Showing posts with label Doctrine 2. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Doctrine 2. Show all posts

Saturday, April 19, 2025

Genesis 1-3, Matthew 28, 1 Corinthians 15: He is Risen!

Presented to TSA Alberni Valley Ministries, Resurrection Easter Sunday by Major Michael Ramsay, 20 April 2025.


He is risen! (He is risen indeed!)

 

Easter is the most important date on the Christian Calendar. Do we know why it is the most important date? What are we celebrating? (the resurrection of Jesus) Why does this matter? (it means we can all be raised from the dead)

 

We read the story of Mary and Mary at the tomb today. I think that is a very important story about the first Christian evangelists and preachers: Two women proclaiming the resurrection of Jesus from the dead. Do we know the rest of the story?

 

At the very beginning of the Bible, in the first few chapters of the first book in this holy anthology, we have the story of how God created the heavens and the earth. God created it all and it was perfect. Not only were there no bad things like murder, stealing, lying, etc. There was also no injury, no illness, no decay, no death. Even the trees didn’t die. The animals didn’t eat each other. It was paradise – it was the Garden of Eden.

 

Then the very first people that God created did something – they disobeyed God. This was the first badness to enter the world. The first sin. From that point on all that erodes life and goodness flowed into the world. Not only bad behaviours but also decay of plants, animals, and people; injury, illness and death.

 

The Bible then, as we know, has many books in the Old Testament that tell how people interacted with each other and God ever since. Mostly – but not entirely – after a certain point, the books speak about the family and descendants of Jacob who was called Israel. Many of these books are looking forward to a time when the world will no longer be in the state that it is in – when everything will be finally made right.

 

There are many recorded memories of God’s interaction with people, giving us a glimpse into when and how things might possibly return. Under and after Moses there is the Law that is given to God’s people to help us know how to relate to each other – in short it can be boiled down to, as Jesus later said, ‘love God and love your neighbour’ – while we are waiting for everything to be set right.

 

Before that even, God and Abraham make an agreement, recorded in Genesis Chapter 12, that all the nations of the earth will be blessed through Abraham and then in Genesis 15 we get our first glimpse of the cross. There is a ceremony, a covenant and God basically says that if mankind messes up again, like they did in the garden, God will take the punishment, He will die. We do mess up. On Good Friday He does.

 

The word ‘gospel’ that we still use today means, ‘good news’. On Easter – a few days later - we have the Good News. Yes God, Jesus, died. He went to the grave. But then something happened. He came back to life – and when he came back to life, he came back with a body that no longer decays, no longer experiences illness, no longer experiences death. He is the first person to experience life back like it was in the Garden of Eden.

 

Now, I say first ‘person’ for a reason. Jesus is God. Jesus is also a person. He is fully, truly and properly God and he is fully, truly and properly human. At Christmas we celebrate God becoming human – He, who was around at the creation of the world, was also, much later, born. On Good Friday he dies. On Easter He has the first fully resurrected body. His body will now never die, never get sick, never get injured. And when he overcame death on Easter, he really overcame it – not just for himself but for everyone. Jesus never died after his resurrection (like others who have risen from the dead). He went away for a while; but he will come back.

 

When he comes back, he will bring with him the Tree of Life that was in the Garden of Eden and the whole world will be made anew. We spoke about this a few weeks ago while we were looking at Romans 5, Genesis 3, and Revelation 22 where the ultimate return of God is recorded.

 

So that is what we are celebrating today: the first fruits of the resurrection, that the world is set right, and the path has been paved for Jesus’ return. On Easter, God made a way so that we never need to die (again). The Bible says that when he returns, even those who are already dead will raise from the grave and they will never die again and those who are still alive will be changed, healed, transformed into these never decaying, never dying entities that love fully both God and our neighbour forever.

 

Today, as we celebrate His victory over death, decay, and sin; We are even now awaiting Jesus’ return. While we wait, we are we are told a couple of things to do

1.     Never forget what he has done for us and that he will return.

a.     In the Bible they meet regularly over a meal to remember Jesus.

b.     Now we meet on the Lord’s Day, Sunday, and at other occasions, as well as have other ceremonies, to remember what the Lord has done and what we have to look forward to.

