Isaiah – Chapter 6
Seeing God helped Isaiah to preach a damning message of double ruin to Judah.
Theme: God revealed Himself to Isaiah, convicted him, forgave him, and charged him to condemn Judah.
Outline:
1-4 Isaiah Saw and Heard God’s Glory
5-7 His Sins of Speech Were Forgiven
8 He Answered God’s Call to Preach
9-10 God Gave Him a Ministry to Blind
11-12 Blindness Through Final Scattering
13 God Saw a Small Remnant of Elect
Preparatory Reading: Isaiah 29; Ezekiel 1; Romans 11; Revelation 4.
Related Links:
- Introduction to the Book of Isaiah (outline) … https://www.letgodbetrue.com/pdf/isaiah-introduction.pdf.
- Overview of O.T. Prophets (slides) … https://www.letgodbetrue.com/pdf/old-testament-prophets-slides.pdf.
- Chronological Table and Notes for Prophets … https://www.letgodbetrue.com/pdf/prophets-table-with-notes.pdf.
- The Prophets of God (sermon outline) … https://www.letgodbetrue.com/pdf/prophets-of-god.pdf.
- Witness of 70 A.D. (detailed study) … https://www.letgodbetrue.com/sermons/prophecy/70ad/sermon.php.
- The Israel of God (know the scriptural difference) … https://www.letgodbetrue.com/pdf/true-israel.pdf.
- Who Is the Seed of Abraham? … https://www.letgodbetrue.com/bible/prophecy/seed-of-abraham.php.
- The Millennium (not Jewish) … https://www.letgodbetrue.com/sermons/prophecy/gospel-millennium/sermon.php.
- Romans 11 (detailed exposition) … https://www.letgodbetrue.com/pdf/romans-eleven.pdf.
- A Vision of God (the need for one) … https://www.letgodbetrue.com/pdf/vision-of-god.pdf.
Introduction:
- This glorious chapter of Isaiah has two parts – a fabulous vision of God … a key prophecy of judgment.
- While most know Isaiah’s vision quite well (first 8 verses), only a very few know the prophecy well.
- We want more than sound and feelings from Isaiah’s vision – we want sense and faith more perfectly.
- The man of God is not an entertainer – he must preach the word! So prepare for doctrine, not stories.
- The prophecy is quoted or referred to six times in the New Testament clearly indicating its high value.
- We should not stop with Assyria or Babylon, for the New Testament applies it to Rome and 70 A.D.
Isaiah Saw and Heard God’s Glory – Verses 1-4
1 In the year that king Uzziah died I saw also the Lord sitting upon a throne, high and lifted up, and his train filled the temple.
- Isaiah was a prophet under four kings of Judah – Uzziah, Jotham, Ahaz, and Hezekiah.
- They were respectively a good king, a good king, a very bad king, a very good king.
- This chapter is dated at the end of Uzziah’s reign, which began the reign of Jotham.
- The next chapter leaps over the reign of Jotham into that of wicked Ahaz (Is 7:1).
- The also here is a separate and unique vision Isaiah had of Almighty God (Is 1:1; 2:1).
- The Lord here is Adonai, not Jehovah, noted by the lowercase letters in our KJV Bibles.
- This Hebrew name for God is used 434 times – Lord (431), lord (2), and God (1).
- It is Supreme Being or Sovereign Ruler as name for the Divine Being with all power.
- It is the same God – it is Jehovah – another name with less unique meaning (De 6:4).
- It is the same God – it is Jehovah – for He is LORD Jehovah in context (Isaiah 6:3,5).
- The Lord sat upon a throne, a high and exalted throne, fit for the King of all (Zec 14:9).
- God is king, and Isaiah will shortly declare it (Is 6:4); the throne is perfectly fitting.
- A throne is most fitting, since He is Creator and Ruler of all (Is 66:1; I Kings 22:19).
- A high and exalted throne is fitting, far above all others (Dan 7:9; Col 1:16; Ep 1:21).
- His train filled the temple, indicating stately robes of His royal authority and judgment.
