STUDY THEME: ADOPTING A BIBLICAL WORLDVIEW. 6-18-00 "CONTOURS OF A BIBLICAL WORLDVIEW. ‘HERE IS YOUR GOD." ISAIAH 40: 10-11, 18-31 PLEASE OPEN YOUR BIBLE TO ISAIAH 40. Last Sunday we learned that because our human reason has been marred by sin, it contributes to our lives of sin and unbelief. When we received Jesus Christ as our Savior He renews our minds as part of His new creation. Then Faith provides a way for us to be confident of God's unfilled promises and to perceive unseen realities of God, that are unseen by our physical senses. Reason and Faith working together make sure that what we believe is true. Isaiah was one of four great prophets of the eighth century B.C. The other three were Micah, Amos, and Hosea. In Ch. 40:1, Isaiah announced a joyous message of comfort and redemption. In Vs. 9 he shouted to the people, "Here is your God!" From Isaiah's prophecy we learn much about who God is and what He is like. The Key to Ch. 40 is Vs. 27. The people complained that God did not know about or care about them. Ch. 40 begins in Vs. 1-11 with a message of comfort and the good news of divine deliverance. The second half of the chapter shows the need to see the greatness of God and to trust Him for strength for each of life's situations. As we move thru the 40th Ch. of Isaiah we will find that this passage presents one of the finest pictures of God in all the Bible. Perhaps the most important of all our beliefs is that concerning God. The Authority for our beliefs is the Bible. The Bible gives us God's own revelation of what He is. He is the most important part of a believers' worldviews. As we study this lesson, let's seek to know more about God so we can give proper honor and praise to Him. 1. PLEASE READ ISAIAH 40: 18-20. In Vs. 18 to show God's incomparable nature, Isaiah asked two rhetorical questions: To whom and to what can God be compared? What is God like? Many people have such a limited view of God that their God is not the true God. They do not honor or worship Him because they do not know Him. When people come to know the true nature of God they oftime have a desire to worship Him and to know Him better. Some people who profess to have faith are practical athesists. They live as if God did not exist. People of true faith build everything else on their personal relationship with the Lord, and they base their understanding of God on His revelation in His Word. The second question, "To what can God compare?", reflects the atmosphere of the 8th century B.C. The religion of Judah was unique. Every other religion of that era employed idols as the primary device for instruction and worship. Idols symbolized the presence of the god they represented. However, the distinction between the god and the idol virtually disappeared. Comparison of the Lord with the gods of other religions reveals that God is the only one in His category. Every other deity is in another category. In Vs. 19 Isaiah pointed out that people make idols. The quality of these idols varied greatly. A wealthy person would hire a smith to cast an idol from metal. The workman heated the metal until it liquefied. He poured it into a mold that he had shaped with his hands. Other artasans covered wood statues with gold plating. Poor people hunted for the best wood they could find. The primary consideration was that it not rot quickly. These destitute worshipers were content if their idol simply did not topple. A longer passage dealing with this subject is found in Isaiah 44: 9-20. There Isaiah told how the people would cut down a tree. Some of it was used for firewood on which to cook. Another part was used to make an idol, which the person proceeded to worship. The First and Second Commandments in Ex. 20:3-4 have to do with idols and images. The First Commandment warns against making a pagan god one's god. The Second Commandment warns against trying to make an image for worshiping the Lord. People then and now were guity of both actions. The First Commandment applies to anything we substitute for God. The Second Commandment is more subtle. It applies to false and limited views of God. Such false views reduce God to something less than He is. Gods made by humans fail to depict the true God. Nevertheless, people prefer their gods because they think they can control them to get what they want. But the true God refuses to become the clay and let us be the potters to shape Him to suite ourselves. He insists on being the potter to shape us as the clay. J.B. Phillips, the famous N.T. translater, wrote a short book titled "Your God Is Too Small." He pointed out that while some people still make wood or metal images to depict God, in our contemporary society most adults have false mental images of God. Some of the false mental images of God mentioned by Philips include "Resident Policeman.", "Parental Hangover", "Grand Ol' Man." "Meek and Mild", "God in a box", and "Pale Galilean." These mental images limit God to our limited views of Him. Thus we need to form our views of God based on His revelation of Himself and not on our own ideas. The eternal God is alive and it is He who sustains us. In these next verses Isaiah reminded the people of what they should have known all along. God is sovereign over all the earth and over all people including the political rulers of the earth. 