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Isaiah 3:1
For
behold, the
Lord
GOD of
hosts is going
to
remove from
Jerusalem and
Judah both
supply and
support, the
whole
supply of
bread And the
whole
supply of
water
(NASB:
Lockman) |
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English Translation of
the Greek (Septuagint): Behold
now, the Lord, the Lord of hosts, will take away from Jerusalem and
from Judea the mighty man and mighty woman, the strength of bread, and
the strength of water,
Amplified: FOR BEHOLD, the Lord, the Lord of hosts, is taking
away from Jerusalem and from Judah the stay and the staff [every kind
of prop], the whole stay of bread and the whole stay of water,
(Amplified
Bible - Lockman)
KJV: For, behold, the Lord, the LORD of hosts, doth take away
from Jerusalem and from Judah the stay and the staff, the whole stay
of bread, and the whole stay of water.
NET: Look, the sovereign LORD who commands armies is about
to remove from Jerusalem and Judah every source of security, including
all the food and water,
(NET
Bible)
NJB: Now the Lord Yahweh Sabaoth is about to deprive Jerusalem
and Judah of resources and provisions -- all reserves of food, all
reserves of water- (NJB)
NLT: The Lord, the LORD Almighty, will cut off the supplies of
food and water from Jerusalem and Judah.
(NLT
- Tyndale House)
Young's Literal: For, lo, the Lord, Jehovah of Hosts, Is
turning aside from Jerusalem, And from Judah, stay and staff, Every
stay of bread, and every stay of water. |
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For behold, the Lord GOD of
hosts is going to remove from Jerusalem and Judah both supply and
support, the whole supply of bread and the whole supply of water: (Famine
- Ge 12:10; 26:1; 43:1; Lv 26:19, 26; Dt 28:23,24,38; 2Sa 21:1; 1Ki
17:1-12; 18:2; 2Ki 8:1,2;
Ps 105:16-note;
Ps 107:34-note;
Isa 3:1, Jer 14:1, 15:2; Lam 4:9, 10, Ezek 14:13, 14, 15, 16, 21;
Joel 1:10,11,16, 17, 18, 19, 20; Am 4:6)
Recall that Isaiah prophesied
from about 740-680BC and the prophecy in this chapter was
fulfilled in the defeat of Jerusalem and Judah by the Nebuchadnezzar
and the Babylonians in 586BC. In this section God will judge
His people by taking away from them everything they were trusting,
including food and water, leaders and soldiers, and judges and
prophets.
It should be noted that not
everyone agrees that the events described in Isaiah 3 were completely
fulfilled in 586BC but has a yet future fulfillment. For example,
John MacArthur has the following note...
The fall of Jerusalem in 586BC was
only a partial fulfillment of this prophecy. The final fulfillment
awaits the times just prior to Christ’s second coming. against the
Lord.
(MacArthur,
J.: The MacArthur Study Bible Nashville: Word
or
Logos)
Motyer sums up this
section noting that...
The message of the whole section is
solemn in the extreme. Divine judgment on society begins to manifest
itself in the disappearance of solid leadership (Is 3:1, 2, 3) and the
appearance of immature, capricious leaders (Is 3:4). Society becomes
divided (Is 3:5a), the age-gap opens up (Is 3:5b), values are at a
discount and those who should be despised take the initiative (Is
3:5c). An air of despair dominates elections (Is 3:Is 3:6, 7). All
this arises from moral and spiritual causes. It is not the result of
failures of policy but of speaking and acting against the Lord and
provoking him; blatant sin inviting its just reward (Is 3:8, 9, 10,
11). (Motyer, J. A. The Prophecy of Isaiah. Downers Grove,
Ill.: InterVarsity Press)
For - This conjunction
explains why Isaiah commanded his readers to...
Stop regarding man, whose breath of
life is in his nostrils; For why should he be esteemed? (Is 2:2-note)
Why should they not regard or
trust in man? Because
God is preparing to bring judgment on Jerusalem and Judah. Isaiah's point is
that in view of the divine judgment to men,
whether rulers or skillful enchanters, etc, his readers would be utterly foolish to
trust in their counsel or guidance = "Stop regarding man...!"
God's judgment will fall on the nation as a whole, but in this next
section
Isaiah directs special attention to the leading men and women.
John Calvin comments that
Isaiah...
continues with the same subject he
was dealing with at the close of the previous chapter. He warns the
Jews that their wealth, no matter how great it may be, will not
prevent God’s wrath from burning up all their defenses. It follows
from this that they are behaving like madmen when they put their trust
in weapons of war and in armor. (Commentary
on Isaiah - Volume 1)
Delitzsch and Driver
write that
the universal proclamation of
judgment (in Isaiah 2) concentrates itself more especially on Judah
and Jerusalem. The current of discourse now bursts the banks confining
it in strophic form, -- though otherwise it flows with freedom, -- and
the exhortation of Is 2:22 not to trust in man, which rests on what
has gone before, becomes the stepping-stone from the universal
proclamation of judgment to the more special one in Is 3:1...That the
announcement of judgment begins anew is evident even from the name of
God (the Lord the LORD of hosts) with
which Isaiah everywhere (Is 1:24, 10:16, 10:33, 19:4) introduces the
judicial dealings of God. Trust in man was the great sin especially
prevailing in the times of
King Uzziah
and
King Jotham
(Ed:
Sounds very contemporary doesn't it? "In God we Trust is being slowly
but steadily replaced by "In man we Trust!" Woe to the !" is the
liberal cry in America!, cp Pr 14:34, Ps 33:12-note).