- Train. An elongated part of a robe or skirt trailing behind on the ground; commonly worn by women of rank or fashion when in full dress, and by sovereigns and high officials on state occasions.
- The temple here was likely Solomon’s in Jerusalem that Isaiah would have known.
- Jehovah in tabernacle or temple was glorious (Ex 40:34-35; I Kgs 8:10-11; Re 15:8).
- The words are wonderful in their sound, and feelings of awe and worship should result.
- However, make sure you know the truth about this God and His effect on good men.
- However, make sure you have seen this God yourself and responded accordingly.
- This writer was affected by these verses in the 19th year of his life with great changes.
2 Above it stood the seraphims: each one had six wings; with twain he covered his face, and with twain he covered his feet, and with twain he did fly.
- Above the throne stood the seraphims, for this makes more sense than temple or train.
- Seraphims. The living creatures with six wings, hands and feet, and a (presumably) human voice, seen in Isaiah’s vision as hovering above the throne of God.
- This is the only place in the Bible where this word is found – twice (Isaiah 6:2,6).
- The speculation (flying fiery serpents) and criticism (plural of a plural) are nonsense.
- The creatures are elsewhere called cherubims, which term is used 76 (57+19) times.
- Very similar or the same creatures are four living creatures (Ezek 1:5-15,19; 3:13).
- Ezekiel described a fire-like appearance, like David and Paul (Ps 104:4; Heb 1:7).
- Revelation calls them four beasts (Rev 4:6-9; 5:6,8,14; 6:1,6; 7:11; 14:3; 15:7; 19:4).
- The four beasts of Revelation had six wings as well and were next to God’s throne.
- These four beasts constantly worship God by declaring Him thrice holy (Rev 4:8).
- Six wings are here denoted as having very special functions, which we try to explain.
- Two wings were used by each seraphim to cover his face – reverence before God.
- Two wings were used by each seraphim to cover feet – modesty for uncomely parts.
- Two wings were used by each seraphim to fly – hover above and around the throne.
3 And one cried unto another, and said, Holy, holy, holy, is the LORD of hosts: the whole earth is full of his glory.
- They worshipped similar to us by praising God to one another (Eph 5:19; Col 3:16).
- God knows His infinitely perfect attributes, but He loves mutual praise (Ps 34:1-3).
- Singing in a New Testament church is congregational – a further one another duty.
- The focus in the presence of Jehovah is holiness – the infinitely pure hatred of all sin.
- The cry by the seraphims to each other was not of love, grace, mercy, or goodness.
- The beauty of our God is holiness (Ps 29:2; 96:9), and it governs His other attributes.
- God is love, but He cannot and does not love unholy objects (Ps 5:5; 11:5; Eph 1:4).
- Those who speak of His love first and last have not seen Him and do not know Him.
- God is gracious and merciful, but He cannot show them until holiness is satisfied.
- God is good, but His goodness is governed by holiness (Matt 5:43-48; Acts 14:17).
- The context will show the effect of His holiness on Isaiah and result in His judgment.
- The identity of Lord Adonai is given here – none other than the LORD Jehovah Himself.
- He is identified by His expanded title of LORD of hosts – the angelic armies of heaven.
- The glory of God is in every part of earth – whether by creation, judgment, mercy, etc.
4 And the posts of the door moved at the voice of him that cried, and the house was filled with smoke.
- This verse is wonderful with more drama than doctrine as it describes the overall scene.
- The seraphims were not naked babies with wing buds tooting little horns as some draw.
- When one cried in worshipful praise to another, intensity and volume shook the house.
- The concussion and strength of the seraphims voice had effect similar to thunder.
- The posts or doorframe of a door (including lintel) is the strongest part of a wall.
- The power in heaven is incomparable to anything we can imagine – even just angels.
- Ezekiel says the seraphim wings were like Almighty God’s voice (Ezek 1:24; 10:5).
- The house was filled with smoke, which often occurred by the glorious presence of God.
- Solomon’s priests could not serve due to this cloud (I Kgs 8:10-12; II Chr 5:13-14).
