THE PROPHET ISAIAH
Dr. W. A. Criswell
Isaiah 1:1
2-9-75
. . . always we are
your debtor, orchestra and choir, and especially when you sing something from
Handel. And you're going to see one of
the reasons for that, my attitude toward it, in the sermon today.
We welcome you to our
First Baptist Church morning hour, you who share it with us over radio and
television. This is the pastor bringing
the message entitled: The Prophet Isaiah,
or as Martin Thorner says, I-ZIE-ah, a good English boy pronouncing it in a
good English way.
I one time began at
Genesis and preached to the end of the Revelation over a period of seventeen
years and eight months. Where I left
off Sunday morning, I began Sunday night and so continued throughout the whole
Bible. I was asked when I came to the
end of the Revelation, "What now will you preach?"
And I said, "For
years it has been in my heart to go back to some of the books in the Bible
through which we passed so hastily and briefly and in-depth to study it and
prepare sermons and messages out of that deeper study.”
So that's what I have
been doing since that day of preaching through the Bible. I preached through the book of Daniel, and
there were four volumes of messages published from that study that I made in
Daniel. And just now, just recently, I
have finished preaching through the general epistles: James, 1 and 2 Peter, 1,
2, and 3 John, and Jude.
But the great dream of
my heart for all of the years has been that the day would come when I felt that
I could try to attempt to preach through the book of Isaiah. It is a stupendous
assignment. It's like standing before
the whole creation of God, and what do you do but in wonder and in amazement
look upon it?
The preacher is always
attempting the impossible. That is the nature of his office. It's the necessity that is laid upon
him. And this is an instance before us
now. How could one be equal to so vast
an assignment, such heights of scale and such depths of profundity to
understand? But God has called us for
the purpose, and it is only He that can make us sufficient and equal for
it.
When we begin our study
of Isaiah—which will be the first and introductory message this morning—we are
first of all astonished, surprised at how little we know of the man
himself. Then looking at that even more
closely, we discover that the earth knows little about any of its really great
men.
We think of the myriad
minded Shakespeare, the greatest genius that the English-speaking world has
ever produced. But when you begin your study
of Shakespeare, you find that you don't even know how to spell his name. There is altercation and discussion and
contradiction about how even he spelled his name. There are great scholars who deny even that he ever lived. There are some of them who attribute his
dramas to Christopher Marlowe. There
are others who say Francis Bacon wrote them.
We know practically nothing of the great genius Shakespeare.
We know even less of
Dante, the incomparable poet of the Italian language and the Italian world. And we know absolutely nothing for certain
about the greatest poet of the ancient world named Homer—don't even know where
he was born; don't even know how he lived his life or how he came to write what
he did. Isn't that an amazing and
astonishing thing: how little we know of our greatest men?
So it is with the
prophets. When we look through the
Scriptures, we find portraits and delineations and presentations of a great
character like Abraham or Jacob/Israel or Joseph, but when we speak of the prophets—of
Amos, Hosea, and Isaiah—we know practically nothing about them. There must be some reason for that, and it
could be this: In the providence and purpose of God, the Lord hid away the man
in the mist. He shrouded his form and
figure. He delineated little of his
circulums and circumstance in order that the voice might be heard. It is the Word of God to which we are to
listen and not to behold the man who delivered it.
Thus Isaiah: But what little we know about him is
unusually significant, and that little is presented in the message today. First, he was a man of the city. He was an urbanite. All of his life did he live in the city. He was born in the city. He labored in the city. He loved the city. His long ministry of possibly over fifty years was spent,
expended, in the city possibly from about 750 B.C. to 700 B.C. The court preacher Isaiah delivered his
prophesies and his messages in the city.
His figures and his references and his great poetic imagery are drawn
from urban life.
Amos is a man of the
country. He smells of a fresh-turned
furrow in the soil. His figures of
speech are from the field and the flock.
But the figures of speech that we read in Isaiah are taken from city
life. He was the court preacher, the
city minister. He is the first in a
long line of famous urban city preachers.