 

2.     And the other thing we need to do is to share the love of God with others. We can do this by telling others about God while we take care of one another.

 

So today, as we are celebrating Jesus’ resurrection to eternal life and awaiting his return when the whole world will be set right, let us do our part.

 

God has provided enough to feed, clothe, and shelter everyone in the world; He has given us this beautiful earth to take care of – and He asks nothing more of us that to love Him and take care of each other until He returns  - let us do that until he returns, for when he comes back there will be no more death, no more decay, no more sorrow, no more sadness; only joy, peace and wholeness because He has risen! (He has risen, indeed)

 

Let us Pray




Genesis 2:15-3:24, Matthew 28:1-20, Revelation 22:1-5: Life and Death and Creation.

Presented to the Community Dinner at the Friendship Center by Major Michael Ramsay, 19 April 2025.

 

Hello,

I am Major Michael Ramsay from The Salvation Army. As well as running The Salvation Army, the Bread of Life Soup Kitchen, shelter and The Salvation Army thrift store, I am a Christian pastor / teacher. This weekend is Easter. That is the most important time on the Christian Calendar.

Christians acknowledge Jesus as God. Our teachings tell us that God, as creator, created the whole world. And when He did it was perfect. Not only did we not harm each other, ourselves or the earth; but we never got sick, we never got injured; and the earth itself – the trees did not fall to the ground and die. Animals did not eat animals. All of creation was in perfect harmony. The Creator even walked in this Garden He created with people He created.

Then something happened. The first people created made a choice.  Because of this choice, death, decay, harm and hurt entered the world. Where there was none before, now there was illness, injury and death for all of creation. Plants, animals and all that is given life now dies. Since that day, Creator would like nothing less than to get us back to what was our life was like in the Garden: with no more death, no more decay.

Today is the Saturday between Good Friday and Easter. On Good Friday 2000 years ago something happened: God died. Creator died. Jesus died. Today is called low Saturday. How would you feel if we were around when God died?

Tomorrow is Easter. On Easter God, Jesus, Creator rose from the dead. He came to life again. He vanquished death. He defeated it. That is why we celebrate on Easter: we can get back to the Garden. By overcoming death, Jesus ended the decay, death and disease that came to the world and as a result when Creator returns to earth no one will ever die; no plant will ever decay; no animal will ever eat another… there will be no more blindness, no more deafness, no more addiction, no more violence, no more pain, no more sorrow. Only goodness. Only wholeness.

In the Christian faith, everyone who wants to serve the creator is invited to live and help others live like this today by providing for those in need until the day arrives when there is no more need. Our sacred book, the Bible, even tells us the ‘Sheep and Goats’ story: that the nations which take care of the vulnerable will be with the creator forever in the new world and those who don’t, won’t.

The Bible often compares life with Creator, Jesus, to a banquet, a feast, a meal, like we have here today – where everyone is invited: the rich, the poor, the old, the young, the widow, the foreigner, the stranger, the… everyone.

Today… Who has been here at the Friendship Centre before? Who has been here a lot and feels at home, comfortable here? I invite you to look out for the new people, the stranger, our guests – those who you have not seen around here before. I invite you to – on behalf of Creator – make the people who have not been here before feel comfortable. Extend to them the Creator’s hand of friendship. Let our guests know that we are happy they are here with us for when we welcome the stranger, the foreigner in the Creator’s name, we are indeed welcoming in the Creator Himself.

Let us pray



Sunday, March 26, 2023

2 Corinthians 5:11-21: Reconciliation with Creator and Each Other.

 Presented to TSA AV Ministries, 26 March 2023, by Major Michael Ramsay

 


This poster means very much to me. It was given to me by Remi – some of you know Remi – he is a colleague here at The Salvation Army. Remi has taught me much about Nuu-Chah-Nulth culture, tradition, government, and some vocabulary (if only I can remember the words!); he is a friend!

 

On Shrove Tuesday this year, the Tseshaht First Nation released the preliminary findings about the residential school that was on their territory.  It is very sad. Everyday since, as before, as I enter my office and as I sit at my desk, I see the painting by Roy Henry Vickers with the words 'Haalapi Hawit' (Creator) written underneath.

