Saturday, August 22, 2020

Isaiah 59: The arm of the Lord is not too short to save.

 Presented to Alberni Valley Ministries, 23 August 2020 by Captain Michael Ramsay

Surely the arm of the Lord is not too short to save. No matter what you have done the Lord can save you. Horrible things happen. Some of the things I have heard in the previous couple of days alone:

·         PTSD

·         Doctors playing with medications

·         People are OD-ing at an incredible rate

·         AA groups aren't meeting

·         People's children are missing

·         People are dying of cancer

·         People are having their legs amputated

·         I have heard of spiritual abuse 

·         People are losing their sight and people are losing their mind

The Lord’s arm is not too short. God can save you.

I remember when Susan and I were with 614 Vancouver on the DTES (downtown eastside). We had just finished a Bible study in one of the buildings there and when we were leaving we accidentally walked out the wrong door. It locked behind us. We were trapped. All around us was barbed wire fence and everywhere on the ground were needles. And with us we had a two year old Rebecca and a one year old Sarah-Grace who still put everything in her mouth. Back then we didn't have cell phones. There was no way out. We tried the door. We examined the fences. We were stuck. It was night. It was dark. A 2 year-old Rebecca led us in a prayer and the door opened - and we walked into the building and out to safety; the LORD provided salvation. We were falling and His arm was not too short to save.

I have told my parachute story before - I was falling and the Lord's arm wasn't too short to save.

I have seen people delivered from addiction - the Lord's arm wasn't too short to save.

I have seen people delivered from cancer - inexplicably - other than through an answer to prayer. The Lord's arm wasn't too short to save.

I have been with people on their deathbed when they accepted the gift of eternal life. The Lord's hand isn't too short to save.

Now, of course people will still get sick; people will still die (far be it for me to preach the prosperity heresy) but the Lord can help us always in any situation and He does offer salvation both for now and forever.

I have talked to many of you. Many of you have stories of how the Lord has saved you right now, in the past, and for eternity.

The arm of the LORD is not too short to save you. His hearing is not so bad that he cannot hear your cries for help.

 This is an important sentiment with which to start this chapter. Notice that this chapter is talking about sin. The author mostly speaks about two sins: lying and violence. But the author uses a whole lot of different words that we translate as 'sin' or 'iniquity' in our Bibles. [1] He refers to sin - through different Hebrew words - as ways we don't measure up, ways we miss the mark; he refers to sin as a moral evil and even a natural evil which isn't evil at all.[2] (Natural evil is just an un-preferred event, a natural disaster like a tsunami, a hurricane or a tornado.) Sin can also be seen as a personified force that can get a hold of us and not want to let go… Evil, Sin, and Iniquity abound in this chapter but there are two that are highlighted here above all others. Lying and violence; of violence. Isaiah here says,

Verse 3 For your hands are stained with blood,

your fingers with guilt.

6b Their deeds are evil deeds,

and acts of violence are in their hands.

7 Their feet rush into sin;

they are swift to shed innocent blood.

They pursue evil schemes;

acts of violence mark their ways.

13… inciting revolt and oppression,…

Violence in our world today is over the top. One of the groups that I am in contact with is ACAWS, the women's shelter in town. You can see Ellen Frood's clips on Shaw TV. Violence in these Covid times, when people are confined, is being manifest in many ways. Not to mention the riots and violence now and in normal times. 

I remember again our time on Vancouver’s DTES: My last Bible study before we left Vancouver to move to Winnipeg, a friend of mine, later that night, murdered a complete stranger in what was probably a drug related crime. She had been clean for a long time before this too and was planning to leave this dangerous area the next week but was caught by the sin of violence, in this tragic act of killing an innocent person. The last stop I had on my way out of Vancouver was to visit another friend of mine who was in jail in the lower mainland. 

In Toronto, a corps member and an employee lost his daughter to a vicious murder in one of the buildings we led Bible study in; we lost a member of our children's youth group to a spree shooter and a friend of friends to a serial killer. Violence is everywhere. 

In Winnipeg one of my favourite ministries was at Stony Mountain Penitentiary. Many there horrible suffered terrible consequences of violence both as perpetrator and recipient. Violence is everywhere. It is a sin that tries to grab us all. Matthew 5 makes it very clear that if we ever wish a violent end to someone then we are already trapped by that sin and it can drag us further and further from the peace of the Lord. And I have felt rage build up in myself sometimes - sometimes over things in my day to day life and sometimes I can get worked up just by watching the news! The temptation to a violent heart is a dangerous trap. Violence -and a violent heart - is a terrible sin that tries to reach out, grab us, and pull us away from the Lord – but the arm of the Lord is not too short to save us.[3]

The sin that Isiah highlights as being similarly significant in this chapter is lying. Isaiah points out that the sin of dishonesty tries to drag us down as much as the temptation to violent thoughts and violent actions. Right next to violence here is people who lie and people who say wicked things. This passage speaks a lot about people who say wrong and deceptive things. 

