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Jan 22
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Delta Force Junior High Ministries

The purpose of ∆ Force Junior High Ministries is two fold.  First, we want to help you make sense out of your world by giving you a solid foundation in the Word of God.  We want to help answer your questions about life.  Second, we want to help you gain a God centered view of your relationships with others.  We want to help you use your relationships to give honor to God.  We do this through various activities and ministries.  On Sunday mornings we meet for Sunday Scripture Exploration.  On the first, third, and fifth Fridays it’s at FNA.  And every day it’s here at Delta Force Daily as we spend a little time with God and together.  Find out more by clicking on the links in the main menu then join us at one of our meetings and maybe we can help you make a difference to those around you by shining for  God in your world.  Your presence certainly would be a bright spot in our day.

Isaiah 58:1-14

Isaiah 58:1-14.  So far in this conclusion to the book we have seen God encourage people to live for him.  The reason to live for God is that because the end is coming.  So God made sure that all mankind knew that salvation was available, there is a way for each human being to have their relationship with God fixed (Isaiah 56:1-8).  But the other side of that coin is that some people will reject God’s offer of salvation, all of their false religious activity will not fix their relationship with God.  God repeatedly appeals to these people but they continuously reject Him.  For them there will be no peace nor rest in eternity (Isaiah 56:9-57:21).  In today’s reading God continues to challenge his people to return to him.  But it’s not just some fake  “Oh I love God” thing, He is challenging them to really live like they love him.

Remember that this book is written to a city under siege.  There is an old saying, “There are no atheists in foxholes.”  A foxhole is a little hole soldiers dig to hide in when they are shooting at and being shot at in a battle.  When death is right there in your face it’s hard not to be thinking about God and how to be right with him.  One way religious people try to show they are serious about god is by fasting, going without food or some other thing for a while.  Another way people try to show they are serious about god is by going to a place where their god is honored and doing things that honor that god.  That was what God was condemning in the chapter we just finished, people going up on hills or to other places where little shrines were to make offerings to false gods.  In this chapter he challenges them about fasting to try to please him and going to church to try to please him.

In verse 1 God tells Isaiah to go out and talk to the people, he actually tells the prophet to get pretty loud with them.  I get accused of yelling sometimes by my kids, I’m pretty loud.  And when I’m very concerned about something I get even louder, I yell.  Most of the people in my family don’t like it but it’s because I’m very worried about the thing I am talking to them about.  In this case the prophet is told to get loud about the fact that the people have been breaking God’s rules (transgressions) and missing the target God has for their lives (sinning).  Verse 2 tells us that the people of Israel are looking for answers from God and they expect to get them.  Why?  Because they think they have a good relationship with God so he must owe them the answers, and help.  They think they have done right and followed the rules.  In the beginning of verse three they even challenge God by telling Him they are so serious they have gone without food and have shown God respect.

God’s answer begins in the second half of verse 3.  They weren’t really looking for answers and help from God and they weren’t really being humble in their actions, their fast was sort of a pride thing.  They got what they really wanted (desired), to feel like they were so faithful.  On top of that the rest of their actions proved they weren’t really getting in closer to God.  They were treating employees badly, arguing, and fighting, and even hitting each other.  God then goes on to ask if they really think he wants them to roll around on the ground in a bunch of ashes wearing a rough icky sack for clothing.

As usual God doesn’t leave us guessing he gives us the answer, he wants us to know how to have a good relationship with him.  Verse 6 tells us that the right kind of fasting is to untie others.  What does that mean?  What does going without food have to do with taking the chains off of someone in a dungeon?  The answer gets even more confusing in verse 7 when he tells us that the right kind of fasting is to share our food with others and to open our homes to the homeless and to give clothes to the naked.  Again, what does that have to do with not eating?

