nChrist
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« on: December 07, 2010, 02:16:10 PM » |
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"Even to your old age and gray hairs I am he — I am he who will sustain you. I have made you and I will carry you; I will sustain you and I will rescue you!" Isaiah 46:4
We have here another example Isaiah's contrasted passages. "Carry" and "sustain" are the two emphatic words singled out for this antithesis. The idols of Babylon are, in the opening verse of the chapter, represented as being "carried away" as spoil from the conquered city: they are piled on the backs of camels, and horses, and elephants — and these beasts of burden are described as groaning under the load. The gold and silver idols — the tutelary deities of Chaldea, which should have proved the guardians of the city and the defense of the besieged — are themselves borne along by panting teams in the enemies' caravans (verse 1), "Bel bows down, Nebo stoops. Their idols are carried away by beasts of burden. The images that are carried about are burdensome."
'Not so,' says Jehovah, in verse 3, "O House of Jacob, and remnant of the House of Israel." Not so is it with the God you serve. These dumb idols cannot 'carry' their votaries. They have themselves to be 'carried.' But, "I will' carry' you." I have carried you "from the womb." "Even to your old age and gray hairs I am he — I am he who will sustain you. I have made you and I will carry you; I will sustain you and I will rescue you!"
These words bring God before us, under the new but beautiful and tender image of a father bearing in his arms, the child he loves. It is a repetition of the same emblem employed by Moses, in his wilderness address to Israel: "The Lord your God, who is going before you, will fight for you, as he did for you in Egypt, before your very eyes, and in the desert. There you saw how the Lord your God carried you, as a father carries his son, all the way you went until you reached this place!" (Deuteronomy 1:30-31).
We have a kindred image in the prophecies of Hosea, where Ephraim is represented, first as a little child, a tender infant, and Jehovah dealing with him as such. "It was I who taught Ephraim to walk — taking them by their arms" (Hosea 11:3). As the babe is, by and by, no longer carried in arms — but led by the hands, to teach it to walk; so God is, in the same passage, represented as conducting His children from stage to stage, alike in the natural and spiritual life.
"I drew them with cords of a man, with bands of love" (verse 4). The picture here is fuller and more comprehensive still. It is the delineation of His unwavering covenant faithfulness — not in infancy or adulthood only — but extending from the cradle to the grave — from the smiles of the lisping babe — to the white hair of old age — when, lapsing into second childhood, tender nursing is again required. "Even to your old age," says God, "I am He" [or rather, "I am the same"].
Indeed the comparison of parental affection falls short of the reality. The care of the earthly parent is diminished or withdrawn on the approach of manhood — the same tender solicitude is not needed, as in the helpless period of infancy. Moreover, in the case of the parent, advancing years and infirmities — too often frustrate and forbid former efforts of love; while many are left fatherless and motherless, to pursue their solitary unbefriended way. Not so 'our Father in heaven!' No weakness, no infirmity paralyzes His arm! From the hour of birth — to the hour of death — it is one unbroken ministry of paternal kindness.
Of the temples of Babylon it is here said, "Bel bows down, Nebo stoops." These were the two great deities of Chaldea. The temple of BEL (Belus, or Baal), with its spiral colossal tower, on the right bank of the Euphrates, and its statue of gold twelve cubits high — was one of the seven wonders of the world. It was supposed to be erected for the worship of the planet Jupiter; while NEBO was the golden image which represented Mercury, the planet which was imagined in their mythology to be the attendant scribe or 'recorder' of the more brilliant orb, ever busy registering the phenomena of the heavens above, and the events of the earth beneath. Both of these idols and their lordly temples have fallen. What is left of them has become the haunt and home of the "the desert owl and the screech owl, the great owl and the raven" — and all doleful creatures.
In futile attempts to identify the site of what once "reached unto heaven" (Genesis 11:4), travelers can only state the competing claims of unsightly mounds on which the roving Arab pitches his tent. But "the Lord lives." While the visible heathen temples have "bowed down" and become a mass of humiliating ruin — the Invisible God ever lives and loves; lives as a Father, loves as a Father: "Even to your old age I am He!" — the same.
(Bel and Nebo are familiar compounds of the names of the chief Babylonian kings, such as Bel-shazzar, Nebo-chadnezzar.
In our own British Museum there is a remarkable stone — a block of black basalt in ten columns, with the cuneiform character, on which the following is part of an inscription extending to 620 lines: "Nebuchadnezzar, the King of Babylon, the supreme lord, the adorer of Nebo. I have restored the sanctuaries of the god. For Merodach is the great god, who created me; and Nebo his son sustains my royalty, and I have always exalted the worship of his august divinity. Nebo, the guardian of the hosts of heaven and earth, has committed to me the scepter of justice to govern men."
It is the believer who is "well stricken in years" — he whose "grey head is a crown of glory," being "found in the way of righteousness" — who alone can bear witness to the reality of this utterance of divine comfort! How many such there are! How many, trembling on the verge of the threescore and ten — can summon the four evangelists of life — Infancy, Youth, Manhood, Old Age — to write their dying — their farewell testimony, as to God's unchanging fidelity, and that, too, despite of manifold conscious changes both around them and within them!
There may be changes in their outward worldly circumstances. All else — much else — may have failed them, or been taken from them: like that file of wagons of which we have just spoken, bearing away the boasted spoil and treasure of Chaldea. Ah! how many a wagon-load of earthly treasure — sacred, hallowed things, to which their yearning affections have clung like the fond votary to his gods — have they seen borne away? Now, it is the wagon-load of worldly goods — the gold and silver they had taken years to amass. Now, it is the wagon-load of beloved clay-idols — hurled by death — the great foe of human happiness, from the dearest pedestals of their hearts, and sent away to the land of forgetfulness. Looking back through the long vista of the pilgrimage, what a strange file of spectral, gloomy visions — mingles with the hazy past!
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