(Paradoxically) The national glory at that time carried within it the
Wrath
of Jehovah, which was
about to break out even in the days of
King Ahaz,
and during
King Hezekiah's
reign was merely
restrained, not changed. The outburst of wrath Isaiah here proclaims,
describing how Jehovah is throwing down the Jewish State into ruins by
removing from it the supports of its existence and the pillars of its
fabric (Ed:
Beloved, as you read this comment regarding ancient Judah, does it not
cause you to shudder and even weep for America, founded on great
pillars of Christian truth, pillars that are undergoing repeated
attacks to remove any vestige of God from our culture, a removal which
the Almighty is allowing?) In supply and support the full idea
is placed in the foreground; the two nouns, which are but one and the
same word in different forms, and these determined by the gender (Mic
2:4, Nahum 2:11, Zeph 1:15, 2:1, Ezek 21:3), serve to generalize the
notion. Both are "instrumental" forms, and signify that which is used
in giving support...Of the various means of support, bread and water
are first name, not in a figurative sense, but as the two absolutely
indispensable conditions, and the basis of human life. Life is
supported by bread and water; it goes, as it were, on the crutch of
bread, and "to break the staff of bread" (Lv 26:1ff; Ezek 4:16, 5:16,
14:13, Ps 105:16) is thus equivalent to physical destruction. The fall
of the Jewish State accordingly begins with the withdrawal from it by
Jehovah of all support afforded by bread and water, all stores of
both. And this was actually fulfilled; for, both in the Chaldean
(Babylonian, 586BC) and in the Roman periods (Jerusalem and the Temple
besieged and destroyed in 70AD), Jerusalem perished under dreadful
famines such as were threatened...on both occasions, the inhabitants
were reduced to such extremity that women devoured their own children
(Lam 2:20; Josephus, Bell.Jud. 6.3, 4). (Isaiah
3 Commentary on the Prophecies of Isaiah)
Behold (hinneh)
calls attention to the text and directs the reader to give special
attention. Whenever you encounter this interjection know that the LORD
desire our undivided attention for what follows. In this case He is
about to move in judgment to remove! This should attract any
sane person's full attention.
Isaiah uses hinneh
(behold) frequently throughout his prophecy in an attempt to engage
his reader's attention - Isa. 3:1; 5:7, 26, 30; 6:7, 8; 7:14; 8:7, 18,
22; 10:33; 12:2; 13:9, 17; 17:1, 14; 19:1; 20:6; 21:9; 22:17; 24:1;
25:9; 26:21; 28:2, 16; 29:8, 14; 30:27; 34:5; 35:4; 36:6; 37:7, 11,
36; 38:5, 8, 17; 39:6; 40:9f; 41:15, 27; 42:9; 43:19; 47:14; 48:7, 10;
49:12, 22; 51:22; 52:6, 13; 54:11; 58:9; 59:9; 60:2; 62:11; 65:1, 6,
13f, 17f; 66:12, 15
John Calvin comments
that...
Behold (hinneh) is employed
not only to denote certainty, but to express the shortness of time, as
if Isaiah caused wicked men to be eye-witnesses of the event; for it
frequently happens that men who do not venture openly to ridicule the
judgments of God will nevertheless pass them by, as if these judgments
did not relate to them or were still at a great distance, reasoning
“What is that to us?” or "If they ever happen, why should we be
miserable before the time comes? Will it not be time enough to think
of those calamities when they actually do occur?”
Wicked men have a tendency to
downplay the judgment aspect of God by digging lurking-places
for the descriptions of His judgment and because of this fact Isaiah
presses his readers more earnestly, so that they may not imagine that
the judgment of God is far in the future or vainly expect that His
hand of judgment will be relaxed (as if God would forget what He
promised to carry out!) (Commentary
on Isaiah - Volume 1) (English modernized by me)
The Lord God of hosts
(Adonai Elohim Sabaoth) (cp study of
Jehovah Sabaoth, LORD of hosts or
of armies)
places emphasis on God's power which should leave the reader with a
sure understanding that the judgment prophesied will be carried to
completion.
Note that the NAS and ESV
do not have the word
"LORD" (Jehovah)
but the KJV and others add this Name so the full title of God in those
versions reads "the Lord (adon), the LORD
(Jehovah) of hosts".
As noted below, Isaiah
uses this compound Name of God more than any other OT book (although
it is also common in Jeremiah's prophecy). This compound Name of God
is found first in Isa 1:24, where "piles" on another divine title
the Mighty One of Israel. This name describes God as the Master of
all and thus Who can easily accomplish the specific aspects of the
removal described in the following passages.
Lord (0136)
(adon) means the one who is the sovereign master, the One Who
has supreme power and authority and is often used in place of
Yahweh which many Jews felt was too holy to utter, and emphasizes the
supreme authority or absolute mastery of God over all things, animate
and inanimate.
The NET Bible renders the
Name of God in Is 3:1 as "the sovereign LORD". The NET Bible
note adds that...
The title pictures God as the
sovereign King Who has at His disposal a multitude of attendants,
messengers, and warriors to do His bidding. In some contexts, like
this one, the military dimension of His rulership is highlighted. In
this case, the title pictures Him as one Who leads armies into battle
against His enemies. (Note on Isa 1:9)
From a practical standpoint,
this compound Name makes it clear that it is the providential working
of a just God and not "bad luck" that will bring the removal of
supply
and support from Jerusalem and Judah.
