Monday, September 30, 2024

The Earth is Judged; Isaiah24-25:5, Revelation 6-7

 

We have come to the end of a judgement cycle in Isaiah.  We have heard lots of judgements over the summer, but remember that every single one has also come with hope and a promise of restoration and salvation after the time of judgment and even during the time of judgment in some cases.  This final judgement is the judgement of the whole earth. 

            A couple of weeks ago, we heard about the church in Philadelphia whom Jesus promised to spare from an even greater “hour of testing” that was to come upon the whole earth, because they had already faithfully endured much persecution in which many members had lost their lives.  We hear in the text that there will be those who are unaffected by the coming judgment, but it’s going to be overall devastating for the world.  It doesn’t matter what one’s social status or class is.  Isaiah tells us that the Lord has said that the earth will be completely laid waste and completely despoiled. 

            Why is God going to judge the earth?  For many of the same reasons God said that He would judge certain nations, but moreso because the evil is so widespread.  In Isaiah 24:5, God gives the reason, people have “transgressed laws, violated statutes, and broke the everlasting covenant.” 

            What will happen when God judges the earth?  Both Isaiah and Revelation talk about earthquakes.  Both talk about the heavens being shaken and the sun and moon being darkened.  Isaiah says that the host of heaven will be punished along with the earthly rulers.  These are the spiritual forces whom Isaiah says will be confined.  We also see this in the book of Revelation, though not in our passages today.  Alcohol will not bring pleasure but will be sought as a way to escape, but it will not work.  Partying will stop.  People will hide and try to escape suffering.  Our Revelation passage speaks of war, pestilence, famine, and attacks by wild animals.  It also talks about food being incredibly expensive.   Death and Hades are given the authority to take 25% of the human population. 

            Isaiah mentions a city that will be destroyed in this prophecy.  The word used to describe is “wasted, confused, chaos.”  It is the exact Hebrew word used to describe the earth in Genesis 1:2. It is disordered.  When we refuse God’s order, the result is disorder and chaos.  The city is not named as cities in the other judgements were.  What is this city?  Is it a city that was unknown at the time, like Beirut, Moscow, or Washington, DC?  Is it Jerusalem?  It is a city that represents the whole world.  Whatever this city is, it will be destroyed never to be rebuilt.  So yes, Jerusalem in a sense spiritually, even if not literally.  We have seen Paul in Galatians b4 talk about the Jerusalem that now is and the Jerusalem that is above, the heavenly city.  He tells us that the earthly Jerusalem is like Hagar, a city that is in slavery, but that the heavenly Jerusalem is free like Sarah.  St. Augustine in his great book, The City of God, describes the same thing.  He says that there exists the City of God and the City of Man.  Both Paul and Augustine say that these cities exist in the present tense.  They are systems.  God’s people belong to the City of God, and if they aren’t living like it, they are called to come out of the City of Man, the earthly Jerusalem.  Whatever our feelings about even the physically real city of Jerusalem, it is not meant to stand forever.  We hate to think of our heritage being destroyed, but in the end, it will be completely unnecessary when the New Jerusalem descends from heaven and replaces it.  Until it does, it already exists, and we are called to live like it exists and that we are its citizens, for indeed we are!

            This great judgment that is to come is referred to as the Tribulation, the great trouble.  We see this in our Revelation passage, that those around the throne of God dressed in white robes and singing praise to the Lord, a multitude that no one can count from every people group on the planet are those “who come out of the great tribulation and have washed their robes and made them white in the blood of the Lamb.”  Popular Bible teaching says God’s people aren’t going to have to endure the tribulation, but that’s not what Revelation 7 says nor is it what any early church father taught.  Tribulation is to be endured and persevered through with God’s help, not escaped.  What the early church father did differ on is whether the 1000-year reign of Christ is metaphorical or whether there will be a post tribulation literal reign of Christ on earth between the resurrection of believers and the resurrection of the condemned.  I personally find myself waffling between those two positions.  God warns us about it, not so that we will be afraid, but so that we will be prepared. 

            There have been many great tribulations throughout history.  I think this is one of the reasons that the disciples expected Christ to return. They always spoke of Jesus’s return during times of intense persecution, but there is still a great tribulation to come.  Are we on the threshold of it?  Maybe.  There are many who think so with the collapse of western civilization, with WWIII about to start and the great threat of nuclear war and the escalation of violence in the Middle East.  We certainly see vast numbers of people breaking and disregarding God’s laws and even natural law.  We see people calling evil good and good evil.  Whether God is going to send a lesser or the final tribulation upon us soon, only God knows, but after the final tribulation, Christ will return and reign.  We see in Isaiah 24:23, “The Lord of hosts will reign on Mt. Zion and in Jerusalem and His glory will be before His elders.” 

As he has done in when pronouncing other judgements, Isaiah weeps over those that do evil.  The apostle Paul reminds us that “we wrestle not with flesh and blood, but with powers, and principalities, and spiritual wickedness in the high places.”  Do we care enough to mourn over those who do evil and desire to see them set free spiritually?  Do we care enough even about our neighbors to share the good news of Jesus with them? 

            Don’t forget that the ending to both of our passages this morning are positive!  They are full of praise for God’s goodness, power, and triumph and for the triumph of the people who are faithful to the Lord.  In Isaiah’s prophecy, the righteous in the west shout with joy over the majesty of the LORD.  Those in the East sing songs of God’s glory.  Those in the islands praise the name of the Lord!  In our Revelation passage, before any judgement can even start, the angels are commanded to first seal up the 144,000.  I don’t believe this is a literal number, but it is the number of completion of Jewish believers—those who actually come from the 12 tribes named as representatives of God’s historic people.  We should be praying for the conversion of the Jews.  It’s why the work of organizations like Jews for Jesus is so important.  God will fulfill God’s promises to them by bringing them into the New Jerusalem.  Notice there is no one from the tribe of Dan or Ephraim. Instead of Ephraim, Joseph is named, and instead of Dan, Manasseh is named.  And then we have the multitude that no one can count around God’s throne. This multitude will include us and all believers throughout time, and all who have come out of the Great Tribulation—that is they survived it, not necessarily by not dying, although therw will be many who will remain alive, but all who remained faithful to Christ, enduring to the end.  They cry out with a loud voice, “Salvation belongs to our God who sits on the throne, and unto the Lamb.”  The angels join with them, along with God’s chosen 24 elders (the patriarchs and apostles), worshipping and saying, “Amen!  Blessing, and glory, and wisdom, and thanksgiving, and honor and power and might be to our God forever and ever. Amen!”  Once the great tribulation is passed, so comes the end of all hunger, thirst, weather disasters, sorrows and tears! 

            I’m not foolish enough to say these are the end times.  I don’t know if the hurricane that happened is God’s judgment, or simply something God allows via the natural processes God has ordained, or because of the general fallen state of humanity.  I’m not going to try to say why any particular thing is happening.  Nor will I try to predict what’s going to happen.  Only God the Father knows when the end will come.  Only God knows the particulars of why God does or allows anything.  I do think we should be prepared for hard and trying times, but we can live with hope because we know that God wins.  Even as God judges the earth, God does so out of love for people and a hatred for evil.  In his book City of God, St. Augustine wrote, “Do not refuse to regain your youth in Christ, who says to you, ‘The world is passing away.  The world is losing its grip.  The world is short of breath.’ Do not fear—your youth shall be renewed as an eagle.”

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