- John saw the temple in heaven filled with the smoke of God’s great glory (Rev 15:8).
His Sins of Speech Were Forgiven – Verses 5-7
5 Then said I, Woe is me! for I am undone; because I am a man of unclean lips, and I dwell in the midst of a people of unclean lips: for mine eyes have seen the King, the LORD of hosts.
- The effect on Isaiah is profoundly important for him and us to know God and the lesson.
- The holiness of God, with perfect praise by the seraphims, condemned Isaiah’s speech.
- Isaiah saw the high King of heaven, LORD Jehovah of angelic armies, but feared Him.
- The Jews knew the true axiom that no man could see this God and live (Ex 33:20).
- There was no response from Isaiah of excitement to dance or to hug this great God.
- There is no being so good, kind, or loving as our God and Father, but get down first!
- Any presumption about our God or what you would do before Him better be guarded.
- You cannot even imagine a slight resemblance to His pure holiness and great glory.
- God’s holiness condemned Isaiah for his speech – he felt totally undone – Woe is me!
- Everything Isaiah had seen and heard was holiness – he knew his speech was not so.
- Speech must glorify God, especially by the glory He put in our mouths for His glory.
- Your tongue is your glory for God’s glory – what has it pronounced this past week?
- God’s holiness condemned Isaiah for Israel’s speech – he felt very undone – Woe is me!
- Everything Isaiah saw and heard was holiness – he knew Judah’s speech was not so.
- It should bother us how those around us speak, starting with family and then church.
- Our nation is an irreverent wicked nation by their speech, and it should incense us.
- Each word in heaven is perfectly holy – will you help your house and this church match?
6 Then flew one of the seraphims unto me, having a live coal in his hand, which he had taken with the tongs from off the altar:
- God sent a seraphim to Isaiah with a live coal from an altar burning before God Jehovah.
- The burning altar of God’s holiness and forgiveness yielded a live coal for His prophet.
- The altar to Israel was where they burned costly sacrifices to appease God ceremonially.
- We have an altar Jewish priests could not touch, for Christ (Heb 9:11-14; 13:10-15).
7 And he laid it upon my mouth, and said, Lo, this hath touched thy lips; and thine iniquity is taken away, and thy sin purged.
- A prophet, like each minister of God, had better guard his speech (Tit 2:7-8; I Tim 6:3).
- God forgave Isaiah for sinful speech and prepared him to be His mouthpiece on earth.
- Any minister with a conscience is terrified to open his mouth as Jehovah’s ambassador.
He Answered God’s Call to Preach – Verse 8
8 Also I heard the voice of the Lord, saying, Whom shall I send, and who will go for us? Then said I, Here am I; send me.
- In addition to all described above, or leading to this moment now, God Himself spoke.
- The drama of the first four verses is a similitude of the glory and majesty of our God.
- The conviction and repentance for sin and then forgiveness is necessary to prepare.
- Then when God called for a man to serve, Isaiah was approved and ready to serve.
- God seeks for each man to be a man and stand in the gap in his realm (Ezek 22:30).
- The LORD of hosts is back to Lord Adonai, but we know He is both – Lord JEHOVAH.
- Almighty God had a terrible message and ministry for Judah, and He needed a preacher.
- This passage has been tortured and twisted countless times, but you should know it.
- It was for Isaiah to take God’s indictment to Judah, not for missionaries to Paraguay.
- There is not a sentence in any epistle of the New Testament calling for missionaries.
- If there is a scriptural call to the ministry, it must clearly include the Pastoral Epistles.
- However, every duty in the word of God is a call for every believer to agree to do.
- Paul begged the Romans to consider the vision of mercies for service (Rom 12:1-2).
- Isaiah responded like every minister and every child of God should respond to service.
- Saul responded perfectly to Jesus – Lord, what wilt thou have me to do (Acts 9:6)?
- If God is calling the heart of a future preacher, let him show it by Isaiah’s holy zeal.
- He must be obsessed about the glory of God, His holiness, and every word of God.