The Lord God of hosts -
This Name of God is found 34x in 33 verses in the NAS (2Sa 5:10; Ps.
59:5; 69:6; 80:4, 19; 84:8; 89:8; Is 1:24; 3:1, 15; 10:23, 24;
19:4; 22:5, 12, 14, 15; 28:22; Je 2:19; 15:16; 38:17; 44:7; 46:10;
49:5; 50:25, 31; Amos 4:13; 5:14, 15, 16; 6:8, 14; 9:5)
The virtually identical compound
Name, the Lord, the God of hosts, is use 7 times in the OT - 1
Ki 19:10, 14; Is 10:16, 33; Je 5:14; 35:17; Ho 12:5
Calvin writes that the
reason Isaiah refers to God in this passage as..
the Lord and Jehovah of Hosts is
that the majesty of God might terrify their drowsy and sluggish minds.
God Himself has no need of titles, but our ignorance and stupidity
must be aroused by perceiving His glory as symbolized by His titles. (Commentary
on Isaiah - Volume 1) (English modernized by me)
Jerusalem and Judah -
Isaiah is not addressing the Church which was a mystery in the Old
Testament. The truths in Isaiah have many applications to the modern
Church but the direct recipient of this prophetic exhortation is
Jerusalem and Judah (Judah and Jerusalem are specifically
addressed 11 times in Isaiah - Isa 1:1, Isa 2:1, Isa 3:1, Isa 3:8, Isa
5:3, Isa 7:1, Isa 22:2, Isa 36:7, Isa 37:10, Isa 40:9, Isa 44:26).
Ironside opens his
comments on Isaiah 3 writing...
THIS third chapter continues along
the same line as chapter two, but makes it very definitely clear that
it is Jerusalem and Judah which GOD has in view above all others when
He speaks of coming desolation and unsparing judgment. The covenant
people and the one-time holy city had gone so far from the path of
obedience that GOD Himself prepared them for the vengeance decreed by
weakening their means of defense. (Isaiah
3 - Judah's Fallen Condition)
Supply and support - Note
the emphasis is on not just most of the supply but the whole
supply which will make daily existence difficult. Supply and
support are related Hebrew nouns and thus the idea is that supports of
every kind would be removed. The thoroughness of God's judgement is
pictured by our saying in English that "the rug was pulled out from
under my feet"!
Clearly Isaiah is speaking of a
time of famine as well as disruption of the social fabric of the
society. J Vernon McGee has an interesting observation that...
There are thirteen famines
mentioned in the Word of God, and every one of them is a judgment from
Him upon the nation of Israel.
(McGee,
J V: Thru the Bible Commentary: Thomas Nelson
or
Logos)
Calvin writes that Isaiah
prophetically warns that Jerusalem and Judah...
will have the whole produce of the
harvest taken from them, so that they will perish from famine (cp Lv
26:26; Ezek 4:16). Immediately in a similar manner he addresses their
military strength ("support"), and all that relates to the good order
of the state. Hence we may infer that the Jews boasted of the
prosperity which they at that time enjoyed, so as to entertain a
foolish belief that they were protected against every danger. But
Isaiah threatens that not only the whole country, but Jerusalem
herself, which was the (symbolic) invincible fortress of the nation,
will be exposed to God’s chastisements. The idea is that “The wrath of
God will not only fall on every part of the body, but will pierce the
very heart.” (Commentary
on Isaiah - Volume 1) (English modernized by me)
The question arises as to
when did God remove both supply and support for Jerusalem and Judah?
Clearly this reached an apex in the Babylonian exile but in another
sense this prophecy has been repeated in the years subsequent to the
Babylonian exile.
Supply (04937)
(mish'en) refers literally to a a support and figuratively as
here to that which serves as a protector or provider of sustenance.
The word is used figuratively as that on which one relies. For
example, David in 2Sa 22:19 says that in the day of calamity,
Jehovah
(Yahweh) was his
effective support. Here in Isa 3:1 mish'en is used of the basic
physical life supports such as bread and water, that God will remove
from Jerusalem.
Young makes an
interesting observation regarding supply and support noting
that these...
Two Hebrew words are employed, one
masculine and the other feminine, and thus the thought of totality is
presented. Every kind of stay and staff will be removed. A similar
phenomenon appears in the Arabic language: “he has not either male or
female lamb,” meaning he has nothing (Hariri) and “male and female
wild beasts,” every kind of wild beast. By using both masculine and
feminine the prophet exhausts the category; the thought is that every
kind of support—all support whatever—will be removed. (Young,
Ed: The Book of Isaiah - 3 Volume Commentary. Eerdmans Pub.
1992-hardcopy or
Logos
or
Wordsearch)
Mish'en - 4v in OT -
2Sa22:19, Ps 18:18, Isa 3:1, Isa 10:20
Clarke notes that
The Hebrew words mish'en...mish'enah
come from the same root shaan, to lean against, to incline, to
support; and here, being masculine and feminine, they may signify all
things necessary for the support both of man and woman.
Support (04938)
(mish'enah) refers to a support such as a walking-stick or
staff (Elijah's staff 2Ki 4:29, 30, 31). In Ps 23:4 it refers to the
shepherd's staff (with a crook) which is a comfort and guide the
straying sheep. The idea of both mish'en and mish'enah
is something one leans on.