 

Shrove Tuesday – the day the findings were released from the residential school on Tseshaht First Nation – is the day before lent begins. It is a day to get our houses and our lives ready for the season of Lent. It is about confession and absolution. I think that it is quite fitting that the preliminary findings from the residential schools be released on a day tradition has set aside for confession and absolution. Our nation has certainly been coming to terms with the residential school systems and many other things. Our politicians, church leaders and others have certainly been confessing the sins and errors of the past. And true reconciliation is only possible with forgiveness, absolution. As Demond Tutu said in the South African context, “there is no future without forgiveness”; for it is only forgiving others that truly sets us free.

 

Lent, the season that begins after Shrove Tuesday, starts on Ash Wednesday. Ash Wednesday is a time for fasting and praying. Lent – the word itself – means ‘fortieth’ and it references the 40 days Jesus fasted (referencing as well Elijah’s and Moses’ fasts of that length) before commencing his public ministry. Lent ends on either Maundy Thursday or Low Saturday – the day between Good Friday and Easter. It is a time for us to prepare ourselves for Easter, the day we commemorate Christ providing reconciliation for the whole world, all of Creation.

 

The symbolism of this picture is important to me. The crown of thorns on the 'Haalapi Hawit' (Creator)’s head make it clear that this is a representation of Jesus. Jesus who died on the cross, Jesus is the Creator. John Chapter 1: He wasn’t just a man. He is God. He is creator of the whole world and more.

 

Doctrines 2 through 4 of The Salvation Army say this about 'Haalapi Hawit' (Creator):

·       We believe that there is only one God, who is infinitely perfect, the Creator, Preserver, and Governor of all things, and who is the only proper object of religious worship.

·       We believe that there are three persons in the Godhead-the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost, undivided in essence and co-equal in power and glory.

·       We believe that in the person of Jesus Christ the Divine and human natures are united, so that He is truly and properly God and truly and properly man.

 

'Haalapi Hawit' (Creator) not only created us but He also went to the cross for us. The tears in this picture remind me how sad He must be. Can you imagine the sadness of 'Haalapi Hawit' (Creator)? He created all of us, everything, the whole world and more; and we killed Him. He loves us and we killed Him. Can you imagine if those whom you love deeply want to kill you and you watch them as they do? In our context today, imagine you are lying in a hospital bed and your loved one comes and puts the needle in that ends everything. Now imagine that they do this NOT out of love. Imagine. This I think can cause some tears. There is more than that though.

 

'Haalapi Hawit' (Creator) went to the cross for us. The tears in this picture remind me how sad He must be for the way we have treated each other in residential schools, and wars, and poverty, and other such things and elsewhere and how sad He must be at the way we continue to treat each other today.

 

Hebrews 10:26ff says that if we continue to sin after Christ died for us, we trample the body of Christ underfoot. 'Haalapi Hawit' (Creator) let His creation kill Him so that we, His creation, could be free of Sin. See the tears on His cheek. Jesus died on the cross so that sin would no longer have a hold on us. He died of the cross so that we no longer need to fall pray to sin. Look at His tears – how sad it must make Him that we still sometimes fall pray to sin; how sad it must make Him that we still do bad things to each other; how sad it must make 'Haalapi Hawit' (Creator) feel to see those He created and loves, harm others whom He created and loved.

 

'Haalapi Hawit' (Creator) died and rose again so that we could be reconciled to 'Haalapi Hawit' (Creator) and to one another. This is what we are preparing for in Lent after confession and absolution and this is what we hope for in Easter. We are preparing to celebrate the reconciliation that Jesus provided for us all between the cross and the empty tomb. Jesus rose from the grave leaving sin and death behind Him so that we can all do the same. And even now we have the opportunity to begin to live out that salvation; even now we have to opportunity to begin to break free from those horrible sins that are trying to drag us down; even now we have that opportunity to live out that reconciliation with God – and with one another.

 

'Haalapi Hawit' (Creator), Jesus, died and rose again so that we could be reconciled to 'Haalapi Hawit' (Creator), Jesus, God, and to one another. As 'Haalapi Hawit' (Creator) has done this for us, it is my hope that indeed we will all look diligently and unceasingly toward that end of living a life reconciled both with 'Haalapi Hawit' (Creator) and with one another. He loves us and He wants us to get along with Him with each other just like any parent desires to have their children get along.

