It’s Time to Own Up
Opening Prayer
Merciful Lord, today my ears are attuned to Your voice and my heart is open to Your Word.
Read Isaiah 48:1-11
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Scripture taken from the THE HOLY BIBLE, NEW INTERNATIONAL VERSION, NIV Copyright © 1973, 1978, 1984, 2011 by Biblica, Inc.® Used by permission. All rights reserved worldwide.
Meditate
“Examine yourselves, and only then eat of the bread and drink of the cup” (1 Cor. 11:28, NRSV). We are better at examining others than self-examination. But that is not what we are told to do!
Think Further
God’s scrutiny now turns from Babylon to Jacob/Israel (Common terms for Judah, especially in Isaiah). It was expected that a pagan nation might fall short of the Lord’s standards, but surely not Judah. It, after all, had been chosen by God, rescued from slavery, given God’s law and established in Jerusalem. But no! While its people paid lip-service to trusting God and being faithful citizens of his holy city, they were actually stubborn, treacherous, innately rebellious, and were now in a dire situation.
It wasn’t as though their fiery affliction should have been a surprise. God had warned them of impending judgment over a long period (see Mic. 3:9-12; Isa. 1:1-9) and had eventually taken swift action to jolt them into reality about their waywardness. He wasn’t going to put up with their blaming their idols! But still, they did not want to admit to their own contribution to their situation. What is it about human nature that makes us reluctant to own up to our shortcomings? Sometimes God (or a wise friend) needs to advise us not to fool ourselves about sin that has derailed our lives of faith.
Thankfully, the reminder of unheeded former pronouncements was not the end of God’s communication. God offered to reveal new things (Jer. 31:31-34) that might give them another chance to avert destruction. Because his own honor was at stake, he would temper his anger towards his disobedient people. We are sometimes prone to repent to make sure we are “saved,” but that is only part of the story of salvation. God’s saving love also reaches us because he will not yield his glory to others. Owning up to our own responsibility for our sinfulness opens the door for our transformed lives to bring God the honor and praise he is due.
Apply
Have you been influenced by the rebellious attitude of other Christians? How has your rebellion at times affected other Christians? What has it cost you in terms of losing God’s peace and blessing?
Closing prayer
Lord, I ask that Your Spirit will reveal where I am living in deception. I take ownership of what You reveal and ask for Your forgiveness.
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