Mish'enah - 11v in OT -
Ex 21:19 Nu 21:18 Jdg 6:21 2Ki 4:29, 4:31, 18:21 Ps23:4 Is 3:1, 36:6
Eze 29:6, Zec 8:4
In Leviticus God warned
Israel if she disobeyed (cp Lv 26:18)...
I will also break down your pride
of power; I will also make your sky like iron and your earth like
bronze (Ed: figures of speech picturing incredible drought = No
rain and no crops). (Lv 26:19)
When I break your staff of bread,
ten women will bake your bread in one oven (Ed: One oven would
suffice to bake the bread for ten families), and they will bring back
your bread in rationed amounts, so that you will eat and not be
satisfied. (Lv 26:26)
Compare Deuteronomy and
Ezekiel...
The heaven which is over your head
shall be bronze, and the earth which is under you, iron. The Lord will
make the rain of your land powder and dust; from heaven it shall come
down on you until you are destroyed...You shall bring out much seed to
the field but you will gather in little, for the locust will consume
it. (Dt 28:23, 24, 38)
Moreover, He said to me, “Son of
man, behold, I am going to break the staff of bread in Jerusalem, and
they will eat bread by weight and with anxiety, and drink
water by measure and in horror (Ezekiel 4:16)
Whole...whole (03605)
(kol) occurs over 5000x in the OT (percentage wise most
frequently in Deuteronomy [“with the whole heart, the
whole soul, and with all your might”] and
Ecclesiastes ["everything is vanity"]) and means the totality
of something. When accompanied by a negation, kol acquires the
meaning “no.” Kol is all inclusive and speaks of the totality
of something, in this case the supply of sustenance, which Israel
(much like America today) took for granted in the good times that
existed when Isaiah was prophesying. Note the
repetition of this word kol serves to further emphasize the
totality of the reality and severity of this prophetic warning.
Bread (03899)
(lehem as in the famous "house of bread" = "Bethlehem" = Beth =
house + lehem) means bread and more generally speaks of food and/or
anything God has provided for nourishment.
Calvin paraphrases this
first clause as...
God will take away every help and
assistance by which you think that you are upheld, so that nothing
whatever may be left to support you.
Ed Young has a good
argument that...
The fulfillment is not to be sought
in the Babylonian exile but in all the judgments which from that time
on came over Israel and which still rest on that unfortunate people
(cf. comments on Isa 3:12). Israel’s whole history is seen at a
glance, as though the entire drama were completed in the first act.
The exile only began the fulfillment (there were still prophets in the
exile); it did not complete it. (Young,
Ed: The Book of Isaiah - 3 Volume Commentary. Eerdmans Pub.
1992-hardcopy or
Logos
or
Wordsearch) |
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Isaiah 3:2 The
mighty
man and the
warrior, the
judge and the
prophet, the
diviner and the
elder, (NASB:
Lockman) |
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English Translation of
the Greek (Septuagint):
the great and mighty man, the warrior and the judge, and the prophet,
and the counsellor, and the elder,
Amplified: The mighty man and the man of war, the judge and
the [professional] prophet, the one who foretells by divination and
the old man,
(Amplified
Bible - Lockman)
KJV: The mighty man, and the man of war, the judge, and the
prophet, and the prudent, and the ancient,
NET: the mighty men and warriors, judges and prophets,
omen readers and leaders,
(NET
Bible)
NJB: of hero, warrior, judge, prophet, diviner, elder, (NJB)
NLT: He will destroy all the nation's leaders--the
heroes, soldiers, judges, prophets, diviners, elders,
(NLT
- Tyndale House)
Young's Literal: Hero and man of war, judge and
prophet, And diviner and elder, |
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The mighty man and the
warrior, the judge and the prophet, the diviner and the elder : (Is
2:13, 14, 15; 2Ki 24:14, 15, 16; Ps 74:9; La 5:12,
13, 14; Amos 2:3)(Is 9:15; Ezek 8:12; 9:5)
So from bread and water,
Isaiah turns to Jerusalem and Judah's sources of security (mighty man...warrior)
and leadership, both spiritual and secular. These are the categories
of people who in general gave Judah a sense of safety and
institutional/governmental order. These were categories of individuals
that the laity depended on and their removal would lead to virtual
anarchy and radical upheaval of the entire order of society.
Motyer sums up this list
of leading men noting that...
Isaiah heaps up titles,
moving broadly from the national (judge and prophet) to the local
(elder and craftsman), and mixing the legitimate with the illegitimate
(counsellor and enchanter). This creates an impression of the total
collapse of the command structure of society. The dissolution of
society and the abandonment of true religion is always the signal for
superstitions and an obsessive interest in prognostication, hence the
reference to the soothsayer or ‘fortune-teller’. (Motyer, J. A.
The Prophecy of Isaiah. Downers Grove, Ill.: InterVarsity Press)
Warrior...judge - God will
remove both the military and civil support, for the judges made
decisions and undergirded to functioning of the government. These
"stays" would be completely removed.
Delitzsch comments that
as the State, under Uzziah and
Jotham, had become a military one, the prophet in both verses begins
with the mention of military officers. (Isaiah 3 Commentary on the Prophecies of Isaiah)
Calvin writes that
regarding the mighty man...warrior...
Of these he threatens that the Jews
will be wholly deprived, so that they will neither have wisdom or
bravery at battle, nor military forces abroad. He is not careful to
attend to order, but is satisfied with giving a short abridgement, and
mixes one subject with another. He begins with men of war, into whose
hands was committed the defense of the country. God sometimes takes
them away by death, and sometimes by making them soft and effeminate.