Verse 3: Your lips have spoken falsely,

and your tongue mutters wicked things.

4b They rely on empty arguments, they utter lies;

 ‘Empty arguments’ with the lies: This reminds me of the internet, Facebook, Twitter, and fake news of which we have all heard. There are empty arguments everywhere. We can read any number of posts and think… That doesn’t make any sense, that can’t be true. And then we do a little research and we find out that it isn’t true. And this is not just social media now.

This is mainstream media as well. I can almost pick the news station I want based on my personal prejudices: I feel this way about an issue so I will read the National Post; I think the opposite so I will watch CBC. I don’t like what so and so is doing so I will watch CNN; I do like what they are doing so I will watch Fox News. The lies and empty arguments are everywhere. In times when we don’t have to social distance, just go down to any coffee shop at certain times of the day and listen to people get worked up about this kind of stuff based on whichever empty arguments they happen to be seduced by.

Verse 4: They conceive trouble and give birth to evil.

5 They hatch the eggs of vipers

and spin a spider’s web.

Whoever eats their eggs will die,

and when one is broken, an adder is hatched.

6 Their cobwebs are useless for clothing;

they cannot cover themselves with what they make.

13 … uttering lies our hearts have conceived…

14 truth has stumbled in the streets,

honesty cannot enter.

15 Truth is nowhere to be found,

and whoever shuns evil becomes a prey.

Lies, lies, and more lies. And whoever does not play the game of lying, condemning others and wishing violence upon those with whom we disagree become the prey of others. I haven’t followed ‘cancel culture’ too closely but I understand that people who have refused to toe the line on various issues have been boycotted or fired by bosses who were afraid of boycotts. I have also heard of people being asked double-edged questions that place them between a rock and a hard place, questions to which there is no right answer and then suffering the consequences of being dashed against either that rock or that hard place. Whoever shuns evil becomes prey.

This is important. A repeated word in Isaiah 59 is justice (mispat in verses 4&8).[4] There can be no justice where people are dishonest. There can be no justice - even if people are calling for justice - if they are really just wanting to force their ideas on others. You can call for justice all you want, if your justice movement is full of violence and lies then it is not justice it is only bullying. Where there is no righteousness there is no justice.  When there is violence and deceit then justice is not possible. (I think this may very much be where our society may be hovering at present.) 

But even so the arm of the Lord is not so short that He can’t save us.

This is so important: as far gone as ancient Israel was, as far gone as our society may or may not be. As challenging as your life may be and as challenging as mine may be, the Lord’s arm is not so short as he cannot save us.[5]

No matter what you have done. No matter how bad you evaluate what you have been caught up in, God can save you. Even if you have succumbed to a temptation for lying or violence God can save you. Even if any of us here have killed someone by accident, by design, or otherwise; God can save us. Whatever the worst thing is that you have done – or thought - in your life that might threaten to plunge you from the cliffs of eternal life, the arm of the Lord is not so short that He can’t grab hold of you and pull you up to salvation for now and forever.

So this is my encouragement for us this week. Whatever sins are trying to grab hold of us and drag us down, I encourage us all to turn to the Lord. He knows what troubles you; He knows what concerns you; He knows all that is trying to pull you under but don’t worry, as we turn to Him whose arm is not too short, no matter how far we have fallen, the Lord can pull us back up to safety.

Let us pray.



[1] Cf. The New Strong’s Exhaustive Concordance of the Bible,  (Nashville, Tenn.: Thomas Nelson Publishing, 1995).

[2] Captain Michael Ramsay, John 2:1: Sinless and Sin Less. Presented to Alberni Valley Corps of The Salvation Army, 05 August 2018. Available online: https://sheepspeaks.blogspot.com/2018/08/1-john-21-sinless-and-sin-less.html

[3] Edouard Kitoko Nsiku , 'Isaiah', Africa Bible Commentary, (Nairobi, Kenya: Word Alive Publishers, 2010),  ‘Isaiah 50:1-21: The Crimes of the People’, 874: God has not abandoned us

[4] Cf. Gene M. Tucker, NIB VI: The Book of Isaiah 1-39, (Abingdon Press, Nashville, Tenn: 2001), 500

[5] Cf. William MacDonald: Believers Bible Commentary: Old Testament (Thomas Nelson Publishers:1985),  p.984