 

So today, if there is anything between you and another of God’s children, another of God’s creations, I encourage you to live free from the power of Sin and death and experience love and forgiveness instead. I encourage you, if there is anything between you and 'Haalapi Hawit' (Creator), that you confess it to Him now and receive His forgiveness, His Grace, His love, and His healing and reconciliation; and when we go from here in a moment or two let us all go from here in His power, and share His love and ministry of reconciliation with all whom we meet.

 

Let us pray.

 



Saturday, February 22, 2020

Isaiah 66: The Emperor is Free of the Palace

Presented to The Salvation Army Alberni Valley Ministries, Port Alberni, BC, by Captain Michael Ramsay on 23 February 2020

Edouard Kitoko Nsiku writes that “While it would be going too far to say that the last chapter of Isaiah is a summary of the book, it does touch on most of the major themes: denunciation of hypocritical worship of the Lord, the restoration of Jerusalem, God’s intervention as both judge and Saviour, and Salvation for Israel and the nations.”[1] Isaiah 66 is an important chapter with which to conclude the book.
  
I remember reading about the Emperor of Japan once during the Samurai era. The people believed that the Emperor was divine so the military powers wouldn’t dare harm him. What they would do instead was that the various warlord Shoguns would fight to control the area around the Emperor’s palace. That way, as they could not rid themselves of the Emperor, they could at least contain him and control who had access to him.

It seems that the same thing was happening at various times in the history of Judah. The ruling classes were seemingly trying to contain YHWH in the Temple on Mount Zion in the capital city of Jerusalem.  Temple worship had become the central focus of the religious practices of the ancient Israelites. It seems that over time some people had come to believe that God himself lived in the Temple of Jerusalem. They should have known better. 1 Kings 8:27 records, at the time of the dedication of the first Temple in Jerusalem, Solomon’s temple; Solomon says: “But will God really dwell on earth? The heavens, even the highest heaven, cannot contain you. How much less this temple I have built!” 

But nonetheless some had come to believe that God had been sealed in that Temple well-guarded by the shogunate of their time and place: leaders, the religious authorities and practices of their day. Isaiah opens up this chapter reminding them that this is not true. Isaiah 66 opens with, vv. 1-2a:

This is what the Lord says:
“Heaven is my throne, and the earth is my footstool.
Where is the house you will build for me? 
Where will my resting place be?
Has not my hand made all these things, and so they came into being? declares the Lord.

God, through Isaiah, reminds us that He made the earth to contain us; we did not make the Temple to contain him. We are contained. He is free. He is the one who is generously supporting us, not the other way around (TSA doctrine 2).[2] 

Verses 3 and 4 speak of some of the rituals that the people had been performing originally, one would presume, to glorify and honour God but here God through Isaiah reminds us that the rituals in and of themselves don’t honour God if we aren’t actually honouring God with the rest of our lives. This would be like if someone broke into your house on your birthday and stole all of your favourite stuff – like your TV or your dog or something – but they left you a birthday cake or a recording of them singing Happy Birthday to you! The rituals, like sacrifices in the Temple or singing Happy Birthday to someone, only matter if we are actually decent the rest of the time.

The Good Guys, Verse 2b, the ones whose sacrifices the Lord does favour are those who are humble and contrite. The Lord favours those who tremble at His Word. The Bad Guys are the ones who not only aren’t humble and contrite and don’t show respect for the Lord – even more – they, Verse 5, exclude those who do fear the Lord.  

It is like a workplace. In the Army, I have a healthy fear of my boss. Tiffany is a nice person but I am not going to do anything to intentionally or carelessly make her mad. Equally as much, I am not going to intentionally disobey or disrespect Jamie. These people have control of my life. They could fire me or transfer me to Newfoundland! God bless The Salvation Army! 