First of all I think we need understand that God only commands fasting on one particular day in his instructions to the Israelites, sort of.  In Leviticus 16:29 the people of Israel were told to “humble” themselves on the Day of Atonement, a special day each year when the Israelites were to make an animal sacrifice as a way of reminding them of the cost or penalty of their disobedience.  The word “humble” means to afflict, the idea is suffering.  The word “humble” is often used together with “fast” so some scholar think that the people were supposed to fast on the Day of Atonement.  All of the times we see fasting in the Old Testament it is people trying to show how serious they are about God or trying to be serious while reaching out to God for answers or help.  Here in Isaiah we see God telling the people that if they are really serious about him it will show up in how they treat others not in how little they ate that day.  It reminds me of the answer Jesus gave to the religious leader who asked him what the greatest commandment in the Law of Moses was.  Jesus’ answered with the top two commandments.  Love God with all that you are and love others like you love yourself (Matthew 22:34-40).  Loving God shows up in how we treat others.

So what about the chains or ropes or whatever the people were tied up with?  The Bible teaches that we are in bondage (tied up) to our sinful nature.  In other words we are we are rebellious against God and can’t get away from it (Romans 7:14; Galatians 4:3).  Paul later tells us that Jesus is the way to get free from sin (Romans 7:24-8:2).  But people need to hear about Jesus (Romans 10:13-14), someone needs to tell them, we need to tell them, we need to untie them.  The way we really prove that we love God is by doing what makes him happy and that is telling people about Jesus.  A big part of telling the people about Jesus involves showing them how much God loves them.  We do this by sharing our food, our homes, and other things they might need, like cloths.  These sorts of actions will result in us being a light to a dark world helping them find the way back to God (Matthew 5:14).

On top of helping others find God we will also get answers for the rest of the things we are worried about in life.  God will take care of us, guide us, satisfy us, strengthen us, and make us like a garden.  In addition we will be a source of spiritual refreshment to others (the spring is probably a metaphor for helping others find the same kind of satisfaction in God that we will have).  The broken down city in the last verse is probably a metaphor (using one thing to describe another) for our broken relationship with God.  So people who love God by serving others will help others have their relationship with God fixed.

I think that fasting is mostly not supposed to be an action but the result of other actions.  We should not go around proving how much we can suffer for God, that is prideful, and pride is one of the things God was trying to deal with in the book of Isaiah.  The peoples pride and selfishness in Isaiah’s time caused many people to suffer.  And it was causing them to suffer to as God stopped helping them.  Here we see that real fasting is the result of serving others.  Sometimes when we are serving others we do miss a meal or two, or suffer in other ways.  So we are fasting, but we are too busy serving God to notice.  God wants us to focus on the needs of others not on what we are giving up along the way.  Lord help me be a servant.  Help me meet the needs of the poor.  Help me set people free from their sin.  Thank you for providing the key, Jesus.  Let it be all about you, never about me.  Then the fasts will become joy and gladness and cheerful feasting (Zechariah 8:19).  Thank you for the joy.

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Last Updated on Saturday, 30 June 2012 10:31

Isaiah 57:3-21

Isaiah 57:3-21.  Today’s reading continues the story of the evil leaders who have ignored and even hurt those who love God (the righteous).  This part of tier story describes their unfaithfulness to God.  In Matthew 22:34-40 a teacher of the Law of Moses asked Jesus what the most important rule in the Law.  Jesus told him that the most important part of the Law is the instruction to love God with all that we are.  Jesus then added that the second most important instruction is that we need to love our neighbor as much as we love our self.  The reading for the last two days has shown us that we need to be just in our lives, we need to care about the needs of others and not just our selves.  That is like the second most important instruction in the Law of Moses.  Today’s reading helps us understand about loving God with all we are.

