Isaiah 55
Tuesday
is the day I set aside to visit the nursing homes in Charlottesville. My wife
knows this and if I am lucky she will give me a list of items which she would
like to be purchased at Costco. I am not
being facetious. On a good day one can literally eat lunch at Costco without
spending a dime. I walk up and down the aisles until those very nice people
holler out, “Hey! You interested in a peanut rolled in chocolate and bacon.” I
know that doesn’t sound all that great but I don’t enter the store until I am really
hungry. The venders don’t care how old I am. They don’t care if I am wearing
slacks or jeans. They just want me to sample free food. Honestly I can’t remember ever buying
anything I sampled but that is not the point.
These folks seem so delighted to share what is on their plate and I am
more than willing to oblige. It is definitely a win/win situation.
I
think the writer of Isaiah must have visited Costco. He beautifully paints a
picture of God as a street vender. To anyone coming home to Jerusalem , God
hollers, “Ho”. (That is Hebrew for “Hey.”)
“Ho, anyone who is thirsty, let me give you something to drink.” That
offer is in sharp contrast to their lives as slaves in Babylon. In Babylon, nothing was free. Anything
offered was done so grudgingly and with a heavy price. But Yahweh declares to
anyone who walks by, “Come and be satisfied.”
Of
course there is a problem. While I chow down on my peanut covered in chocolate
and bacon, not everyone chooses to participate. Some eye the vender
suspiciously figuring there must be a catch. Some look at me as if I have been
taken in by the Tempters snare. Others don’t look at all, somehow embarrassed
by the whole situation. I guess when you’ve grow up in Babylon it is hard to
trust anyone.
So what is it Yahweh
is so intent on selling? Why are we so suspicious when something is being offered
for free? There are two critical words found in Deuteronomy, Psalms, and
Isaiah. The first is covenant. In
deuteronomic language this covenant, this pledge, is best understood through
the promise, “I will be your God and you will be my people.” Think of what had been offered the Hebrew
people in Babylon. “You will be my slave and I will be your master.” All
Babylon offers is a hard……. cold…… threat. In contrast Yahweh comes to enslaved
people and says, Hey, are you thirsty for
freedom? Hey, are you thirsty for a new life? Hey do you thirst for the
opportunity to just say your name out loud without fear? Then come to my waters
and drink.
So why doesn’t
everyone rush to the waters? As members of the human species, by nature we are
suspicious. Not everyone is telling us the truth. They might say what we want
to hear but they feel no obligation to fulfill their promise. I bought my Camry
eighteen months ago. When I walked into the dealership the first words I heard
were, “How can I make you happy?” I made two simple requests. I asked for a car
with an installed receiver for Sirius Radio and a CD player. The salesman
replied, “No problem, I can do that.” Two hours later I am sitting in what I
hoped will be a car that would make me
forget about my beloved Solara. As we were getting ready to close the deal I
asked, “Now tell me how I am to transfer my Sirius subscription from my old car
to this one.” He replied, “No problem.
You just download an app on your smart phone and connect it to your blue
tooth.” I responded, “What’s a blue
tooth?” He stared at me, realizing with dismay that I was over 65. I bravely
continued. “Where do I inject my CDs?” He responded, “No one buys CD’s
anymore.”
People lie. Worse than
that, they lie without blushing. So it might be hard to believe but the second
word so critical to any reading of Deuteronomy, Psalms, or Isaiah is fidelity. In contrast to the oppressive
and coercive words that have filtered into our common language, Yahweh offers a
deep promise of reliability, trustworthiness, and loyalty. Yahweh said to the
people of Israel, and continues to say to us, “I offer you a new heaven and
earth. You have my word on it. What does Babylon offer?”
I realize for many of
you the mention of Babylon has no significance whatsoever. It was an empire
that existed over 2500 years ago. Let me so bold to suggest the idea of Babylon
never disappeared. Babylon is synonymous
with anxiety. Babylon represents those who are coercive. Babylon is praised by
those who celebrate exclusivity. Babylon wears us down. It is a burden that too
often we accept because we can find no other alternative.
Jesus speaks about a
Babylonian weight when he sings, Come to
me, all who are weary and carrying a heavy burden and I will give you rest.
Take my yoke and learn from me. I am
gentle and humble. My yoke is easy; my burden is light.
Doesn’t that sound
refreshing? Who among us doesn’t carry heavy burdens? We want to let them go
but we can’t. The main reason is of all the coercive tools our culture has
placed in our soul, number one is guilt. Is there anything more corrosive? The
history of any religious movement owes much of its success to the power of
guilt. Well here is a news flash. God didn’t invent guilt. We manufactured it
all by ourselves. Guilt creates fear, loss of self-dignity, and anxiety. None
of those are Godly traits.
Once a culture
enslaves you through guilt the second burden placed upon us is exclusiveness.
When the children of Israel were dragged to Babylon their captors showed them
the mighty Ziggurats reaching toward the sky. “Become like us. No one can
exceed our supremacy. We are as powerful as the gods.” Well here is the second
newsflash. God didn’t invent the scoreboard. We did. Yahweh didn’t say, “Hey
you with the white skin and the acceptable passport; you come to the waters.”
Yahweh said, “Everyone who thirsts come.” Jesus didn’t say, “Only you who are
male and an upstanding member of the synagogue have your burden lightened.
Jesus said, “Come to me, all who are weary.”
Babylon thrives on
anxiety and demands exclusivity; but God does not. If you thirst, drink. If
your burden is heavy, let God take it from you. Hear the word of the Lord one
more time. “I am your God. All of you are my people. I created you to be
diverse. I created you to be colorful. I created you to have different
experiences, different skills, different likes and dislikes. I created you to
be one. I created you to offer water to each other. I created you to lift each
other’s burdens. I created you to love.
Deb and I were
traveling back from a birthday party a few weeks ago. My cell phone was
properly connected to my blue tooth which was allowing us to mysteriously hear
Sirius Radio entertain us through a station called The Village. Richard Shindell was singing a song titled
“I am”. If you are narcissistic this song has little meaning. But if you are
familiar with the story of Moses and the burning bush, the song says everything
I could possibly say about Isaiah 55.
I am the stranded traveler,
I am the distant home,
I am a family waiting,
I am a silent voice.
I am the stricken faces,
I am the settling dust,
I am the stranger’s shoulder,
I am the ocean breeze.
I am, I am, I am.
I am the coffee vender,
I am the CPA,
I am the fire incurring,
I am a new born son.
I am the church bell ringing,
I am the passing peace,
I am the choir singing,
I am the swelling hymns.
I am, I am, I am.
I am the NY Harbor,
I am the Promised Land,
I am the closing borders,
I am the Rio Grande.
I am the River Jordan,
I am the raging peace,
I am the world in anguish,
I am a refugee.
I am, I am, I am.
“Ho, everyone who thirsts, come to the
waters. For you shall go out in joy and be led back in peace.” This is an
everlasting promise that all will be safe, and beloved, and free at last. Amen.
No comments:
Post a Comment