A Jeremiah of Anathoth and Jerusalem, a Paul of Ephesus and Corinth and
Rome, an Ignatius of Antioch, a John Chrysostom of Constantinople, a Savonarola
of Florence, a John Calvin of Geneva, or a John Knox of Edinburgh, or a
Spurgeon of London, or a Brooks, a Phillips Brooks, of Boston, or a T. DeWitt
Talmage of Brooklyn, or a Dwight L. Moody of Chicago, or a George W. Truett of
Dallas.
Isaiah was the first of
a great, mighty line of city preachers.
He was a man of unusual cultivation and culture. He was an aristocrat in birth, in bearing,
and in speech. There are traditions
that say that his father, Amoz, (spelling) A-m-o-z, was a brother of Amaziah
the king, who was the father of Uzziah the king. In that event, Isaiah was a first cousin of Uzziah the king. Possibly that could explain why, in the
sixth chapter of the prophecy, when he sees the great vision in the days of the
death of King Uzziah, why the young man was so deeply stricken and
grieved.
He is at home in the
highest circles of government. He has
ready access to the king. He knows the
priesthood intimately, and he no less is conversant with the life of the upper
classes. He moves with grace and
understanding among the great and the sovereigns and the leaders of the
land.
He grew up in a day of
affluence and prosperity. King Uzziah
of Judah and Jeroboam II of Israel, of the northern kingdom, brought their
people to the highest heights of economic and political prosperity. They rivaled the power and glory of the
United Kingdom under David and Solomon.
And, of course, attendant to the affluence and riches and power of the
nation, there were the vices that inevitably accompany it, and Isaiah lived to
see the degeneration and the degradation of the people, the nation.
When I read the book
and look at the background against which he lived, I think of America. How great God has made our people. With what affluence and wealth has He
blessed us, and yet the very source of our degeneration and promiscuity and
violence and rebellion lies in our riches and our wealth. I doubt whether there is a knowledgeable man
today but who would think one of the things that is wrong with the young of our
generation is that they have never known anything but abundance and
wealth.
So it was in the days
of Isaiah. He lived to see their wealth
plundered and their affluence used as a means of the decimation and
degeneration of the people. As such,
Isaiah walked around dressed in a garment of haircloth like Elijah and like
John the Baptist, calling the people back to God and to repentance. As such, for three years Isaiah walked
through the streets of the city of Jerusalem naked, except for a loincloth. That is, dressed like a slave—barefoot, unclothed—that
he might demonstrate the prophecy of the Word of God of a coming servitude and
captivity.
The very family of
Isaiah was a part of his message and prophetic ministry to the people. He referred to his wife as the prophetess, a
word of endearment. Not that she
delivered oracles from God, but like you might say, "Mrs. Pastor," or
"Mrs. Preacher." He referred
to her as the prophetess.
And his sons who were
born, two of them named, his sons are themselves messengers of the prophecy
that he delivered. For example, his
first son he named Shear-jashub, Shear-jashub.
That is, "a remnant shall return." When the judgment of God falls upon the nation and the people,
God will spare a small remnant. And he
named his first son and took him with him to meet Ahaz the king. That boy was named as a part of the prophecy
of the man of God.
He had one other
son. "And the Lord said to me,
'Call his name Maher-shalal-hashbaz.'"
Why under heaven would a man name his boy Maher-shalal-hashbaz. Call him "Hash" for short, I
suppose. The word means "hastening
to the prey, speeding to the spoil," and it was a prophecy of the coming
of the bitter and hasty Assyrian who would destroy the Northern Kingdom and
destroy the cities of Judah, shut up Hezekiah and Jerusalem as in an iron vice
and would have destroyed them had it not been for the intercession of
righteous, good King Hezekiah. Thus the
family of Isaiah was itself a part of the prophetic ministry of the man of God.
How did he die? Universal tradition is that he was sawn
asunder. In Hebrews 11:37 there is a
mention of a hero of faith who was sawn asunder. Universally, tradition says that is Isaiah. The Mishnah, a part of the Jewish Talmud,
says that Isaiah was martyred. He was
slain by the wicked King Manasseh.
Justin Martyr speaks of Isaiah being sawn asunder with a wooden
saw.