The latter is more frequent, so that posterity degenerates from the
bravery of ancestors, and those who were formerly courageous become,
in process of time, cowardly and unfit for war. But we see also that
the former sometimes happens, in consequence of which the boldest men
suddenly lose heart...
The word judge stands for
every kind of governors; and it is certain that by prophets are
meant every kind of teachers. Accordingly, he threatens that the civil
government will be set aside, and that instruction will be at an end,
and that thus the Jews will be destroyed; and, indeed magistrates and
teachers hold the same place in the commonwealth that the two eyes do
in the human body. (Commentary
on Isaiah - Volume 1) (English modernized by me)
We encounter an almost verbatim
fulfillment of the removal of the leading men by the Babylonians...
Then he (Nebuchadnezzar) led away
into exile all (note repetition of "all") Jerusalem and
all the captains and all the mighty men of
valor, ten thousand captives, and all the craftsmen and the
smiths (Ed: Both the Assyrians and the Babylonians had the
practice of removing leaders and influential people from the lands
they conquered which would effectively minimize any native resistance
due to lack of leadership). None remained except the poorest
people of the land. (compare (Isa 39:6; Mic 4:10) So he led
Jehoiachin away into exile to Babylon; also the king's mother and the
king's wives and his officials and the leading men of the land, he led
away into exile from Jerusalem to Babylon. 16 And all the men of
valor, seven thousand, and the craftsmen and the smiths, one thousand,
all strong and fit for war, and these the king of Babylon brought into
exile to Babylon. (2Ki 24:14, 15, 16)
The prophet - Although
the context is not entirely clear, it is possible Isaiah is referring
to false prophets such as those who saw false visions (Ezek 13:9 - see
below). The prophet Ezekiel himself was taken in the second siege of
Jerusalem in 597BC and although removed from Judah and Jerusalem still
functioned as a true prophet of God.
As an aside according to
rabbinical tradition Isaiah was sawn asunder (cp He 11:37) by order of
Manasseh
(697-642BC), and after his
death the prophetic voice was heard no more until the reign of Josiah.
Young comments that...
the mention of prophet
Isaiah shows how serious the deprivation will be that is to come upon
the nation. It was through the prophet that the will of God was
made known, and when the people are left in ignorance of divine
revelation their plight is tragic indeed. A famine of hearing the
words of the Lord is more serious than a famine caused by lack of
food. A contemporary of Isaiah had said, “Behold, the days come,
saith the Lord God, that I will send a famine in the land, not a
famine of bread, nor a thirst for water, but of hearing the words of
the Lord” (Amos 8:11 - Ed: A shepherd layman who prophesied
primarily to the Northern Kingdom circa 755BC). (Ibid)
The diviner (07080)
(qasam) is a verb and means to practice divination wherein one
seeks to foresee or foretell future events or discover hidden
knowledge usually by the interpretation of omens or by the aid of
supernatural powers. All the major prophets condemned divination
(Is. 44:25; Jer. 27:9; 29:8; Ezek. 13:9).
The KJV rendering of "prudent"
misses the essence of the word. The NIV renders it
soothsayer.
Qasam - 20x in OT - Deut.
18:10, 14; Jos. 13:22; 1 Sam. 6:2; 28:8; 2 Ki. 17:17; Isa. 3:2; 44:25;
Jer. 27:9; 29:8; Ezek. 13:9, 23; 21:21, 23, 29; 22:28; Mic. 3:6, 7,
11; Zech. 10:2 and is rendered in the NAS as conjure(1),
divination(2), divine(2), diviner(2), diviners(7), divining(1),
practice(1), practiced(1), use(1), uses(1), utter divinations(1).
Isaiah's inclusion of diviner
and enchanter (Is 3:3) does not signify that he approved of
these practices. Unfortunately, the nation had come to "approve" of
them and to depend on even
these evil, godless methods for their "wisdom" and their survival.
Isaiah wrote disparagingly about Babylon trusting in this kind of
activity (Is 47:12).
Hosea (circa 710BC
prophesying primarily to the northern kingdom, cp Isaiah 740-680BC
speaking to the southern kingdom) issued a similar prophetic warning
that...
the sons of Israel will remain for
many days without king or prince, without sacrifice or sacred pillar (Ed:
This has continued for almost 2000 years - the Temple having been
destroyed in 70AD!), and without ephod or household idols (Ed:
The Jews largely abandoned their pagan images and teraphim when the
Babylonians took them into captivity). (Ho 3:4)
God's word is very clear
regarding diviners/divination...
There shall not be found among you
anyone who makes his son or his daughter pass through the fire, one
who uses divination, one who practices witchcraft, or one who
interprets omens, or a sorcerer... For those nations, which you shall
dispossess, listen to those who practice witchcraft and to diviners,
but as for you, the LORD your God has not allowed you to do so. (Dt
18:10, 14)
Balaam a diviner
met a fitting end...
The sons of Israel also killed
Balaam the son of Beor, the diviner, with the sword among the
rest of their slain. (Joshua 13:22)
God clearly stated through
Ezekiel (who was prophesying to Judah and Jerusalem)...
So My hand will be against the
prophets who see false visions and utter lying divinations.
They will have no place in the council of My people, nor will they be
written down in the register of the house of Israel, nor will they
enter the land of Israel, that you may know that I am the Lord God.