That being said, I have been in workplaces before I was an officer and maybe even heard of a few since where people did not listen to their boss. I have been in workplaces where people intentionally disobeyed their boss. I have been in workplaces where people talked back to their boss. I have even seen people ostracized by fellow employees for actually doing what their boss told them to do! I have seen people decide for themselves how they are going to do their job and refuse to do anything else - even what the boss tells them to! And they don’t care. They don’t fear their boss in the least little bit. I don’t know if you have ever been in a work environment like this where people do not actually do what the boss wants them to do but this is the environment that God through Isaiah is describing here. The Bad Guys don’t respect the boss; they don’t fear God. God says He doesn’t care that they are showing up for work every day if the work they are doing is contrary to the work He wants them to do! This is what God is saying life at the Temple is like.[3] But God says He is not confined to the Temple and He will take action!

Isaiah then goes on to tell us what God is going to do to those bad employees. God is not happy with the people who do not tremble at His Word! He is not happy with those who don't do what they are supposed to do and He is not happy with those who exclude those who do! Using the employer analogy some more: He is going to fire them. Using contemporary Church language He is going to fire them as well only this firing is more significant (TSA doctrine 11). Claus Westermann states about our text here that "This is the earliest idea of hell as a state of perdition".[4]  Don’t worry I am not going to spend a lot of time on the idea of hell here but I do want to point out that God and Isaiah are not happy with those – even the chosen people, even the chosen people in the Temple, even the people chosen as priest and other leaders in God’s Temple – God is not happy with those who don’t actually fear Him, in the way that I described fear earlier. They are not going to be able to disrespect God forever! John Calvin says of Isaiah 40 which can be applied here, “This is a remarkable passage, which teaches us that God is not confined to any people, so as not to choose whomsoever he pleases, by casting off unbelievers whom he formerly called to himself.[5] God is not confined by the Temple or the people of Jerusalem!

Now the whole mid-section of this text speaks about Jerusalem. It is a little confusing at times, I must admit. I did have to read and reread this chapter quite a bit to get the grasp of the flow of it. Verses 7-14 are speaking about a new Jerusalem. They seem to be speaking about the same New Jerusalem that is referred to very, very many years later; in Revelation 22.[6] Revelation has this as the place where heaven and earth come together for eternity as the city descends from the clouds. God, in Isaiah here, speaks of the overflowing shalom, peace, abundance which will overflow in the city. He speaks of this shalom that He will extend to her like a river and the wealth of the nations that will be pouring into this new Jerusalem (v.12). God speaks about how much He loves this new Jerusalem and how the people He loves will be its citizens but to His foes He will show His fury (v.14), anger (v.15) and rebuke with flames of fire. “For with fire and with His sword the LORD will execute judgement on all people and many will be slain by the LORD” (v.16). 

And then God says something very interesting. God says that because the Bad Guys did these bad things in Jerusalem and on the Temple Mount, His Holy Hill, Mt. Zion; beyond punishing the Bad Guys something else will happen. Through Isaiah He says, Verse 18, “And I, because of what THEY have planned and done, am about to come and gather the people of all nations and languages, and they will come see my Glory.” Because of what the Bad Guys have done, God will fulfill His promise made to Abraham (Genesis 12:3) that all the nations will be blessed. God can use even the bad we do to accomplish His good. I always find it very interesting that God often has more than one reason and more than one way to do what He says He will do, like tying so many loose ends together into a bow. 

In our Bible Study on Luke the other week we were speaking about how the guests in Jesus’ parable who were invited to the eternal wedding feast declined the invitation and so forfeited their seat at the banquet but in so doing many others came to the eternal feast of Salvation (Luke 14:15-23). God through Isaiah here is saying that even in the disobedience of some of His chosen people He will extend His grace further - to the corners of the earth, inviting people of all the nations to come.[7] 

Now this passage certainly does have some tensions in it. It does introduce some of the language of hell and of ongoing torment but it also speaks of Salvation for all of the nations and that every knee will bow and every tongue confess. Walter Bruggemann asserts that these thoughts aren’t necessarily meant to be reconciled.[8] 

What is important is this: God is not confined to the Temple or anywhere else and He rules His Kingdom. In God’s Kingdom, all who are present, we will have deference and respect for the Lord. In God’s Kingdom, all who are present, we won’t rebel against God’s laws of love and life. In God’s Kingdom, all who are present, we will seek to do His will rather than our own. In God’s proleptic Kingdom, all who are present, we will be humble and contrite.

