Dear brothers and sisters,
Today we see a rather vivid description of the marketplace of ideas from Isaiah's time and marvel how not that much has changed over the millenia.
Blessings
Jeff
A recent Al Mohler "Daily Briefing" podcast reported on the "discovery" that atheists and believers have different moral compasses. The point of division is on questions of authority, loyalty and sanctity. I think these two verses are evidence that this is really a re-discovery.
Justice, righteousness and truth are pictured as being outcasts in the society that Isaiah is describing. This statement only makes sense when referring to justice, righteousness and truth as given in the Bible. The authority of these attributes makes all the difference. God's standards are unchangeable because they are a reflection of his character. He is the authority for true justice, righteousness and truth. They are outcasts because unbelievers (both ethnic Jews and Gentiles) reject His authority and use themselves to define these terms.
We see our times as particularly prone to this problem. Yet Isaiah shows us that standing for biblical righteousness, justice and truth has always been a dangerous thing. I am comforted by Psalm 2. The Lord holds the nations that rage and the peoples that plot against the Lord and Anointed in derision and laughs at them. God has set his King on Zion. Regardless of the circumstances we find ourselves in, this is how God has always looked on those who reject Him.
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