I am using One Year Bible Online for my daily Bible study. For today, One Year Bible Online links here. I have found that by writing this daily blog of what I see when I read these scriptures, I get more out of them. I hope that by posting these ruminations others may get some benefit as well. If you have any thoughts or comments regarding these verses or what I have written about them, please post them.
Today’s passage starts with a message that applies in many ways. It applies to political leaders and religious leaders. All too often the leaders, rather than follow the path laid out by God, attempt to compromise with the enemies of those they lead. I will address the ways in which I see religious leaders do this. Those who oppose the Church often call Christians stupid for one reason or another. All too often the leaders of the Church attempt to be seen as smart by those opponents of the Church by abandoning those doctrines which are criticized by those enemies. They think that by doing so they will be seen as enlightened by the “intellectuals” who are “too smart” to accept God’s wisdom. But God has laid a Foundation Stone and He measures everything against that. Those leaders who attempt to build a structure that does not line up with that Foundation Stone will see their structure swept away. In the other hand, those leaders who build in line with the Foundation which God has laid, will discover that the structure they build will stand firm against whatever assaults come at it. God will measure our organizations with the measuring line of justice and the plumb line of righteousness. Anything that does not measure up to those standards will be destroyed.
Isaiah uses a metaphor here that carries a message to me that perhaps is not the one intended. Isaiah discusses how a farmer uses different methods to thresh different grains. He points out that some grains are more fragile than others, so a farmer will use less forceful means to thresh the more fragile grains. In the same way, some people can be led to seek God’s righteousness by less stressful means than others. Those people are likely to be crushed by the more vigorous threshing that some people need to be brought to seek God. So, God will adjust the method He uses to separate us from our sins depending on our ability to withstand crushing blows and the need for more forceful blows to separate us from our sinfulness. I am unhappy with the way that explanation of the metaphor came out, but I cannot think how to phrase it better.
Isaiah goes on to make a strange prophecy. He says that God is going to bring judgement against Jerusalem for the evil that its people do, but at the last moment those whom He has raised up to attack Jerusalem will be driven away. Isaiah goes on to say that too many people say that they serve the Lord and honor Him with their words, but their actions are far from those that God commands. God will bring judgement against such people. Those who pervert justice and plot evil will be killed and disappear from among God’s people.
Paul tells us that God gave us the Law in a manner similar to putting a guardian in charge of minor children. Now that Christ has come we have been released from being under the guardianship of the Law and are freed to serve God as his adopted children. The divisions among us have been erased and we are the heirs to God’s promise to Abraham. He goes on to tell us that before we came to know Christ we were slaves to those things which we worshiped. Now that we have been freed, why would we accept being enslaved to the same sorts of things again? We do not gain righteousness with God by following prescribed rituals and rules.
Paul goes on and gives us a guideline that will help us avoid false teachers. He tells us that false teachers will try to convince us that we should not listen to any teachers other than themselves. We should be zealous to do good, but not only when there are Church leaders around to impress. We are the children of God’s promise, we should not live as slaves to rules and regulations. I just had a new insight into how what Paul is talking about applies. If a Church body finds itself constantly having to clarify and reword its guidelines because people are taking advantage of “loopholes” in the wording of those guidelines, that Church body has fallen into legalism and has failed to inspire those within it to follow God’s path of righteousness. The guidelines have become the standard against which people are measured rather than God.
In the face of opposition and attack we should wait for God to rise to our defense. He will do so. He will provide us with a refuge against those who wish to destroy us. We should not count on any human defense, neither the common man, nor the powerful. When they are weighed on the scales against God, they weight as less than a puff of air. I will wait for the Lord to move.
Today’s proverb tells us not to get caught up with those who spend all of their resources on pleasure. We need to learn to delay gratification so that we can gather resources so as to serve the Lord by helping those in need.