Bible Commentaries

Expositor's Dictionary of Texts

Isaiah 57

Clinging to a Counterfeit Cross
Verses 1-21

Wearied in the Greatness of the Way

Isaiah 57:10

Weariness—spiritual weariness—that is our subject tonight. It seems that in this chapter, as so often, the language of the Prophet is suggested by the incidents of national history. The memorable journey of Israel through the wilderness, in the passage from Egypt to Canaan, was fraught with many lessons concerning human infirmity and concerning Divine righteousness and grace. In this passage, where Isaiah laments the sinful defections of the nation, he makes use of the wanderings of the wilderness to illustrate the experience of rebellious and apostate Israel. The people wander and wander, and know no repose; they are "wearied in the greatness of their way".

I. Causes of Spiritual Weariness.—These are mainly two:—

a. Abandonment to error and sin. "There is no peace, saith my God, to the wicked." They who are led by Satan are led in a devious, an aimless, and altogether unsatisfactory and wretched road.

b. The deceitfulness of false religion. Men, feeling their spiritual need and misery, strive to make out a way of safety and of peace for themselves. They sometimes submit to many sufferings in the hope of propitiating the Deity and of appeasing their own conscience. The self-imposed penances and pilgrimages and privations of the religious who yield themselves to the devices of human religions are chargeable with no small part of the misery of mankind. Men following the lead of such delusive lights grow "wearied in the greatness of their way".

II. Signs of Spiritual Weariness.—These are:—

a. Dissatisfaction. The journey is too "great" for human strength. They who undertake it find no peace.

b. Distress. This is natural enough when effort has been put forth and sacrifices have been made, and all in vain.

c. Despondency. They who journey for long, and who find themselves in no way advanced towards their goal, or who return to the point whence they set out, are likely enough to abandon themselves to despair.

III. Remedy for Spiritual Weariness.

a. Confess the error and folly of the past. If the whole course has been a mistake, it is well to find out that it has been Isaiah 57:15

I. The first great theme of meditation the text brings before us is God's inhabitation of infinite time. In all eternity past there is no vacant century, no unpeopled epoch, no barren, unillumined, God-lacking millennium. He fills immeasurable time to its utmost dimension, every moment of the vast eternity, past and to be, pulsating with God's conscious presence.

II. We are reminded of God's inhabitation of selected space. "I dwell in the high and holy place." God presents Himself to us in these words as a being who brings His noblest attributes within space-limits because the dwellers in the high and holy place with whom He communes are beings to whom space-limits attach.

God dwells here with an express and intentional manifestation wanting in those extensions of His wisdom and power which touch every part of the universe alike. God is present, but not equally present and unveiled in all the orbs of the firmament. There are elect realms in which He vouchsafes peculiar epiphanies of His majesty and spiritual perfection.

III. God's inhabitation of the individual hearts of His contrite ones is declared. This rests upon His pure compassion. Not only does He stoop to the finite that is holy but also to the finite that is frail.

That He Who inhabits eternity and receives the homage of the high and holy place should seek this latest enshrinement is a mystery, but it is a self-consistent mystery. In making the humbled heart sensible of His presence He appeals more directly to man's consciousness than would be possible by any other method. He must deal with us first in the sphere of the affections. His opening revelations are revelations of healing tenderness to that part of man's nature which is most susceptible to His influence. "Like as a father pitieth his children, so the Lord pitieth them that fear Him." That truth gets into the affections and puts mystic fire at their source.

IV. This is a mystery of condescension, but it is a self-consistent mystery. The revival and homeward return of the life that came from God is the clue to this enigma of pity and gentleness. It is no slight thing to recover and restore that life. By this inhabitation of contrite hearts the Eternal will add at last a new kingdom to the high and holy place where He is enshrined. From those to whom He so strangely bows Himself He will attract a devotion of which those never needing a Saviour may be incapable. "We love Him because He first loved us,"—true for angels, but uniquely true for us.

—T. G. Selby, The Lesson of a Dilemma, p165.

References.—LVII:15.—G. McHardy, Christian World Pulpit, vol. li1897 , p134. R. J. Campbell, City Temple Sermons, p199. F. W. Robertson, Sermons Preached at Brighton (3Series), p230.

God's Two Homes

Isaiah 57:15-16

We know and believe separately the doctrines of the majesty and of the mercy of God, but it probably seldom occurs to a Christian to think of one as a result of the other. It would not occur to us to say that God sent His Son into the world because He is almighty and infinite, and all-glorious, or that Jesus came to save us because He is the eternal God. Yet this or something very like it is what Isaiah does say in the text.

I. is, who says so much elsewhere, both before and after this chapter, of the work and the sufferings of Jesus, here does not mention Him; he speaks of the dwelling of God with the humble, of the mercy of God to the contrite, not as fruits of the Incarnation or of the sacrifice of Christ, but as results of the glory of the Eternal Father, the High and Lofty One that inhabiteth eternity. The special truth that seems set forth in these verses is, that the Incarnation and the Sacrifice of Christ, while they are to us the cause and the source of all blessing, of all pardon, of all grace, of all holiness, of all salvation, are themselves not the cause but the effect of the mercy and the love of God the Father; as Jesus says Himself, "God so loved the world, that He gave His only begotten Son".

II. The reason why God is so eager to revive the spirit of the humble, and to revive the heart of the contrite ones, is simply His own majesty, His greatness, before which they are so little. This is a great and glorious thought if only we can bring our minds to the effort of grasping it. Our creation, our preservation, our redemption, and all the mercies of the Gospel, are not merely acts of God, things that He has been pleased to do, and which we may rejoice that He has done, but which might have been otherwise; they are all the overflow of the fullness of God's own nature. Because He is what He is, He has done what He has done. The time will come when the world and all the works therein shall be burned up, even the works of God Himself. The time will come when there will be no Holy Bible, no Christian Church, no faith in Christ; but those who now know and trust in the redeeming work of God know that their salvation rests, not on the Bible, not on the Church, nor on their own faith, but on Him who is the same yesterday, Today, and for ever; that it can never fail until there be no God, or not the same God as our God.

III. Thus then God's promises are made surer than certainty; we know and more than know that He is ready to dwell with us. Only let us be such as those with whom He dwells: "With him that is of a contrite and humble spirit, to revive the spirit of the humble, and to revive the spirit of the contrite ones". Do not think that this is said only of the beginning of the Christian's conversion: that though he must have a contrite and humble spirit before God will come to dwell with him, yet his heart is healed and his spirit exalted as soon as God comes. It is with the heart that is—not only that has been—humble and contrite, that God will dwell; it is with the spirit that does not forget its own sin, even when it feels and knows and rejoices in God's grace. We have not to do anything that we cannot do, only what our own nature requires of itself. Being weak, we ought to be humble; being sinful we ought to be contrite, even though we had nothing to hope for by it. To this simple confession of the truth—a thing that has no merit, that ought to require no effort—to this God promises His presence.

—W. H. Simcox, The Cessation of Prophecy, p48.

References.—LVII:16-18.—Spurgeon, Sermons, vol. xxv. No1490. LVII:18.—Ibid. vol. xxii. No1279. LVII:19.—Ibid. vol. xxvi. No1558. LVII:20-21.—Ibid. vol1. No2886. LVIII.—A. Rowland, Christian World Pulpit, vol. xxxvii1890 , p321. Spurgeon, Sermons, vol. xli. No2411.

Comments



Back to Top

Comments

No comments yet. Be the first!

Add Comment

* Required information
Powered by Commentics
Back to Top