will do for my servants’ sake, and not destroy them all…” (Isaiah 65:8). The distinction is between those “who have sought me” (65:9) and you who forsake the LORD (65:10) (One of the repeated themes of Isaiah).
The LORD judges this distinction of “those who have sought Him” and “those who have forsaken Him.” They are judged on His terms (not our terms, not based on our feelings, or our justification for our sins/the why’s of our forsaking the LORD and His ways.) From the beginning of Isaiah (Ch. 1-3) through the end (Ch. 64, 65), we read of this theme: God will judge those who are against His ways, and He will graciously preserve a remnant for His good purposes.
The 26 verses of chapter three consist of many woes to the wicked…EXCEPT for THIS verse, verse 10! A ray of hope for the righteous! And that ray of hope continues to shine all the way through the end chapters (64, 65). Hang on dear remnant, there is the fruit of righteousness coming your way. Keep trusting the LORD, keep walking by faith!
(v. 10 - HOPE, sandwiched between the two verses of woe (v. 9, 11).
V. 11 - Woe to the wicked - it shall be ill with him, for what his hands have dealt out shall be done to him.
They have brought evil on themselves (v. 9) and the wicked shall have done what their (wicked) hands have dealt out (v. 11). This is not karma, this is personal knowledge, response, and action of a God who sees, and hears, and knows His creation, and who remembers His covenant, and who has the specific holiness, justice, and power to respond in judgment and deliverance (Exodus 2:24)!
V. 12 - “My people — infants are their oppressors, and women rule over them. O my people, your guides mislead you and they have swallowed up the course of your paths.”
(cf. v. 4-7) - Verse 12 echoes verses 4-7, where the rulers are not as they should be – they are infants (unable, unqualified, ill-equipped) and they are oppressors. “Women rule over them” echoes the curse of Gen. 3:16 that says, “He (your husband) shall rule over you” so here the infants oppressing and women ruling reflect an unraveled order. The guides, who are supposed to lead, are misleading. The guides themselves have swallowed up (gives the idea of an animal swallowing up, devouring, eliminating) the course of their path, so they do not have a clear path or know which way to go, as the role of a leader or guide is to help show the course of the path!
V. 13 -15 “The LORD has taken his place to contend; he stands to judge peoples. (14) The LORD will enter into judgment with the elders and princes of his people: ‘it is you who have devoured the vineyard, the spoil of the poor is in your house. (15) What do you mean by crushing my people, by grinding the face of the poor?’ declares the Lord GOD of hosts.”
This is the LORD’s response to the wickedness → it is righteous judgment. He has come to be the prosecutor and judge. They have brought this judgment upon themselves by not caring for what the LORD has entrusted to them (the vineyard, the people). They oppress the people (crush, grinding - actions that the servants would do, crush and grinding the grain, that is what the leaders are doing to them, crushing and grinding them under the hard labor and unjust wages, yet living off the “spoils” themselves (“the spoils of the poor are in your houses.” (v. 14)). The poor have labored, but the spoil of their labor is found in the homes of the leaders - evidence that they have not been caring for the people, as God desires, thus He stands to judge them.
May we take care to consider whether our deeds align with God’s righteous ways or whether we have been misled and possibly deceived by how our deeds are being influenced wrongly leaving others to be treated unjustly or even setting ourselves up to be judged because we have done or allowed what God considers wicked.
3:10-15 SUMMARY
In chapter three, we read about the ruin that the LORD of hosts is bringing on His rebellious people because their speech and deeds are against the LORD. They have brought these woes upon themselves and these verses of 10 to 15 continue explaining the woes of unraveled order: infants are oppressors, women rule over them, guides mislead, devoured vineyards, crushing the poor, taking spoil from God’s own people. The LORD will judge and the wicked will receive ill, BUT one verse (verse 10) in the midst of the ruin reminds us of the fruitful hope for the righteous! We later learn that this righteousness and this rightness with God, ultimately comes through the Messiah, and Old Testament verses like these give us these glimmers of hope in the midst of all the uncertainty and pending judgment.
PRAYER
O LORD God, who takes your place (3:13). We know that we cannot stand before you, without the righteousness of Jesus covering us. So, thank you. Thank you for the hope for the righteous, that it may be well with us. That we may eat the fruit of our deeds. May you continue teaching us the fruitful deeds of righteousness that you desire for us to do in order to honor you, reflect your glory, demonstrate our gratefulness and allegiance, and to bless those around us. May we seek to correct oppression (1:17, 3:12). May we seek to not mislead (3:12). May we have mercy on the poor and laborers (3:14,15), and may we seek not to mistreat others. Would we be aware of the subtle ways we may do this as we are caught up in our own ways and our own little worlds of “American independence.” May you grow our understanding and application of good deeds versus misdeeds that we may bring you more glory on earth as it is in heaven. In the name and power of Jesus, we ask. Amen.
NEXT
NEXT: In verses 11-15, the author unfolds the misdeeds of oppression, leadership misleading (v.12 & 14), and mistreatment of the poor and their labor (v. 14, 15). Then in verses 16-26,and 4:1, we read of the misdeeds of haughtiness and abundant luxury. Join us next time for details on these misdeeds and then hang on for the rest of the short chapter 4 (4:2-6), which is an awesome passage of Hope!
Click Here to Print Study Guide for Isaiah 3:16-26, 4:1. - Observations, etc.
NEXT NEXT:) – Combined IMPACT for Isaiah 2:22, 3:1-26, 4:1 - Click HERE to print IMPACT Study Guide
No comments:
Post a Comment