(Ezekiel 13:9)
Zechariah (a post-exilic
prophet) writes that...
the teraphim speak iniquity, and
the diviners see lying visions, and tell false dreams; They
comfort in vain. Therefore the people wander like sheep (Ed:
false dreams lead to false steps and to real affliction!). They are
afflicted, because there is no shepherd. (Zechariah 10:2)
Mark Phelps writes that
divination is...
The art of determining the future
or ascertaining divine will. An important aspect of life throughout
the ancient Near East, divination was not a mystical practice, but a
process based upon empirical observation and cause/effect, practiced
by trained specialists. (Eerdmans Dictionary of the Bible. Page 349.
Grand Rapids, Mich.: W. B. Eerdmans)
Unger adds that...
Divination, the art of obtaining
secret knowledge, especially of the future, is a pagan counterpart of
prophecy. Careful comparison of Scripture will reveal that
inspirational divination is by demonic power, whereas genuine prophecy
is by the Spirit of God. The biblical attitude toward divination is
distinctly hostile (Dt. 18:10, 11, 12).
(Unger,
M. F., Harrison, R. K., Vos, H. F., Barber, C. J., & Unger, M. F. The
New Unger's Bible Dictionary. Chicago: Moody Press)
Elder
(02205)
(zaqen possibly from zaqan = beard) (171 uses in OT and
9 uses in Isaiah = Is 3:2, 5, 14; 9:15; 20:4; 24:23; 37:2; 47:6;
65:20) refers to older
individuals and can convey the ideas of individuals who were of
dignity, rank, privilege,
experience, or authority, as well as those qualified for specific
leadership roles. Refer to the article in
Holman's Dictionary
(Easton;
ISBE-NT
ISBE-OT) for more in depth discussion
of "elders", as used in the Old and New Testaments.
The
Septuagint
translates zaqen with
presbuteros
(see
word study) which
referred to men who were older or
more senior with no negative connotations but rather a sense of
venerability.
Presbuteros is
transliterated into English as “presbyter” (a leader in one of the
Jewish communities--especially a member of the
Sanhedrin--or of the early Christian
churches) and from which the word “priest” (from Late Latin presbyter)
was derived. Presbuteros in the secular Greek culture referred to
older men with seniority to serve as ambassadors to other states and
as advisors within the political community or in the management of
public affairs. So these were men of "ripe age" and experience to whom
was committed the direction and in the New Testament the government of
individual churches. It should be emphasized that in the context of
its Biblical use the concept of elder had less to do with age per se
than with the quality of one's spiritual character (reputation is what
others think about you but character is what those most intimately
associated know is really true about you) and possession of the
ability to teach. Simply being older, including even being older in
the faith, does not by itself qualify a man for leadership in the
church. |
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Isaiah 3:3 The
captain of
fifty and the
honorable
* man, the
counselor and
the
expert
artisan, and
the
skillful
enchanter.
(NASB:
Lockman) |
|
English Translation of
the Greek (Septuagint):
the captain of fifty also, and the honourable counsellor, and the wise
artificer, and the intelligent hearer.
Amplified: The captain of fifty and the man of rank, the
counselor and the expert craftsman and the skillful enchanter.
(Amplified
Bible - Lockman)
KJV: The captain of fifty, and the honourable man, and the
counsellor, and the cunning artificer, and the eloquent orator.
NET: captains of groups of fifty, the respected citizens,
advisers and those skilled in magical arts, and those who know
incantations.
(NET
Bible)
NJB: captain, dignitary, counsellor, architect, soothsayer. (NJB)
NLT: army officers, honorable citizens, advisers, skilled
magicians, and expert enchanters.
(NLT
- Tyndale House)
Young's Literal: Head of fifty, and accepted of faces,
and counsellor, and the wise of artificers, And the intelligent of
charmers. |
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The captain of fifty and
the honorable man, the counselor and the expert artisan, and the
skillful enchanter: (Ex 18:21; Dt 1:15;
1Sa 8:12) (Honorable - Jdg 8:18) (Enchanter - Ex 4:10,14,
15, 16)
Delitzsch comments that the
names of the leaders of the military and of society
are here intermingled without any
attempt at arrangement, because the mighty and magnificent State,
properly regarded is but a heterogeneous mixture of Judaism and
heathenism, and the godless glory will become a mass of utter
confusion when the wrath of Jehovah bursts forth.. (Isaiah 3 Commentary on the Prophecies of Isaiah)
The captain of fifty -
see 2Ki 1:8, 2:16, 17, 1Sa 8:12. This term designates a specific
leader of 50 men. Compare this Hebrew phrase to the Roman term
centurion (from Latin = centurio = century), a military
officer who commanded a hundred men.
The honorable
- This is a Hebrew idiom which more literally reads "the ones
lifted up with respect to the face" (cp "highly respected" = 2Ki 5:1
and "accepted of face" = 2Ki 5:1YLT)
Counselor (03289)
(ya'ats/ya'as) (74x in the OT and 17x in Isaiah = Is
1:26; 3:3; 7:5; 9:6; 14:24, 26, 27; 19:11, 12, 17; 23:8, 9; 32:7, 8;
40:14; 41:28; 45:21) is a verb meaning to advise or counsel. It's most
"famous" use is in the description of the Messiah (Is 9:6
"Counselor").
Expert (chakam)
wise, skilled, experienced.
Artisan (charash)
craftsmen, engravers (basically describes those skilled in some craft
such as metalwork, 1Chr 14:1, woodwork 1Chr 14:1, stonework Ex 28:11).