In about 150 A.D.,
there was a Jewish apocalypse entitled, "The Assumption of Isaiah,"
and his martyrdom by being sawn in twain is told in that apocalypse. It is no less recounted in the lives of the
prophets by Eusebius. All through the
long tradition of the death of Isaiah, it is always that by wicked Manasseh he
was sawn asunder.
The man was in himself
the greatest poetic inspired genius that the world has ever known. Compared to Isaiah, a Homer or a Dante or a
Shakespeare is a pygmy. There are hardly limits to the poetical sublimity that
this man reaches as he declares the message of Almighty God. He is an artist with words. He is a master with language. He is an orator far beyond a
Demosthenes. His periods and his
perorations and his descriptions and his poetic imagery are sublime,
celestially so, in the highest. He uses
every form of poetic speech: alliteration, parable, interrogation, dialogue,
metaphor, simile, paramnesia (a play upon words). He rises to heights of poetry beyond what you could think human
speech could bear. In a version of the
Bible other than the King James, you will see that most of his prophecy is in
beautiful poetic form, rhythm, figure, imagery, style.
He has a rich
vocabulary beyond any other who ever spoke in the Word of God. For example, in Ezekiel there are 1535
different words; in Jeremiah, 1653 different words; in all of the Psalms, 2,170
different words. But in Isaiah alone,
that one prophet uses 2,186 different words.
His language, his figures of speech, his poetic genius are raised by
inspiration to a divine and celestial fire.
No wonder when you
visit Jerusalem there is a beautiful monument called "The Shrine of the
Book." What book? "The Shrine of the Book." When you go inside the dome and look, it is
the book of the prophet Isaiah, a fourteen feet long parchment written by the
Essenes in about 150 B.C. The burning
words, the beautiful words, the seraphic words of the great prophet
Isaiah.
He was the evangelical
messenger of the Old Testament. He is
the apostle Paul of the old covenant.
He is the man who stands alone and proclaims the glorious gospel of the
grace of the Son of God before the gospel itself. His name means, "The Lord our salvation." His theme is justification by faith, saved
by trusting God alone, and his message is delivered in beautiful evangelical
form and language. It is as though the
prophet Isaiah stood in the shadow of the Son of God as He walked through
Galilee and Judea and Perea and finally to Calvary. He is a man of the life and ministry and saving message of the
divine Redeemer.
If a minister stands in
the pulpit to preach a sermon at Christmastime, it can be from Isaiah:
"Born of a virgin, whose name shall be Immanuel, God with us." If a man stands to preach his message on
Good Friday, the suffering servant who died for our sins, his message could be
from Isaiah 53: "He was wounded for our transgressions, he was bruised for
our iniquities: the chastisement of our peace was upon him; and with his
stripes we are healed." If the
pastor delivers his lectures on Wednesday night on the theology of atonement,
he will use as a background the great prophetic word of the prophet Isaiah:
"God shall see of the travail of his soul, and shall be
satisfied…"
And if a man stands in
the name of God to proclaim the golden age that is yet to come, he can use as
the background of his message the glorious visions of the prophet Isaiah, who
saw new heavens and a new earth, and who, beyond the grave, cried, "O
death, where is thy sting? O grave,
where is thy victory?"
He is the great prophet
of the millennium. He is the Messianic
messenger of the old covenant. Isaiah,
in sublime form and in poetic imagery, pictures by heavenly revelation the
millennial golden age that is yet to come.
Herein is an astonishing thing, for all of the ancient philosophers and
poets spoke of the golden age as being past, long since gone away.
Plato, for example,
will describe the golden age of mankind in the form and in the context and in
the place of an island named Atlantis, which was located beyond the gates of
Hercules beyond the Straits of Gibraltar in the vast expanse of the Atlantic
Ocean and which now is submerged, the continent Atlantis. And in the civilization and life of a people
who lived on that continent of the long ago, Plato found the golden age of
mankind long since past.
Every ancient poet of
the Greco-Roman world spoke of the golden age as being a time of innocence and
bliss in the story of mankind long, long ago.
But Isaiah lifted up his voice, and in words inspired from God in
heaven, he described the golden age as yet to come. The millennial age in which God shall come down, when the sky
shall be rent asunder, and the Prince of glory shall reign in person upon this
wicked and stolid earth, cleansed and purified, now the place of beauty and
holiness and righteousness.
