Righteousness and Justice in Isaiah

A major theme in Isaiah's message is righteousness and justice. These concepts bear studying because they mean different things to Isaiah than they do to us in the western, modern world. Furthermore, our Christian subculture associates righteousness with personal morality and justice with social political action. This is not how the Bible portrays them.

The Work of a Potterโ€™s Hand

My sister is a potter. She has gifted me over the years with plates, bowls, mugs, pitchers, and a teapot. I love displaying her beautiful work and using them in my daily life. I am in awe that she can turn a wheel, shape an object, pour some glaze on it, apply extreme heat, and out comes a work of art as well as functionality. I can understand why Isaiah used a potter to describe Godโ€™s relationship with his people and with us.

Hard Hearts, Plugged Ears, and Closed Eyes

In writing circles, we are taught to identify and speak to our target audience. And when teaching, to aim for heart change, not merely information transfer. Since this is my goal, itโ€™s frustrating when my communication doesnโ€™t land or my message doesnโ€™t stick. So I feel for Isaiah when God calls him to be his prophet with the warning that nobody will listen.

In That Day No More Tears and a Trumpet Call

Isaiah is replete with promises of a future timeโ€”in that dayโ€”when God will restore all things to his original design. One beautiful aspect of this future kingdom is the absence of death, mourning, and tears. Another is the trumpet call to signal the return of Jesus for his church.

You Are Invited to Godโ€™s Banquet

Isaiah foresees a great feast that all are invited to. This banquet (also called the marriage supper of the Lamb) is the glorious future celebration of all who are in the kingdom of God. There we will commemorate the final defeat of his enemies, but also the unifying (โ€œmarryingโ€) of Christ with his church (โ€œhis brideโ€).

Roots, Shoots, Stumps, and Branches

References to Jesus are smattered throughout the book of Isaiah. A primary designation is the tree metaphor complete with roots, shoots, stumps and branches.

A Steadfast Mind

After a long, hard slog through chapters 13โ€“24 of Isaiahโ€”prophecy after prophecy of judgment on the nationsโ€”a familiar and dearly loved promise jumps from the text: "You will keep in perfect peace those whose minds are steadfast, because they trust in you." Isaiah 26:3 NIV

Isaiah Offers Hope in the Hard

In the middle of the โ€œweighty messages from Godโ€ (oracles) that Isaiah delivers to the nations surrounding Israel (Is 13โ€“24), he continues to give us glimpses of hopeโ€”Godโ€™s compassion, peace, justice, righteousness, deliverance, salvationโ€”on his people, his handiwork, his inheritance.