There may however be an additional nuance intended because the word
for artisan is also used later by Isaiah to describe those
skilled at making idols (Is 40:19, 20, 44:11, 12, 13, 45:16)!
There is no question that they will be removed from the land of Judah!
(These will be carried away - See 2Ki 24:14, 16, Je 24:1, 29:2)
The skillful enchanter -
More literally this reads "the wise with respect to magic", describing
one who could whisper or mutter magical "formulas" (one instructed in
whispering) in clear defiance to God's holy law (see below). Some feel
this represents those who attempt to communicate with the dead
(spiritism) (cp Is 8:19)
Skillful (0995)(biyn)
primarily speaks of understanding or insight and in this context
indicates that these men had specialized knowledge that they
effectively implemented.
Enchanter (03908)
(lahas) was one skilled in magic arts and/or charming, eg, the
act of charming snakes through soothing sounds or whispering (Eccl
10:11, Je 8:17). It is interesting that this same Hebrew noun (lahas)
is the same word used to describe the amulets worn by the
haughty women (Is 3:16-note)
in Isa 3:20-note.
The diviner (in Is 3:3)
and enchanter in this passage were both clearly prohibited by
God, Moses recording that...
There shall not be found among you
anyone who makes his son or his daughter pass through the fire, one
who uses divination, one who practices witchcraft, or one who
interprets omens, or a sorcerer, or one who casts a spell, or a
medium, or a spiritist, or one who calls up the dead. For whoever does
these things is detestable to the Lord; and because of these
detestable things the Lord your God will drive them out before you.
(Dt 18:10, 11, 12)
Later in Isaiah God
describes the utter and complete impotency of divination, witchcraft,
sorcery, astrology, etc, in the time of His judgment ...
But these two things will come on
you suddenly in one day: Loss of children and widowhood. They will
come on you in full measure In spite of your many sorceries
(Heb = kesep = occult practices, magic), In spite of the great power
of your spells (Heb = heber = magical spell or incantation, as
in Dt 18:11 above, cp Ps 58:5). (Is 47:9)
Stand fast now in your spells
(Heb = heber = magical spells or incantations) and in your many
sorceries (Heb = kesep = occult practices, magic) with which you have
labored from your youth; Perhaps you will be able to profit, Perhaps
you may cause trembling. You are wearied with your many counsels; Let
now the astrologers, those who prophesy by the stars,
those who predict by the new moons, stand up and save you from what
will come upon (Is 47:12, 13) |
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Isaiah 3:4 And I will
make mere
lads their
princes, and
capricious
children will
rule over them,
(NASB:
Lockman) |
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English Translation of
the Greek (Septuagint): And
I will make youths their princes, and mockers shall have dominion over
them.
Amplified: And I will make boys their princes, and with
childishness shall they rule over them [with outrage instead of
justice].
(Amplified
Bible - Lockman)
KJV: And I will give children to be their princes, and
babes shall rule over them.
NET: The LORD says, "I will make youths their officials;
malicious young men will rule over them.
(NET
Bible)
NJB: I shall give them boys for princes, raw lads to rule over
them.' (NJB)
NLT: Then he will appoint children to rule over them, and
anarchy will prevail.
(NLT
- Tyndale House)
Young's Literal: And I have made youths their heads, And
sucklings rule over them. |
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And I will make mere lads
their princes, and capricious children will rule over them: (1Ki
3:7, 8, 9; 2Chr 33:1; 34:1; 36:2,5,9,11; Eccl 10:16)
Delitzsch writes that...
deprived of its proper foundation
and torn from its grooves, the kingdom of Judah falls a prey to the
most audacious despotism. (Isaiah 3 Commentary on the Prophecies of Isaiah)
I will - In context, this is
clearly the LORD Himself speaking these words of judgment. While it is
difficult to discern when the LORD ceases speaking in the following
verses, certainly by Is 3:8 Isaiah is once again speaking (for he
refers to the LORD in the third person).
Mere lads - Nature abhors
a vacuum and so does leadership. So when God takes away those things (and
people) in which Judah had placed their trust and depended upon for
military security and social order, this "vacuum" would be
filled by those who were inadequate, incompetent and ill equipped to lead
individuals (mere lads).
We have a clear record of this
pattern when the kingdom was torn from Solomon's son, Rehoboam,
who refused the counsel of the elders and instead listened to the
foolish counsel of young men. (see 1Ki 12:1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9,
10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15). Contrast Solomon's attitude at the inception
of his rule after David (1Ki 3:7).
As Delitzsch notes it is
generally a misfortune when the
king of a country is a lad (Eccl 10:16), (but) it is doubly so when
the princes or magnates surrounding and advising him are also youths
or youngsters, in the bad sense of the term. (Isaiah 3 Commentary on the Prophecies of Isaiah)
Lads (05288)
(naar) refers to a boy or young man and the
Septuagint
translates it with neaniskos
which refers to a relatively young man or youth.
Capricious children will rule
over them - The NET Bible (ref)
has "malicious young men will rule over them". The NLT
paraphrases it - "anarchy shall prevail". The Amplified has
"with childishness shall they rule over them [with outrage instead of
justice]".
Capricious (08586)(ta'alulim)
means wantonness (wanton describes one hard to control, one who is
playfully mean, one who is maliciously and unnecessarily cruel or
destructive, one who acts without justification). It describes those
who are unstable, capricious and thus unpredictable.
Constable observes
that...