Actually this next section talks not only to the evil leaders but to anyone who is unfaithful to God.  These people are called “sons of sorceress” and “children of a cheater and a prostitute”.  Deuteronomy 24:6 tells us that people are responsible for their own actions.  Children are not punished because of the actions of their fathers and fathers are not punished for the actions of their sons.  In this case Isaiah uses the words “sons” and “child” to show us that they following the example of the parents.  In this case a parent who tries to talk to the dead (a witch or medium) or a parent who is a cheater and one who is a prostitute.  All of these activities break the rules God gave the Israelites (and us) for living.  They are also called rebellious and liars in verse 4.  Scholars are not sure what the first part of verses 4 means.  Either they are making fun of the faithful people in verse 1 or they are using their voices to honor the false gods and idols that verses 5-8.  There are a bunch of different activities mentioned in these verses but all have a connection to worshipping manmade gods (idols).

Verse 9 probably deals with the other problem that the people of Judah were having at the time.  Remember their were being invaded by Assyria and had been tempted to make an alliance with Babylon and actually did make an alliance with Egypt and some of the other kingdoms around them.  This alliance failed as Sennacherib marched down the coast and eventually across the territory of Judah.  He also defeated Egypt during this campaign. Verse 9 seems to be talking about ambassadors sent to make these treaties.  It looks like some of them might have died in the process.  It could also be talking about the king of Judah misleading these ambassadors to the point that they were on the road to hell in a sense, they weren’t dead yet just headed that way.  Remember in Isaiah 56:11-12 the leaders were doing their own thing and thinking that God was going to let them keep on sliding by.  Even when their plans were failing (v. 10) they kept lying to themselves and moving forward.  They found their own strength.

Verses 11-13 challenge the leaders and other Israelites about who they were worshipping.  They had started to deny God and trust in idols instead.  To do this they had to lie to themselves because only God had proven himself through out their history.  According to verse 11 the people had stopped believing because God was not stopping all of the trouble in their lives.  Sometimes as a parent I let my children fail and see the consequences of what they are doing, especially when I have warned them in the past and they still go their own way (see Isaiah 56:11).  Sometimes they say I don’t care but I realize that if I always bail them out they will never stop doing the thing that is really hurting them.  I think that God does the same thing.  The thorns and weeds and death and even the death of the animal God used to make clothes for Adam and Eve were all reminders of the broken relationship with God, and still are reminders to us.  But weeds beat the lake of fire any day (see yesterday’s post).

Again in verse 13 we see the heart of God.  After he challenges them to ask their idols for help he tells them that if they put their existence in his hands that they will be a part of the promised forever kingdom.  Verses 14-19 then go on to tell us what god will do for “his people”.  The people who turn their lives and eternity over to him will be taken care of, revived, like a drink of water on a hot day.  Verses 17-18 is very cool because we see why god punishes, because of our sins and the way we treat others, but even when we are still going the wrong way God reaches out to us to help us.  Eventually the people who come back to God are filled with good things to say about him (praise).  And they will have peace (remember how the chapter started with those who love God suffering and dying).  God fixes things but for people who reject God and keep going their own way (Isaiah 56:11) their strength will fail and their will be no peace, their eternity will be filled with torment as we saw yesterday.

We have seen more of the down side of gong against God.  Yesterday we looked more at not treating others right (justice or injustice) today we looked at not treating God right, or being unfaithful to him by loving idols and our selves.  We see that God will eventually get the honor that he alone deserves and will deal with prideful self-centered people.  Remember those have been two of the main ideas through out Isaiah.  The is no peace for the wicked but in John 16:33 Jesus assured his followers that in him they would have peace even if they had trouble as they lived in the world, like the righteous man in Isaiah 57:1-2.  Lord help me trust you even in times of trouble.  Help me not forget you when it seems like you are being quiet.  Help me trust you completely.  You really have proven your love and concern.  But we can be so forgetful.  All the good and then one little bad thing and we jump overboard.  Help me remember and stay faithful.  Fill me with your peace even if I face death.  You have conquered sin and death, help me believe and trust.

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Last Updated on Wednesday, 27 June 2012 02:05
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