2. PLEASE READ ISAIAH 40: 21-24. In Vs. 21 Isaiah asked four more rhetorical questions. These are basic truths the people should have remembered. Do you not know? Surely you have not missed the knowledge of God. The affirmations of His deity and majesty are overwhelming. Have you not heard? Everywhere someone and something declares God's presence. Has it not been told you from the beginning? These truths about God were not new. they were spoken in the very first instant of time.Have you not understood since the earth was founded? From creation these truths have been unmistakable. Their clarity allowed anyone to understand them. The term "understood" makes it clear that people have no excuse for not knowing about God. God is sovereign over all the earth and its inhabitants, including the political powers of this world. The circle of the earth reflects a human perspective of the earth. God sits enthroned above His creation. He is superior to all creation and rules over it as its King. In comparison to Him, humanity is like trifling grasshoppers. Because He is God, however, he takes more notice of people than people do of grasshoppers. Standing on the surface of the planet earth, the enormous expanse of the sky defies human comprehension. What we don't know about space surely exceeds what we do know. Yet for God, creating the heavens was like putting up a tent. The universe remains a vast mystery to humans, but to God it was merely the erection of a temporary cover. Some people strive to rule over others. A few amass significant power. They rule over nations with pomp and pagentry. They tell others what to do and consider themselves magnificent. They are give grand titles and are treated as superiors. God is not impressed. He quickly reduces their power. The Bible and human history contain many examples of God doing this. Some strutting tyrant rides high, only to come to an untimely end. King Agrippa 1 had put James, the brother of John, to death and had planned to execute Peter. One day Agrippa appeared in a glittering garment. The people spoke of him as if he were a god. Then, in Acts 20 the angel of the Lord struck him down. God is soverign over all the world's political powers. Some strut across history's stage, caught up in a sense of their importance; but they soon fall. God controls history. It is His Story. God is King. He always has been, is, and always will be King. People of faith live in light of this reality now. Others live as if they were kings and ignore God. Someday all will be forced to recognize His sovereignty. For those of us who honor Him now as the sovereign King, this is a key feature of our worldview. Our faith in God shapes our attitudes and actions. We who acknowledge God's sovereignty also understand His authority. In these next verses Isaiah emphasized God's power by pointing to His control of the stars. He asked the people why they complained that God had forgotten them. He reminded them that God is the everlasting God and Creator, who never grows weary. Total understanding of such a God is beyond human comprehension, but we can know Him and what He has revealed about Himself. 3. PLEASE READ ISAIAH 40: 25-28. Vs. 25 is similar to Vs. 18, except, rather than Isaiah it is God Himself who asked two rhetorical questions that are virtually a repetition of the two previous quesitons asked in Vs. 18. However, the second question drives home the futility of any comparison. OR WHO IS MY EQUAL? emphasizes the sharp distinction bvetween the Lord and other gods. Isaiah emphasized God's power by pointing to His control of the stars. The powerful Creator of the starry hosts brings out the stars, and calls each by name. When God summons them each night, not one star failes to appear. No other god or individual possesses such power. The stars come into sight in the same way every night because God created them to do so. Their daily apparance communicates to us that God's great power and authority have not diminished. God assigned each star its particular nature, characteristics, and function. Ps. 19: 1 says "The heavens declare the glory of God; and the firmament showeth His handiworks." As we said before, Vs. 27 is the key to this Ch. 40. It gives insight into the problem that Isaiah was addressing. Often when the name Jacob was used by the prophets, they were referring to the people of God as being more like Jacob before the Lord changed him and gave him the name Israel. The name Jacob suggests the unworthiness of the chosen people. What was their complaint? My way is hid from the Lord means they felt God was unaware of them and their plight. My judgment is passed over from my God means they felt God was treating them unjustly. In