- But every Christian should see this vision and hear this call for his/her own duties.
God Gave Him a Ministry to Blind – Verses 9-10
9 And he said, Go, and tell this people, Hear ye indeed, but understand not; and see ye indeed, but perceive not.
- Wisely consider that the doctrine of this prophecy is greater than the drama of the vision.
- The drama of God’s glory, the seraphims, Isaiah’s purging, and a call are precious.
- But the judgment of gospel blindness and sovereignty of gracious election are better.
- It is true … the drama should motivate you … then the doctrine should direct you.
- The whole combination should result in great praise and thanksgiving and service.
- Let us first note this section is used at least six times by our Lord Christ and His apostles.
- Six uses (Matt 13:14-15; Mark 4:12; Luke 8:10; Jn 12:39-41; Ac 28:24-29; Ro 11:8).
- Therefore, we accept the doctrine and prophecy here to be of great N.T. importance.
- Therefore, we see Jesus Christ and the apostolic gospel to be the primary objects.
- Therefore, we do not stop with captivity in Babylon but look on to Rome in 70 A.D.
- Therefore, we see the blinding permanent, for there is no general recovery promised.
- Therefore, we see desolation of Israel also permanent, as Daniel and Jesus confirm.
- Isaiah’s ministry was to condemn the overall nation for their rejection of God’s worship.
- God told Isaiah to Go … tell this people. Detail their depravity. Harden their hearts.
- God did not call them my people to Isaiah. He called them this people, with rejection.
- Isaiah, Jeremiah, and Ezekiel all had condemning ministries (Isaiah 3:9; 30:8-11; Jer 3:3; 4:22; 7:16; 11:14; 14:12; 22:21-22; 25:1-7; Ezekiel 2:3-8; 3:4-8; 33:30-33).
- Isaiah’s mission was two-fold here – condemn past rebellion, provoke further rebellion.
- This is hard for you to believe? – it is the savor of death unto death (II Cor 2:14-17).
- This is hard for you to believe? – He moved them to child sacrifice (Ezek 20:23-26).
- God loves to judge in kind – it is part of His character – beware (Psalm 9:15-17)!
- Whether Stephen or Paul, they preached truth but offensively so (Acts 7:51; 17:30).
- Modern gurus modify the message to multiply the multitude, opposite of Isaiah here.
- Why did the Jews hate Jesus? He preached truth that offended them (John 8:31-59).
- Why did the Jews leave Jesus? He preached truth too high for them (John 6:24-71).
- Regardless of how it will be received, pastors must be always instant (II Tim 4:1-4).
- Isaiah’s message was … indictment for rejecting His word … judgment of blindness.
- God mocked their associations and promised blindness and stumbling (Is 8:9-22).
- God mocked their ridicule of His prophets and promised trip them up (Is 28:9-16).
- God promised a marvelous thing of taking away their understanding (Is 29:9-16).
- God promised to judge suddenly for rebelling against His prophets (Isaiah 30:8-14).
- Isaiah in context of Messiah asked if any understood or appreciated Him (Is 53:1-3).
- Isaiah will appeal to God about causing Israel to err from His ways (Is 63:15-19).
- Other prophets declared this same indictment for past rebellion and the promise of more.
- Contemporary with Isaiah was Amos, foretelling a famine for truth (Amos 8:10-14).
- Coming later, Jeremiah promised Judah would be punished like Israel (Jer 7:13-15).
- Ezekiel promised God would deceive prophets for people with idols (Ezek 14:6-9).
- Ezekiel revealed God Himself had moved them to child sacrifice (Ezek 20:23-26).
- Daniel declared the 70 weeks included sealing up vision and prophecy (Dan 9:24).
- Zechariah declared it happened exactly as former prophets foretold (Zech 1:4-6).
- Jesus rebuked Israel for rejecting prophets and losing the kingdom (Matt 21:33-46).
- Paul wrote that the Jews had a vail over their hearts about Messiah (II Cor 3:14-16).
- Humble yourself to praise and thank Jehovah for any truth you know (Matt 13:16-17).
