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Thursday, June 25, 2020

Woe!

Woe to those who go down to Egypt for help and rely on horses, who trust in chariots because they are many and in horsemen because they are very strong, but do not look to the Holy One of Israel or consult the LORD! And yet He is wise and brings disaster; He does not call back His words, but will arise against the house of the evildoers and against the helpers of those who work iniquity. The Egyptians are men, and not God, and their horses are flesh, and not spirit. When the LORD stretches out His hand, the helper will stumble, and he who is helped will fall, and they will all perish together. (Isa 31:1-3)
Isaiah 31 is addressed to Israel, the professing people of God. In this chapter God begins with a warning. We're not really familiar with the concept of "woe." I mean, we kind of get that it's about grief or indignation or something, but in biblical terms it is something much more. Isaiah used the term about himself in Isaiah 6 when he saw God. "Woe is me! for I am undone." (Isa 6:5) The language is not merely of grief or indignation. It is an unraveling of the person. It's a lament, but it carries with it the sense of being cursed. "God is turning His back on me." It is a term of judgment. We think, "It means things won't go well for you," but this is really bad. What brought about this statement from God about His people?

Well, they did something awful. They ... expected help in battle from perhaps the world's most powerful army at the time. Now, hang on. How is that "woeful"? Isn't that rational? If you want to get healthy, go to a doctor. If you want to make money, get a job. If you want to protect yourself from enemies, buy protection. It makes sense. "Woe"???

Of course, I'm not precisely correct. It wasn't that they sought help from Egypt. It was that they relied on Egypt. It was that they didn't "look to the Holy One of Israel or consult the LORD." They trusted in horses and chariots to the exclusion of the LORD, their only actually reliable help.

We do that, don't we? We look to better judges or better leadership to make America better. We hope for better laws to make America more moral. We work out better programs to make people less racist or less sexist or more inclusive. (Have you heard recently that the language of "inclusiveness" is now considered racist because it is condescending? No win.) We try to get better stuff to make a better life, whether it's better equipment for church or better Bible studies for personal use or better training to get along better with others.

Mind you, I'm not suggesting in the least that we shouldn't do any of this. What I'm suggesting is that, like God's self-professed people, we are mistaken (to the level of "woe") if that's where we're putting our trust. We're wrong (to the level of the biblical curse) if we do it without seeking God and relying on Him. I'm suggesting that our eyes need to be on the Lord and Him alone. He may often supply what we need through these means, but never forget that it is Him, not them, that is our focus and sufficiency.

3 comments:

Craig said...

There have been a lot of churches who've taken a lot of flack for choosing not to follow Covid guidelines because they trust God to protect them.

It seems as though there is a balance where we do trust God and His sovereignty, and we use our seat belts. I'm pretty sure that part of God's providence is that He's gifted people with creativity and allowed them to come up with things that help keep us safe.

I think where things fall apart is that too many people trust God to keep them safe, to keep them from harm, when we should be trusting God to act in the way that brings glory to Him, and that will be the best way for us to fit into His design.

What's the line from The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe? Something like, "He's not safe, but he's good"?

Stan said...

Yes. We lock our doors and we buy insurance and we wear seat belts. We do those things. That's not a problem, as God provides them as ordinary means of grace. The point is not that we shouldn't use them (as some have suggested), but that we aren't trusting in them. We're trusting the One who provided them.

I love the old joke about the guy in the flood. A Jeep pulls up and offers to get him out. "I'm just waiting on the Lord." The water rises to the porch and a boat pulls up to get him out. "I'm just waiting on the Lord." The water rises to the roof and a helicopter comes in to get him out. "I'm just waiting on the Lord." And he drowns. In heaven he complains to God. "I trusted You and you didn't save me." God says, "I sent you a Jeep, a boat, and a helicopter. What more did you want?"

Craig said...

I too enjoy that joke. I still think that too many people think that it's about God protecting us from every possible harm, which seems contrary to what scripture tells us.