So then the invitation of our text today is this: we don’t need to spend another moment outside His Kingdom. Today we can humbly and contritely come to Lord and when we do, like a friend of ours, Major David Ivany always says, ‘In the end everything will be alright; so if it isn’t all right then it isn’t the end. With that then I would like to encourage us that even if we are being excluded by people or society as Verse 5 says, even if we are being persecuted, even if we are suffering in all kinds of ways here and now, the Lord will prevail and as we persevere then everything will be alright for He is able, more than able to handle anything that comes our way.

Let us pray.


[1] Edouard Kitoko Nsiku , 'Isaiah', Africa Bible Commentary, (Nairobi, Kenya: Word Alive Publishers, 2010),878.
[2] Cf. Walter Brueggeman, WBC: Isaiah 40-66 (John Knox Press: Louisville, 1998), 251
[3] Cf. Karl Barth, Fragments, Grave and Gay ed., M. Rumscheldt (London: Collins, 1971), 46-47
[4] Claus Westermann, Isaiah 40-66: A Commentary (Translated by David MG Stalker) The Westminster Press, Philadelphia, 1969, p. 428.
[5] John Calvin, Isaiah IV, 431-432. Available on-line: https://www.studylight.org/commentaries/cal/isaiah.html
[6] Walter Brueggeman, WBC: Isaiah 40-66 (John Knox Press:Louisville, 1998), 256.
[7] Edouard Kitoko Nsiku , 'Isaiah', Africa Bible Commentary, (Nairobi, Kenya: Word Alive Publishers, 2010), 878
[8] Walter Brueggeman, WBC: Isaiah 40-66 (John Knox Press:Louisville, 1998) 256.

Thursday, January 2, 2020

Isaiah 5:1-25: Toward a Just Society: the Song of the Vineyard

Presented to Alberni Valley Ministries, Port Alberni BC, by Captain Michael Ramsay

This week we went to see lights in Vancouver. They had an Aurora (Northern Lights) festival at the PNE grounds. Heather was able to go on stage and act out the part of Santa's reindeer, Prancer; she was able to go on a lot of rides and we were able to walk around and look at a lot of really interesting lights. A few days prior, we were in Victoria. This year they have lights in Centennial Square. We took a look at those with the girls’ cousin and my folks. We also looked at the lights in Chinatown and on the Parliament Buildings. And a week ago today Heather and I went to look at the lights at Milner Gardens.

That was really quite something. Heather had been the day before so she knew exactly what she wanted to show me in the garden. We looked at all the lights through these special glasses that made them look like stars, candy canes, or reindeer. Then we had story time, cookies and hot chocolate, listened to musicians and carollers and had a very nice tea and scones. Heather was taken aback by a Christmas Tree they had in the teahouse that was decorated entirely with tea cups. It was a fun evening that Heather and I had together in the garden.

Our scripture today is about a garden, a vineyard, in which God wanted to spend time with His children, His people. Isaiah shares this song about a loved one who had a vineyard on a fertile hillside. He loved it. He tended to it. He rototilled it - or the ancient equivalent - he dug it up, picked the stones, built a watch tower, made a grape press (a wine press). He loved it. He cared for it. He did everything one could be expected to do for His vineyard. And he kept looking for a crop of good grapes from this loved, tended to vineyard on fertile soil but it refused to produce fruit.

The songwriter tells us that the Lord's vineyard which was refusing to produce fruit is Jerusalem and Judah. Later he reiterates that the vineyard are the people of Judah and Israel. We know what Judah, Jerusalem and Israel are right?