- Truth is not a right, nor are we able or wise, so we must give thanks (II Thess 2:9-14).
10 Make the heart of this people fat, and make their ears heavy, and shut their eyes; lest they see with their eyes, and hear with their ears, and understand with their heart, and convert, and be healed.
- Fatten the minds of these people by preaching truth and in a way they do not appreciate.
- Bore them with sound doctrine, so they will turn to their fables and entertainment.
- The goal is to blind and harden them past repentance and conversion for me to heal.
- Why did Jesus use parables? To fulfill this exact prophecy to Israel (Matt 13:10-17).
- Paul had a short fuse with the Jews in any given location, quickly condemning them.
- Think of how Jesus offended the Jews repeatedly by how and what He said and did.
- But for us Gentiles, this same glorious and sovereign God opened hearts and minds.
- Think about Lydia, whose heart the Lord opened, for she attended to Paul’s doctrine.
- Think about the Thessalonians, for whom Paul thanked God they heard and believed.
- We owe Him all praise, thanksgiving, and obedience (Matt 13:16-17; II Thess 2:13).
Blindness Through Final Scattering – Verses 11-12
11 Then said I, Lord, how long? And he answered, Until the cities be wasted without inhabitant, and the houses without man, and the land be utterly desolate,
- Isaiah interrupted the hopeless indictment of 6:9-10 with a natural query … How long?
- Isaiah viewed the future as a timeline, and He asked God about the end of blindness.
- He knew God had covenant promises with Israel, so He must eventually have mercy.
- Captivity in Babylon was such an event – 70 years and an end (Jer 25:11-12; 29:10).
- God answered that the blindness on Israel would be permanent through their final ruin.
- God did not view the future as a timeline, but as an elect remnant within the nation.
- He would be faithful to His covenant promises by loving and saving the elect seed.
- God’s answer in concept is more in 6:13 than 6:11-12; here he declared desolation.
- David knew of elect within Israel by a seed counting as God’s generation (Ps 22:30).
- Paul wrote it by election for the fathers’ sakes – note apostrophe location (Ro 11:28).
- God foretold the overthrow and ruin of Israel and that their blindness would be as long.
- If it were temporary blindness and Babylon, why did the N.T. use it 6:9-10 six times?
- Daniel understood perpetual ruin of the nation (Daniel 9:26-27; 10:14; 12:1; 12:7).
- Jesus said Jerusalem would be trodden down throughout this age (Luke 21:20-24).
- He doomed them to desolation without a 70-year offer (Matthew 21:40-46; 23:28).
- He hated the Jews and considered their worship to be toward Satan (Rev 2:9; 3:9).
- Paul held out nothing for future Jews (Gal 4:21-31; Heb 11:8-16; 12:22-29; 13:14).
- Witness of 70 A.D. (detailed study) … https://www.letgodbetrue.com/sermons/prophecy/70ad/sermon.php.
- The Israel of God (know the scriptural difference) … https://www.letgodbetrue.com/pdf/true-israel.pdf.
- Who Is the Seed of Abraham? … https://www.letgodbetrue.com/bible/prophecy/seed-of-abraham.php.
- The Millennium (not Jewish) … https://www.letgodbetrue.com/sermons/prophecy/gospel-millennium/sermon.php.
12 And the LORD have removed men far away, and there be a great forsaking in the midst of the land.
- See notes for Isaiah 6:11 above; this prophecy was used by Jesus and apostles six times.
- This was not temporary – it was permanent – God’s judgment of blindness and ruin.
- Babylon was temporary for 70 years, and there were poor (including Jeremiah) left.
- The desolation coming would not be temporary (Dan 9:26-27; 12:7-13; Matt 23:38).
- The days of vengeance purposed and prophesied would fall on Israel (Lu 21:20-24).
- There is no hope or promise of a general recovery of the Jews, only the elect remnant.
- All Israel being saved in Romans 11 is legal salvation of the elect by Jesus’s death.
- Paul quoted Jeremiah about the new covenant, but it was already past (Heb 8:6-13).
