Bible Commentaries

Expositor's Dictionary of Texts

Isaiah 65

Clinging to a Counterfeit Cross
Verses 1-25

The Church a Blessing in the World

Isaiah 65:8

As a rule, the pious and good are of little value in the eyes of the world, and are despised often as foolish and "narrow" men. The "religious public" is spoken of contemptuously and scornfully. But God's judgment is a different one. It is the judgment that Abraham recognized when he pleaded for Sodom and Gomorrah for the sake of even (at length) ten righteous persons. It is the judgment of the text. The vinedresser is about to hew down the unfruitful tree, but espies a rich cluster in one part, and it is spared, and so orders are given that it shall be spared. Thus is the world itself indebted for its preservation to the "cluster" of the righteous. The Church is the "blessing" in the world. "Ye are the salt of, the earth." The text teaches us:—

I. Why God's Judgment on the World is Restrained.—1. Because He is a righteous God, Who will not destroy the guiltless with the guilty ( Genesis 18:25). Rather will He remove the righteous from the world or save them from the danger (as Noah, Lot, Isaiah from the Babylonian exile, etc.).

2. Because He is a merciful God, Who must hear the prayers and petitions of His children and let Himself be entreated ( Ezekiel 22:30). As a rule, we think too little of the power of prayer. If we only knew what a power it possesses and how it avails with God, we should knock at the door of heaven until heaven itself resounded ( Psalm 50:14-15; St. Matthew 7:7; Matthew 7:18-20; Abraham, Jacob, David, Elias).

3. Because He is a wise God, Who has certain great purposes to fulfil, and proceeds with calm leisure to carry them out in His own way. He desires that none should perish, and He sets before the evil the example of the pious for their salvation. How many a trifling mind has been made serious by a single casually spoken word of the good? How many a home has been blessed because a pious Joseph is in it? How many a house prospered like the house of Obed-edom because of the ark of God? How many cities and lands are spared because of a "cluster" of the good and holy in it? The land of Israel is not utterly corrupt, destroyed, and degenerate while there are the seven thousand who have not bowed the knee to Baal—life in the very midst of putrefaction. The influence of pious men will be seen in eternity, if it is lightly esteemed here. There are great names in the world, artists, poets, sculptors, statesmen, princes, who have done great things, broken up new paths, provided bread for thousands; but what are these to "the blessing" which Moses gave mankind in his law, David by his Isaiah 65:20

I. You cannot quite see how a child can die a hundred years old. No, but it is possible for a man with a great weight of years to live and die just as hopefully and happily as a child lives. It is possible to have a very old body and a very young heart; and it is just as possible to be only thirty or forty years old, and yet to be as weary, and sad, and heavy-hearted, and gloomy-hearted, as if you were tottering down to the grave with a hundred winters on your shoulders.

II. A real Christian calls himself a child of God. It is no empty figure of speech. He is a child of God, and feels it. He is ever learning like a child, and he is as trustful as a child, and as restful; and he looks forward to a bigger life, and dreams beautiful dreams and his heart sometimes dances for joy, though his feet have not much spring and movement left in them. I tell you it is not the calendar and the birthday book that determine your age. It is the soul within, and the eyes you look out with, and the mind that thinks, and the heart that feels. It is health that makes young blood, not mere health of body, but health of spirit, health of temper, health of affection. A bad life, as this Prophet says, comes to bear the weight and weariness of a hundred years upon it.

III. There are three things in a child which makes child-life happy and beautiful—faith, hope, and love. Faith in God, mother, friends, and all men. Hope of tomorrow, hope for the years which are coming, hope of the better things which lie beyond; and love: the joy of loving, and the joy of being loved. There you have all the best things in a child's life. And these three things are in the life of every good man and woman. Certainly they are in the life of every Christian. They never leave him however long he lives. They are with him through all life's rough scenes. They are with him on his dying bed. Now abideth these three—faith, hope, and charity.

—J. G. Greenhough, Christian Festivals and Anniversaries, p150.

References.—LXV:22.—J. M. Neale, Sermons on the Prophets, vol. i. p275. F. E. Paget, Helps and Hindrances to the Christian Life, vol. ii. p185. LXV:24.—" Plain Sermons "by contributors to the Tracts for the Times, vol. x. p208. LXVI:1 , 2.—Spurgeon, Sermons, vol. xviii. No1083. W. H. Hutchings, Sermon-Sketches, p57. A. J. Parry, Phases of Christian Truth, p74. LXVI:2.—Spurgeon Sermons, vol. xxxv. No2071. LXVI:8.—R. F. Horton, Christian World Pulpit, vol. lxix1906 , p328. Spurgeon, Sermons, vol. xvii. No1009. LXVI:10.—Ibid. vol. xxxv. No2085. LXVI:11.—J. M. Neale, Readings for the Aged (3Series), p45. LXVI:13.—P. M. Strayer, Christian World Pulpit, vol. lx.. 1901 , p39. S. Martin, Comfort in Trouble, p1. J. T. Stannard, The Divine Humanity, p1. LXVI:13.—T. Gasquoine, Christian World Pulpit, vol. xxxvii1890 , p157. LXVI:21.—Spurgeon, Sermons, vol. xvii. No992. J. Keble, Sermons for Advent to Christmas Eve, p332.

The Prayers of the Saints

Isaiah 65:24

All through the great ages of the Christian Church the people of God have been a people of prayer. They have had their faults, they have had their grievous inconsistencies, but, throughout, they have clung to the Throne of Grace, and, with all the differences which divide good and Christian people of the Church of God Today, the true men of Christ are men of prayer. The first evidence that a man shows in his life that there is a work of grace in his heart is his desire to pray. When St. Paul's heart was opened, St. Paul's lips were opened too, and somebody said at once, "Behold, he prayeth".

I. The measure of our real religion is the measure of our prayer-life, and no less the measure of our love to Christ is the frequency, the earnestness, the heartiness with which we come to God in prayer, because, depend upon it, what we really are before God is what we are when nobody is with us but Himself. Is it not a very lamentable thing to know how often there is a spirit of great earnestness in the public gathering, and yet that we go home to sometimes a very slight and slender approach to God in secret prayer? We catch the spirit of the day, and the spirit of the place, and the spirit of the people, and we seem to be in earnest, and we are; but how often we go home to a comparatively neglected Mercy-seat, and to an unknown God! Gauge your religious life by the earnestness and the heartiness and the warmth of your secret addresses to God.

II. The praying Christian Isaiah 65:24-25

This text was quoted by Henry Venn in the last report he drew up for the Church Missionary Society. He pointed out that "one of the richest promises of answer to prayer is given in immediate connexion with the full establishment of Christ's kingdom".

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