Isaiah 14:22, 32 (ESV)
Those who stand against God may appear to be winning, but they will fail.
Remember the Flood! The world was bent on violence and evil. It appeared that
evil had taken over the earth and was winning. It appeared that way until the
rain began to fall. Then God’s greatness was revealed.
Only one man found favor with God in that story, and yet eight people were saved in the Ark. Similarly, in Isaiah 14 God’s people will be a refuge to others. As the people of God, we do not exist for the purpose of huddling in safety until the winds of wickedness blow over. Rather, we are called to be a refuge to the world. When Judah was facing deportation to Babylon God told them to “seek the welfare of the city where I have sent you into exile, and pray to the LORD on its behalf, for in its welfare you will find your welfare” (Jeremiah 29:7). Judah would not find their safety by huddling together or by fleeing Babylon’s advance. They would find their security in seeking and praying for their enemy. God’s people would be a refuge for the very people that were seeking to oppress them.
What does that look like in our world? I am not sure that I know. It may look different for each of us. What I do know is that it does not look like circling the theological wagons and huddling in the safety of our church buildings. It means seeking and praying for the welfare of our city, our country, and our world. Let us begin to pray in that direction and ask God for wisdom to know what it truly means to seek the welfare of our world. Only God knows the power and influence of a prayer like that. Perhaps God will use us for his glory in ways we cannot even imagine. Certainly, God will accomplish his purposes, and the Enemy will not win. God is greater.
“I will rise up
against them,” declares the LORD of hosts, “and will cut off from Babylon name
and remnant, descendants and posterity,” declares the LORD.
What
will one answer the messengers of the nation?
“The
LORD has founded Zion,
and
in her the afflicted of his people find refuge.”
This
chapter contains two contrasting elements: the fate of God’s enemies, and the
fate of God’s people. God’s enemies will be destroyed. God’s people will be a
refuge to others. That is an interesting contrast because one would expect the
fate of God’s enemies to be destruction. One then expects the fate of God’s people
to be preservation. But he does not say that he preserves his people, he says
that his people preserve others.
In
the middle of this chapter it becomes difficult to know whether God is talking
about Babylon or about Satan. I think that is intentional. You will find the Enemy
in the shadows behind every nation, every movement, every people bent on
destroying others or uniting against God’s truth. With the wickedness of our
world it is easy to believe that he is more powerful than he really is.
Satan’s
primary tool is deception. Jesus said that Satan “is a liar and the
father of lies” (Jn 8:44). He would convince us that he has more power than he
does. He will seek to convince the world that he is truly God. He will seek to
demonstrate that he is God’s equal. He will fail.
Isaiah 14:12-15 (ESV)
“How you are
fallen from heaven,
O Day Star, son of
Dawn!
How you are cut
down to the ground,
you who laid the
nations low!
You said in your
heart,
‘I will ascend to
heaven;
above the stars of
God
I will set my
throne on high;
I will sit on the
mount of assembly
in the far reaches
of the north;
I will ascend
above the heights of the clouds;
I will make myself
like the Most High.’
But you are
brought down to Sheol,
to the far reaches
of the pit.
Only one man found favor with God in that story, and yet eight people were saved in the Ark. Similarly, in Isaiah 14 God’s people will be a refuge to others. As the people of God, we do not exist for the purpose of huddling in safety until the winds of wickedness blow over. Rather, we are called to be a refuge to the world. When Judah was facing deportation to Babylon God told them to “seek the welfare of the city where I have sent you into exile, and pray to the LORD on its behalf, for in its welfare you will find your welfare” (Jeremiah 29:7). Judah would not find their safety by huddling together or by fleeing Babylon’s advance. They would find their security in seeking and praying for their enemy. God’s people would be a refuge for the very people that were seeking to oppress them.
What does that look like in our world? I am not sure that I know. It may look different for each of us. What I do know is that it does not look like circling the theological wagons and huddling in the safety of our church buildings. It means seeking and praying for the welfare of our city, our country, and our world. Let us begin to pray in that direction and ask God for wisdom to know what it truly means to seek the welfare of our world. Only God knows the power and influence of a prayer like that. Perhaps God will use us for his glory in ways we cannot even imagine. Certainly, God will accomplish his purposes, and the Enemy will not win. God is greater.
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