- When Paul encouraged Jews, he only offered the gospel kingdom (Heb 12:22-24).
- When Paul encouraged Jews, he said the gospel kingdom was last (Heb 12:25-29).
- For a detailed exposition of Romans 11 … https://www.letgodbetrue.com/pdf/romans-eleven.pdf.
- For Gospel Millennium … https://www.letgodbetrue.com/sermons/prophecy/gospel-millennium/sermon.php.
God Saw a Small Remnant of Elect – Verse 13
13 But yet in it shall be a tenth, and it shall return, and shall be eaten: as a teil tree, and as an oak, whose substance is in them, when they cast their leaves: so the holy seed shall be the substance thereof.
- Let us first note this section is used at least six times by our Lord Christ and His apostles.
- Six uses (Matt 13:14-15; Mark 4:12; Luke 8:10; Jn 12:39-41; Ac 28:24-29; Ro 11:8).
- Therefore, we accept the doctrine and prophecy here to be of great N.T. importance.
- Therefore, we see Jesus Christ and the apostolic gospel to be the primary objects.
- Therefore, we do not stop with captivity in Babylon but look on to Rome in 70 A.D.
- Therefore, we see the blinding permanent, for there is no general recovery promised.
- Therefore, we see desolation of Israel also permanent, as Daniel and Jesus confirm.
- God intended to blind Israel permanently, including Isaiah’s call, but He had His elect.
- Blinding is a terrible judgment, but God does it (Romans 9:15-18; II Thess 2:9-12).
- God also intended to destroy and ravage the nation to desolation by warring enemies.
- If it were not for election, no one would or could believe, as already shown (Is 1:9).
- Author of Confusion … https://www.letgodbetrue.com/sermons/god/is-god-the-author-of-confusion/sermon.php.
- This verse has caused commentators great grief, especially tenth, eaten, substance, etc.
- John Calvin and others said tenth means ten kings, Jotham to Zedekiah, inclusive.
- Matthew Henry decided eaten is by God; He accepts the holy seed as an edible tithe.
- Albert Barnes wants the tenth and return to be the poor, faithless ones from Egypt.
- Most want to change substance to Shallecheth, the king’s terrace-walk to the temple.
- Commentators are glad to write that this is a difficult and obscure verse of scripture.
- First, divide the verse by its content, grammar, and punctuation into two separate halves.
- The first part extends through eaten, for it is separate in two ways from what follows.
- First, the as … so form of the second half ties its clauses separate from the first half.
- Second, the colon, inferior only to the period to separate ideas, also divides the verse.
- When a colon does not divide or interrupt (the first one), it explains (the second one).
- Second, distinguish it from its tenth in the first clause to match substance and its thereof.
- The verse’s first clause contains two things – a thing as it and a tenth of/in that thing.
- A thing … and a tenth of that thing must equal = substance … of that thing (thereof).
- The holy seed is not the nation but only a part of the nation … a tenth of the nation.
- Trees lose leaves and appear dead, but the life vitality hidden in a tree is not the tree.
- Third, what is it in the first clause? What exactly is considered here along with its tenth?
- God had commissioned Isaiah to judge the nation for and with blindness (Is 6:9-10).
- God has called them this people, rather than my people, showing His disdain of them.
- Isaiah’s interrupting question and God’s answer were an interruption (Is 6:11-12).
- The it of the first clause are those being considered … this people … or that nation.
- Fourth, what is it in the second clause that returns? Not the tenth, but rather the first it.
- This people … or that nation … would return from Babylon, the coming desolation.
- Those that returned from Babylon were a motley crew of rebels under good leaders.
- Ezra and Nehemiah had problems with them, and Malachi has nothing but rebuke.
- The nation returned from Babylon, and within the nation was the elect, holy tenth.
- Fifth, how was that nation, or this people, as God called them, eaten after their return?
- They were eaten up by God’s continued judgment through enemies of the nation.
- Grasp eaten as consuming destruction (Is 5:5,17; 10:20-23; Jer 8:16; 10:25; 50:7).
