Isaiah 1:1-2:22
Ambassadors of holy love
‘The characteristic name for God in Isaiah is “The Holy”,’ writes Eugene Peterson. ‘Holiness is the most attractive quality, the most intensive experience we ever get of sheer life – authentic, firsthand living, not life looked at and enjoyed from a distance… Holiness is a furnace that transforms the men and women who enter it.’
Isaiah’s message is about God’s holy love for his people. God loves his people more than any parent loves a child.
Yet Isaiah says, ‘For the Lord has spoken: “I reared children and brought them up, but they have rebelled against me”’ (1:2). He goes on to speak of all the ways in which his children have rebelled – their unfaithfulness, the injustice they allow, and their failure to look after the widows and orphans (vv.21–23).
God’s desire is for holiness:
‘Sweep your lives clean of your evildoings
so I don’t have to look at them any longer.
Say no to wrong.
Learn to do good.
Work for justice.
Help the down-and-out.
Stand up for the homeless.
Go to bat for the defenseless’ (vv.16–17, MSG).
But they have failed and rebelled. Further, they are full of superstitions, they practise divination, and their land is full of materialism and idols (2:6–8).
Their religiosity is not working. The Lord says, ‘I have no pleasure in the blood of bulls and lambs and goats’ (1:11c). ‘I can’t stand your trivial religious games… I’m sick of your religion, religion, religion, while you go right on sinning’ (vv.13–14, MSG).
Yet, God does not abandon them. He says, ‘Come now, let us reason together’ (v.18). ‘If your sins are blood-red, they’ll be snow-white. If they’re red like crimson, they’ll be like wool’ (v.18, MSG).
He promises, ‘Afterward you will be called the City of Righteousness, the Faithful City. Zion will be redeemed with justice, her penitent ones with righteousness’ (vv.26b–27a). Like Micah, he promises justice and peace will come (2:2–4).
But how? How can we who are sinful and rebellious be made righteous? How can we, whose ‘sins are like scarlet’, be made ‘white as snow’ (1:18)? How will these remarkable promises of the Old Testament be fulfilled?
Only in Jesus do we find the solution. The Old Testament prophets foreshadow what was to come. The New Testament tells us how: in today’s New Testament passage we read how ‘God made him [Jesus] who had no sin to be sin for us, so that in him we might become the righteousness of God’ (2 Corinthians 5:21).
Jesus, who ‘had no sin’, was made sin for us on the cross so that in him, though our sins are like scarlet, we could be made white as snow and become the righteousness of God. You become friends with God and an ambassador for Christ.
Lord, thank you for the immense privilege of being your ambassador, able to take your message to a world that desperately needs forgiveness and hope.
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