Israel was an ancient kingdom named after who? (Israel) and who was Israel? What was his other name? (Jacob). And who was the person Judah in the Bible? (Jacob's son). The ancient Kingdom of Israel were people descended from Jacob and they were made up of 12 or 13 provinces/tribes named after Israel's sons and/or grandsons. About 60 years after Israel became a Kingdom there was a civil war and the country split into two. The southern country named itself after its dominant province/tribe: Judah. That would be like if Canada spilt up and we just named the new entity back east Toronto or Ontario or just called the West here BC, Vancouver or Alberta. The southern country is called Judah. The northern country keeps the name Israel. (As a result sometimes the name Israel can refer to just the northern country and sometimes it can refer to both. Just like with present day Korea. If we say Korea we may mean South Korea, North Korea or both the Koreas. It was the same with East and West Germany when I was growing up.) The capital of Israel is Samaria and the capital of Judah is Jerusalem. Jerusalem may be mentioned here not only because it is the main city but because sometimes you refer to a whole country by just its capital. In Canada we like to blame Ottawa for things that that city is really no more to blame than any other city who elected the same people to office and the world blames Washington - rightfully or wrongfully - for a lot of our woes today.

So then this is what Isaiah is saying in the song: he is saying that the Lord's vineyard that is refusing to produce fruit is Judah and Jerusalem (the southern kingdom and its capital) and Israel (the northern kingdom and all of both of the kingdoms). These are the people of God and the One who loves them, provides for them, and cultivates them is God.

In the song, he tells us some of the ways God has been cultivating His people whom He loves. They, however, refuse to produce fruit and as a consequence they will no longer be His vineyard. They will instead be a wasteland in perpetual drought because, even though God loved them and cultivated them, and planted them in fertile ground, they still refused to produce fruit. The fruit that they refused to produce, Isaiah tells us, is justice and righteousness and as a result the vineyard is destroyed. Historically speaking this happens. The Kingdom Israel is destroyed in 586 BCE and the Kingdom of Judah is wiped from history in 720BCE - never to rise again until the end of the age.

God has tended to our country too - just like He did with Israel and Judah. He has provided us a very fertile land. He has provided us a heritage of faith. Even many of the First Nations here have been Christian as long as the Germans have been Lutheran or the Scots Presbyterian. Our constitutional acts of 1867 and 1982 recognize the supremacy of God, as does our Charter of Rights and Freedoms. The Order of Canada's motto comes from Hebrews 11 and the country's motto comes from Psalm 72. God has provided many good things for this country, His Dominion. We are among the best blessed nations on earth; so have we borne fruit in keeping with repentance? Are we producing fruit of righteousness and justice? 

Prime Minister Pierre Eliot Trudeau spoke about moving us towards a just society. His government was the one that enshrined God and the Bible in the Order of Canada, the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, and the Constitutional Act of 1982. How are we doing today, about 40 years later, in the reign of Justin Trudeau at being a just society? Let us look at what Isaiah says about what a just and an unjust society looks like. 

Isaiah says,
Woe to you who add house to house
    and join field to field
till no space is left
    and you live alone in the land.
He says in a just society small family farms won’t be taken over by large corporate one - like is happening all over the Canadian prairies today. And the wealthy will not monopolize the housing so that the poor have no place to live in the land. Gene M. Tucker says, “in the eighth century BCE, economic shifts in the direction of capitalism were undermining the traditional ideas of stewardship of the land.” In our time and place, how are we doing at providing accessible housing and the like?

Isaiah says,
11 Woe to those who rise early in the morning
    to run after their drinks,
who stay up late at night
    till they are inflamed with wine.
12 They have harps and lyres at their banquets,
    pipes and timbrels and wine,
but they have no regard for the deeds of the Lord,
    no respect for the work of his hands.
He says a just society is one where people do not spend their days in idle pursuits such as drinking and their nights out partying abusing their bodies with noise, food and booze; gorging themselves completely forgetting that it is the Lord who provided these resources for us to use and to share with our neighbour. The inference here can be made that the rich are indulging themselves while the poor go hungry. Geoffrey W. Grogan says, “in an affluent society all do not always profit from increased wealth” if that was the case then how are we doing at taking care of our neighbour today as well as not abusing our own mind, body, and spirit through overindulgence?

Isaiah says,
18 Woe to those who draw sin along with cords of deceit,
    and wickedness as with cart ropes,
19 to those who say, “Let God hurry;
    let him hasten his work
    so we may see it.
The plan of the Holy One of Israel—
    let it approach, let it come into view,
    so we may know it.”
He says that in a righteous and just society, people will not be deceptive and we will not challenge God. A just society is one who perseveres and waits upon the Lord rather than one that whines and grumbles reminiscent of the Hebrews in the desert after the LORD delivered them from Egypt or in Judah of Isaiah’s day. What about our day? Do we remember what the Lord has done? Are we appreciative of what He is doing in our lives or do we bait Him, challenge Him, and mock Him; demanding that he perform for us when summoned like a genie in a bottle? How do we do today at loving, trusting, and waiting upon the Lord?