- After their return, they were troubled by neighbors, the Seleucids, and the Romans.
- This eating is to be compared to the casting of leaves by deciduous trees in winter.
- Sixth, thus far … But yet in this people shall be an elect remnant, and the nation shall return from captivity, and it shall be persecuted and devoured by its enemies.
- Seventh, the as … so similitude compares deciduous trees to God’s view of this people.
- The two trees are the lime or linden tree (unrelated to the citrus tree) and oak tree.
- There is little value studying the trees beyond the deciduous life cycle of perennials.
- Tree science, dendrology or silvics, identifies abscission and senescence, for trees under duress may cast their leaves for other than perennial cycles or death (Z.H.).
- There is certainly no value running to some Shallecheth (terrace-walk) of the Jews.
- A deciduous tree in winter appears dead in every outward respect, like eaten Israel.
- A tree during excessive heat and/or drought may also appear dead, like eaten Israel.
- However, within the tree is life vitality that continues the tree through another cycle.
- Job knew the life principle or cycle of trees well and spoke well of it (Job 14:7-9).
- The substance of the two trees is the life vitality in them, like the holy seed in Israel.
- Without the very small remnant kept by God, the nation would have ended (Is 1:9).
- Eighth, God counted the elect, holy remnant tenth in the nation for covenant fulfillment.
- David understood it; he said the holy seed was accounted for a generation (Ps 22:30).
- Paul knew the difference in Israel; you should learn the difference (Romans 9:6-8).
- Paul appealed to Isaiah several times in this regard of the remnant (Rom 9:27-29).
- There was a great difference in the nation by God’s electing grace (Romans 11:1-8).
- God was faithful to the fathers – Abraham, Isaac, Jacob – by election (Ro 11:28-29).
- Ninth, the double disjunctive opening exalts election against the judgment (Is 6:9-12).
- The ferocity of the judgment is severe, but His covenant promises stood in the seed.
- Isaiah sought a timeline remedy – how long? But God answered by a perpetual seed.
- The judgment is quoted or used six times in the N.T., but the elect are always seen.
- Even in the destruction of Jerusalem, the elect were saved by design (Mat 24:21-22).
- The holy seed were always distinct from that evil generation (Matt 3:7; Acts 2:40).
- When Paul wrote of these things, he burst forth into glorious praise (Rom 11:33-36)!
- Tenth, it is our interpretive duty to rightly divide between the nation and its elect seed.
- Paul very clearly distinguished between national Israel and elect Israel (Rom 9:6-8).
- Paul prayed for Israel to be saved, that is, elect Israel to be converted (Rom 10:1-4).
- Paul wrote all Israel would be saved, that is, elect Israel then blind (Rom 11:25-32).
- Thus, Isaiah 4:2-6 (Mal 4:1-3) has a short-term national fulfillment, later a spiritual.
- Thus, Isaiah 10:20-23 (Rom 9:27) is short-term, national and long-term, spiritual.
- Thus, Isaiah 65:8-10 has features that apply to both short-term and long-term Israel.
- Thus, Amos 9:8-12 included Assyria destroying Israel and also Gentile conversions.
Application
- Fall down before this glorious and holy God, confessing your sins, and offering service.
- David told enemies to stand in awe, stop sinning, and examine themselves (Ps 4:4).
- What hinders you from saying what Paul said when he saw Jesus Christ (Acts 9:6)?
- There is nothing more profitable and pleasant for your soul than a vision of God.
- For more about a moving vision of God … https://www.letgodbetrue.com/pdf/vision-of-god.pdf.
- Fall down before this sovereign Judge that chooses blindness or light and praise Him.
- Jesus told His beggarly, redneck, low-class apostles to give thanks (Matt 13:10-17).
- Paul knew he was bound to thank God for the Thessalonians’ faith (II Thess 2:9-14).
- We must not be puffed up about God cutting off unbelieving Jews (Rom 11:17-24).
- For more of God’s electing grace … https://www.letgodbetrue.com/pdf/what-if-election-is-true.pdf.