other words, they accused God of not knowing their plight; and if He did know it, they accused Him of being unjust and uncaring. No information is given as to the precise cirucmstances under which this complaint is uttered...it is a universal complaint, raised in times of difficulty and adversity. "My God neglects my cause." The greatness of God is seen in His names and titles. What Isaiah asked in Vs. 14 now is stated as a fact. He emphasized four facts. First,The everlasting God. He has no beginning and no end. He is not limited by time. He is eternal . The Lord Yahweh is the personal name of the covenant God of Israel. The Creator of the ends of the earth shows His all-encompassing power in creating all things. He is omnipotent. The true God is not limited by space. He is omnipresent. God's character is also seen in the words fainteth not, neither is weary. Fainteth and weary have similar meanings. Both words appear again in Vs. 30 and 31, where they are used to describe human feelings. In Vs. 28, the point is that God will not grow tired or weary as He is omnipotent. He is eternal, having always existed, and He will always exist. He is immutable, that is He does not change. No searching of His understanding means that "his understanding no one can fathom." He is inscrutable. He is all knowing or omniscient. A full compehension of God and of all His ways is beyond human ability. This is stated even more strongly by Paul in Romans 11:33-36, where he said, in Vs. 33, "O the depth of the riches both of wisdom and knowledge of God! how unsearchable are his judgments. and His ways past finding out." This does not mean that we cannot know God in faith and know those things about Him that He has revealed, but it does mean that the full mystery of God lies beyond us. If we fully understand and explain God, our god would no longer be the true and infinite God but some image in our minds. In these concluding verses Isaiah emphasized both God's great power and His loving care. He is a King, but He is also a caring Shepherd. He gives His power and strength to the weak. Those who place their hope in Him find strength for each of life's varied situations. The best definition of God I have found is in 1 John 4:8 "God is Love." 4. PLEASE READ ISAIAH 40: 10-11, 29-31. In Vs. 10 Isaiah called on his people to look and comprehend. The sovereign God was coming to their assistance. The term power could be translated "might." God was susperior to any foe. His victory was certain. ARM is used in both Vs. 10 and 11. In Vs. 10 it is a symbol of the power of the strong hand of the Lord God as He rules . In Vs. 11, it is a symbol of His loving care, His gentleness for His people. Thus God is both a mighty Ruler and a loving Shepherd. Notice the words in Vs. 11 that describe what He does for the flock: feed...gather ... carry...gently lead. He gives special attention to the lambs and to those that are with young. Vs. 29-31 continue the Lord's word to those who complained that God either did not know or did not care for them. Vs. 29 focuses on the weak, who are described as the faint and them that have no might. To these helpless and powerless ones, he giveth power and increaseth strength. Vs. 30 describes those who ought to have strength-- the youths and the young men. Yet life is so tough that even the strong become weary and utterly fall. Vs. 31 is one of the great verses in the Bible. If you have not memorized this precius promise, commit it to your mind and heart and recall it often. To wait upon the Lord means to have patient trust in the goodness of God no matter what happens and to have confident hope that His promises will come to pass. Such faith involves a personal relationship with the Lord. Those who have such a relationship with the Lord can handle anything that comes. The variety of situations in life are depicted in three ways. God gives us some experiences in which He enables us to mount up with wings as eagles. These are the mountaintop experiences of life that inspire and encourage us for life in the valley's below. The Christian life is like a long-distance race. We need perseverance for this race. Thus He enables us to run, and not be weary. But much of life is like a walk. In fact, the godly life is described as walking, and sometimes we must walk thru the valley of the shadow. But He enables us to walk, and not faint. How does God do this? He renews us. God exchanges human weakness for divine strength. People who place their trust in God will go from strength to strength. Paul wrote in 2 Cor. 4:16 as he grew older, "Therefore we do not lose heart. Though outwardly we are wasting away, yet inwardly we are being renewed day by day." We oftimes sing: Frail children of dust, and feeble as frail, In Thee do we trust, nor find Thee to fail: Thy mercies how tender, now firm to the end, Our Maker, Defender, Redeemer, and Friend." NEXT SUNDAY FROM GENESIS 1 WE LOOK AT GOD'S GOOD CREATION. THIS SHOULD STRENGTHEN OUR BIBLICAL WORLDVIEW. A.V. DAUGHERTY