Bible Commentaries

Expositor's Dictionary of Texts

Isaiah 25

Verses 1-12

An Act of Faith

Isaiah 25:1

I. "O Lord, Thou art my God." This is not a prayer, but something higher—"an act of faith".

What do we mean by an act of faith? We mean an expression of faith in which the will has its part.

An act of faith should be the utterance of the whole nature, the will giving effect both to the conclusions of the reason and to the desires of the affections. An act of faith seems so simple; it is tremendous, for it involves the operation of the whole soul.

II. There is (1) the act of faith, "O Lord, Thou art my God". (2) Then its result, "I will exalt; Thee, I will praise Thy Name". (3) Then the reason for this, "For Thou hast done wonderful things; Thy counsels of old are faithfulness and truth".

1. The act of faith proceeds from personal religion; for having taken God as the Supreme Ruler of our life, the intellect loves to seek into the mysteries of His Being, revealed in Holy Scripture, and in the experiences of Divine Providence; the will strives to be obedient to His commandments and precepts, and the affections find their joy in reaching out to Him as the object of their love.

2. The result of this is expressed in the next two clauses, "I will exalt Thee, I will praise Thy Name". And by "Name" we mean when we speak of God His character—what He is. Some may ask, "How can we exalt God?" We cannot exalt God in the sense of raising Him any higher than He Isaiah 25:8

Ruskin says, speaking of the death of Christ: "It was not the mere bodily death that He conquered—that death had no sting. It was this spiritual death which He conquered, so that at last it should be swallowed up—mark the word—not in life; but in victory. As the dead body shall be raised to life, so also the defeated soul to victory, if only it has been fighting on its Master's side, has made no covenant with death; nor itself bowed its forehead for his seal. Blind from the prison-house, maimed from the battle, or mad from the tombs, their souls shall surely yet sit, astonished, at His feet Who giveth peace."

Waiting for God (Third Sunday in Advent)

Isaiah 25:9

I. What does Waiting Imply?—Advent is especially a time of waiting, and this waiting involves four things.

1. Faith. St. Paul speaks of Christians as those who are "waiting for the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ". They therefore believe in the promise of His coming.

2. Further, the posture of the Christian is one of desire. Israel of old longed for the manifestation of the Deliverer. "Thou that sittest between the cherubims, come and save us!" ( Psalm 80:1-2). St. Paul speaks of loving Christ's appearing; St. John cries, "Come, Lord Jesus!" The word which the Apostle uses describes the attitude as of one stretching out and longing for "the revelation" ( Romans 13:19).

3. Then patience is an ingredient in the waiting. "Be patient," says St. Isaiah 25:9

I. The Hope of the Incarnation.—Christmas is a season of expectation. And then also it is a season of confidence. "He will save us." Not—He will save the heathen, the outcast, the hopeless; but He will save us. It is a personal confession. For it implies that we are dissatisfied with our lives as they are; that we are willing that they should be lifted out of the bondage of convention. The slavery of selfishness and greed, the deception thoughtlessly practised, the slander carelessly spoken. No one can mix much with his fellow-men without realizing that a new doubt is everywhere awaking in men's minds. Is not Christianity an exhausted force. Is not its power over the world coming to an end? Here are vast social evils crying to heaven, and no salvation comes. Men live and work and die with no apparent consciousness of spiritual realities, and all our efforts break against the passive force of apathy. Can we, in face of all this, still hold to our belief that He who was born on that first Christmas morning is the Saviour of the world? If He is a Saviour, where is His salvation? We must face questions like these and they will lead us back to the cradle of Bethlehem. Like the wise men we grow bewildered in the streets of the city and we lose our star, but as we go towards Bethlehem, behold it goes before us again. We have found the lost cue, we are strong again, we can face the world's challenge. We believe that in the Incarnation lies still the hope of the world. Yes, and our hope too. For when the simple truths of religion have become complicated by human glosses, and have lost touch with reality, or have grown harder and intolerant, we need to bring them again to Bethlehem and lay them at the cradle of a little Child. For He is the Saviour of Christianity as well as the Saviour of the World. Of our religious ideas, as well as of our personal character, it is true that except we be converted and become as little children we cannot enter into the kingdom of heaven.

II. The Realization of God.—Christmas is a season of realization. "This is our God." The realization of God; God not far away in some heaven of music and rapture, but here by the cradle of little children, in the paths where footsore men tramp wearily, in houses of gladness or sorrow.

III. "The Prince of Peace."—We are asked to speak to the people of this country on the subject of international peace. But what can we say?

There can be no peace till the spirit of distrust and greed and selfish ambition ceases to dominate the policy of nations. The only real guarantee for peace is in the resolute and watchful action of all Christian men. In this too "He will save us" if we wait for Him. He will teach us that there are better battles to fight than the battles full of "confused noise and garments rolled in blood". His battle is against ignorance and vice, against the selfish heart and the grasping hand, against discord and hatred, and all the foul things that haunt the darkness.

References.—XXV:9.—A. Murray, Waiting on God, p89. T. F. Lockyer, The Inspirations of the Christian Life, p196. W. H. Hutchings, Sermon-Sketches, p12. H. P. Liddon, Advent in St. Paul's, pp77 , 306. E. Fowle, Plain Preaching to Poor People (1Series). XXVI.—Spurgeon, Sermons, vol. xli. No2430; vol. xlvii. No2713. XXVI:1.—W. C. E. Newbolt, Counsels of Faith and Practice, p305. XXVI:1 , 2.—J. Monro Gibson, A Strong City, p3; see also Christian World Pulpit, vol. liii. p151. A. Maclaren, Expositions of Holy Scripture— is, p102; see also Paul's Prayers, p234. XXVI:1-10.—A. Maclaren, Expositions of Holy Scripture— is, p95. XXVI:1-14.—Spurgeon, Sermons, vol. xlvi. No2669.

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