Isaiah says,
20 Woe to those who call evil good
    and good evil,
who put darkness for light
    and light for darkness,
who put bitter for sweet
    and sweet for bitter.
21 Woe to those who are wise in their own eyes
    and clever in their own sight.
He says that their society had become so unjust that people were calling good evil and evil good. I have heard that same complaint more than once in our contemporary Canadian society. I think in this age of twitter, facebook, social media; mainstream media, parliament, and universities, many of us have become wise in our own eyes projecting, accepting, rejecting things based simply on how we feel inside ourselves about it. I think there are many these days who think that they, that we are so clever; has our wisdom really become so limited? Have we become wise in our own eyes?

Isaiah says,
22 Woe to those who are heroes at drinking wine
    and champions at mixing drinks,
23 who acquit the guilty for a bribe,
    but deny justice to the innocent.
He says woe to those who are heroes at things as harmful or as inconsequential as imbibing but ignore the importance of justice. Woe to those who give preferential verdicts to those who can afford a lawyer to argue their case eloquently over the working poor or others who are not able to afford for justice. The justice system in this country is one that is particularly skewed in favour of the wealthy, the educated, and the eloquent; leaving the rest outside in the cold. Maybe there are outright bribes in some western countries. The US elects their judges. It costs money to get elected. Who are the judges indebted too? But even if there is not individual corruption there or here, this passage is not speaking to individual rights; it is speaking to societies that deny justice to the poor; is that us?

These aren’t just rhetorical questions that I am asking. I am not looking to be upset and downcast on this new year. If these condemnations do apply to us as well as to Israel then Isaiah offers us the same consequences. Isaiah does say, 
24 Therefore, as tongues of fire lick up straw
    and as dry grass sinks down in the flames,
so their roots will decay
    and their flowers blow away like dust;
for they have rejected the law of the Lord Almighty
    and spurned the word of the Holy One of Israel.

But Isaiah also has this to say. In Isaiah 4, just prior to this pericope, Isaiah spoke about the branch of the Lord and look here at Verse 15. Isaiah always embeds hope in the midst of distress. Isaiah always includes good news. Isaiah often speaks of the coming Messiah and as a result Isaiah has even been referred to as the fifth gospel. Isaiah says, 
15 So people will be brought low
    and everyone humbled,
    the eyes of the arrogant humbled.
16 But the Lord Almighty will be exalted by his justice,
    and the holy God will be proved holy by his righteous acts.

He says people will be brought low; everyone will be humbled including the arrogant; and the Lord will be proved holy by his righteous acts. This is important. When we are humble the Lord will lift us up; when we are down He will restore us; He will make us holy. But when we exalt ourselves we will be brought low. And once we are humbled He will lift us up again. 

This is how it works. What God wants is for us to love Him and our neighbour the same way that He loves us; He wants to care for us and give us the joy of the Lord even when life is miserable. Sometimes, however, we try and do things on our own; sometimes we think that we can handle things just fine; sometimes we do what is right in our own eyes, under our own strength. That is sad because if we only rely on ourselves, who do we turn to when we are humbled? But when we rely on the Lord seeking His justice and righteousness, seeking His face, He promises that we will find Him and He will comfort us when we mourn and He will embrace us as we grieve; as we seek the Lord we will find Him and as we hold onto His embrace, He will never let us go. Let us in this New Year resolve to seek the Lord for it is from Him that we get our strength, our love, and our power to continue on. 

Let us pray.

1. Gene M. Tucker, NIB VI: The Book of Isaiah 1-39, (Abingdon Press, Nashville, Tenn: 2001), 93
2. Cf. Geoffrey W. Grogan, The Expositor's Bible Commentary, p.50

3. Gene M. Tucker, NIB VI: The Book of Isaiah 1-39, (Abingdon Press, Nashville, Tenn: 2001), 95