And as Isaiah, the
prophet of God, describes that beautiful millennial and golden age that is yet
to come, he says it will be inherited by a remnant, and one of the messages
that I have prepared will be entitled, "The Doctrine of the
Remnant." “Not all will be saved,”
says Isaiah. “Not all will come to the
knowledge of the truth,” says Isaiah.
“Not all will enter into the kingdom,” says Isaiah, “but there will be
some.” Some will be saved. Some will turn in faith to the Lord. Some will be plucked out of the burning, and
that holy remnant shall be called the people of the Lord.
Isaiah the prophet says
they shall have a king over them. He
will be of the line of David. He will
come of the stock of the root of Jesse.
He will be born of a virgin, says the prophet. He will be imbued and empowered and filled with the Holy Spirit
of God, and He will reign in beauty and in justice and in righteousness.
The spirit and the
imagery of that coming messianic millennial kingdom is found all through the
Word of God. It is found in the
Protoevangelium in Genesis, the seed of the woman. As the days passed, its rising glory is increasingly seen in
Moses and in David and in Solomon. But
it is only when we come to Isaiah that we see the beauty of His person, the
express image of His glory, and the marvelous incomparable kingdom over which
someday He shall rule and reign.
I close—What shall I
think in my heart and my mind? What
shall I think about these glorious prophecies of Isaiah? Can I believe them? Will this dull and stolid earth ever see
anything so glorious as the majestic king, the Messiah of the millennial reign
come down? Will my eyes ever look upon
the Redeemer? Will I ever share in that
ultimate and final kingdom? If I lie in
the dust of the ground, will I also feel the stirrings of a resurrection, a
quickening of a new life spoken into immortality and glory? Could such a thing ever be? Could it happen to you, to us? Could it?
All that I have to go
on is this: The same prophet who speaks of the marvelous millennial coming of
our Lord is the same prophet who described in minute terms His first coming,
His birth in the womb of a virgin, His ministry among people who sat in
darkness and in the region of death, His kindliness in healing the sick, in
ministering to the poor. The same prophet
who, as clearly as if he stood on Calvary that awful day, describes the
suffering and the atoning death of the Son of God; it is that same prophet who
described in glorious terms and in minutest detail the first coming of our
Lord. It is the same prophet who
describes the glorious return of that same Redeemer/Messiah in wonder, in
holiness, in power, and in beauty.
If I can believe that
Isaiah described the first coming of our Lord 750 years before He walked the
face of this earth in the days of His flesh, can I not also believe that the same
prophet no less saw by divine inspiration the coming again, the returning King
who shall set up His millennial kingdom in this earth, and His subjects shall
be those who love and worship and believe in the Lord?
Oh, with what
anticipation, with what optimism should a Christian, a child of God, lift up
his face waiting for the great dawning of our final millennial redemption? When we preach through the prophet Isaiah,
you will find always in the description of destruction and despair the next
breath he's speaking of the glory of the coming of the Lord.
In the midst of death
and disease and loss and the hopelessness of people who have no other choice
but to face slavery and captivity, in the next moment he's speaking,
"Comfort ye, comfort ye my people.
Yea, speak ye comfortably to Jerusalem," and then will describe the
glories of the kingdom set to come and avow it, "and all flesh shall see
it together."
You, I, we—and the
superlative language in which he describes that millennial kingdom is treasured
in our hearts by promise forever. “When
there shall grow a root out of the stem of Jesse and a branch from that cut
down stump. When He shall come who
shall judge the earth in righteousness and in justice and when the wolf shall
dwell with the lamb and the leopard shall lie down with the kid, and when the
lion shall eat straw like an ox, when they shall not hurt nor destroy in all of
God's holy mountain and when the earth shall be filled with the knowledge of
the Lord as the waters cover the sea.
When God creates new heavens and a new earth and He shall reign whose
name is the Lord our righteousness.
Oh, that God would give
me the eloquence of a seraph and the burning imagery of a cherub as we enter
the Holy of Holies of the divine visions that open for us the vistas of the
millennial kingdom of God, what the Lord has prepared for us who love Him.
Our time is spent…
.