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Bible Doctrine Study Guides Isaiah Chapter 28 (Continued)
{How
do the Jews take the News? Worry Causes Insomnia}
{Certainty
of This Judgement} {Note: Mount Perazim is described in II Samuel 5:20-21 and it was God's wrath expressed against idolatry of the Philistines. Gibeon refers to Joshua chapter 10 in which the Amorites were annihilated. In both of these analogies we have a reference to complete annihilation - the first one, Perazim, emphasizes religion. Gibeon emphasizes that the fifth cycle of discipline is the complete destruction of a nation. God's work here is judgement. These things are ghastly but God is fair and righteous. Often we feel sorry for people because they are going through such terrible things but you must always remember that when it is divine judgement, if anything it is overdue. God never judges a nation or a person without first giving ample opportunity for salvation - grace before judgement. Grace precedes judgement. And when God judges He must do so because it is being compatible with His own character. The love of God is demonstrated by the gift of His Son at the cross. When the love of God is rejected then the alternative is righteousness and justice. This is compatible with His own character but not compatible with His desire.}
{Verses
22-23: Deliverance through the Word}
23``Give
your ear {give the Word a hearing - be present at the teaching of
the Word}, 'hear, listen and obey' {dabar} {means concentrate on the content of the Word being taught}; and hear my speech {take in the entire message being taught by the teacher of Doctrine}. {Note: The only way to be prepared for disaster when it comes is threefold: a. Personally accept Jesus Christ as savior - regeneration; b. Learn Bible doctrine and store it in the frontal lobe; c. Operation faith-rest technique, the means of applying doctrine in your frontal lobe to disaster. When you can apply doctrine to disaster the result is stability and orientation to the plan of God. Even when the plan of God for a nation is judgement, your personal impact and testimony will have eternal results. So even when a nation is going down in time you can have a marvelous ministry which will last forever.} {Note: Isaiah ends this chapter with a good illustration to us today about the importance of isagogics in the study of the Word. In the day the bible was written, this was an agricultural society. This illustration was second nature to his audience, but not so much to the city dwellers we have today. So, here we have three things: first verse 24 - the plowing - analogous to regeneration; next, verse 25-26 planting; thirdly, verses 27-28 harvest.}
{Conclusion
of Chapter with an Agricultural Illustration in an Agricultural Society}
Does
he open and break the clods of his ground? {Note: Plowing is equivalent to regeneration, trusting in the Jehovah/God Jesus Christ - and to the spread of the gospel/good news of Jesus Christ.}
25``
When he has leveled and broken the ground
and
scatter the cummin
and
cast in the principal wheat and the appointed barley and rye {Note: This is the analogy for after salvation, the next need is for the 'basic doctrines'. In another analogy, Paul calls it giving milk to the baby believers.} 26`` For his God does instruct him to orientation/farming. {Note: Farmers originally got all their information about farming from God. When Adam had to earn his living by the sweat of his brow, by the cultivation of fields, then he received information from God, which has been passed down in the human race.}
27``
For the fitches {animal food} {Note: A threshing sledge was a cart pulled by animals, which was a kind of antique harvester. The wheels of the threshing sledge actually chopped and collected a little bit and so on. The point is: if you tried to harvest fitches with a threshing sledge you would destroy them. So when it comes to fitches you can't use a threshing sledge. Next, you can't harvest medicine-type things with a cart. A cart had wide wheels and crushed. How do you get the seed/production out? You get growth by hard work/study and being consistent in your work/study. This is a picture of the believer growing from baby-hood through adolescent to maturity. There will be 'hard knocks' along the way, but by the end of the process, the production will be useful to God.}
28``
Bread corn {wheat} is bruised. {Note: Wheat has to be handled in a certain way because the horses can trample it and ruin it and so on. Bread corn/wheat is threshed. Notice that you don't use a stick on wheat. This is a picture of the mature believer who is ready to permit God to 'produce divine good production' though him.} {Note: Just as God has conveyed in centuries past information whereby man can live on the face of the earth and derive a living from the earth, so God has provided in great detail how and why a believer should operate to the glory of the Jehovah/God - and this is revealed through doctrine. The emphasis then is, you must know doctrine - what the Word teaches. This is what Isaiah would say to the northern kingdom: You get into the Word and there will be no discipline. But they failed to do so and in 721 BC, Isaiah's message to them was fulfilled.}
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