Wicked King
Manasseh
began ruling over Judah when
he was only 12, and Kings Jehoiakim, Jehoiachin, and Zedekiah, who
followed him later, proved capricious. (Isaiah 3 - Expository Notes)
The NET Bible note adds
that...
The immediate context makes clear
the fact that they are mere youths. The coming judgment will sweep
away the leaders, leaving a vacuum which will be filled by
incompetent, inexperienced youths. (NETBible
Isaiah 3:4 - Scroll to bottom of page)
Solomon writes...
Woe to you, O land, whose king is a
lad and whose princes feast in the morning. (Eccl 10:16)
This prophecy was literally
fulfilled when the
Manasseh
[circa 697-642BC] began his
reign over Judah at age 12. (see 2Chr 33:1,2, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9)
Clarke adds that...
This also was fully accomplished in
the succession of weak and wicked princes, from the death of Josiah to
the destruction of the city and temple, and the taking of Zedekiah,
the last of them, by Nebuchadnezzar.
Young has an excellent word
for America...
How good God is to give a nation
worthy rulers. May we ever appreciate such and constantly render our
gratitude to Him for them. May we pray that He will spare us from the
calamity of unworthy and unable rulers. Prayer must always be made for
the officers of state. (Young,
Ed: The Book of Isaiah - 3 Volume Commentary. Eerdmans Pub.
1992-hardcopy or
Logos
or
Wordsearch) |
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Isaiah 3:5 And the
people will be
oppressed,
each
one by
another, and
each
one by his
neighbor; The
youth will
storm against
the
elder and the
inferior
against the
honorable.
(NASB:
Lockman) |
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English Translation of
the Greek (Septuagint): And
the people shall fall, man upon man, and every man upon his neighbor:
the child shall insult the elder man, and the base the honourable.
Amplified: And the people shall be oppressed, each one by
another, and each one by his neighbor; the child shall behave himself
proudly and with insolence against the old man, and the lowborn
against the honorable [person of rank].
(Amplified
Bible - Lockman)
KJV: And the people shall be oppressed, every one by another,
and every one by his neighbour: the child shall behave himself proudly
against the ancient, and the base against the honourable.
NET: The people will treat each other harshly; men will
oppose each other; neighbors will fight. Youths will proudly defy the
elderly and riffraff will challenge those who were once respected.
(NET
Bible)
NJB: People will be ill-treated by one another, each by
his neighbour; the young will insult the aged, and the low, the
respected. (NJB)
NLT: People will take advantage of each other--man against man,
neighbor fighting neighbor. Young people will revolt against
authority, and nobodies will sneer at honorable people.
(NLT
- Tyndale House)
Young's Literal: And the people hath exacted -- man upon
man, Even a man on his neighbour, Enlarge themselves do the youths
against the aged, And the lightly esteemed against the honoured. |
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And the people will be
oppressed, each one by another, and each one by his neighbor; The
youth will storm against the elder and the inferior against the
honorable:
Delitzsch comments that
then the people become like the
government: passions are let loose, and all restraints of modesty are
burst asunder. (Isaiah 3 Commentary on the Prophecies of Isaiah)
In chapter 9 Isaiah
records a similar refrain...
By the fury (ideas expressed by
this Hebrew noun = a surpassing measure or excess) of the LORD of
hosts (Jehovah of the armies = a warrior) (See
Jehovah Sabaoth, LORD of hosts)
the land is burned up, and the people are like fuel for the fire. No
man spares his brother. And they slice off what is on the right hand
but still are hungry, and they eat what is on the left hand but they
are not satisfied. Each of them eats the flesh of his own arm.
Manasseh devours Ephraim, and Ephraim Manasseh, and together
they are against Judah. In spite of all this His anger does not turn
away, and His hand is still stretched out. (Is 9:19, 20, 21)
The following passages further amplify Isaiah's picture of a divisive
spirit and absorption in self sustenance - Is 11:13; Je 9:3, 4, 5, 6,
7, 8; 22:17; Ezek 22:6,7,12; Amos 4:1; Mic 3:1, 2, 3,11;
Zec 7:9, 10, 11; Mal 3:5; Jas 2:6; 5:4)
Oppressed (05065)(nagas)
to oppress, to be pressed or harassed, to drive (be a taskmaster), to
exact (to call for forcibly, to force or compel, to extort, to demand
as a right, to insist upon), to exert demanding pressure. The root
conveys the sense of exertion of demanding oppressive pressure for
payment or labor. Although nagas is a verb, the participle is used to
describe a taskmaster or slave driver. For example in Ex 3:7 the
taskmasters caused affliction of God's people, but in the present
context the affliction is not from the Egyptians, but from one Jew to
another illustrative of the total breakdown of society in Judah and
Jerusalem.
Delitzsch comments that
nagas
signifies to treat as tyrant or
taskmaster. The meanest selfishness then stifles all nobler motives;
one becomes a tyrant over another, and rude insolence takes the place
of reverence, which, by the law of nature, as well as the Torah (Lv
19:32) and custom, is due to the aged and superiors from boys and
those in the humbler ranks...When there is disregard of the
distinctions due to age and rank, the State in a short time becomes a
wild and waste scene of confusion. (Isaiah 3 Commentary on the Prophecies of Isaiah)
Nagas - 23v in the OT -
Exod. 3:7; 5:6, 10, 13f; Deut. 15:2f; 1 Sam. 13:6; 14:24; 2 Ki. 23:35;
Job 3:18; 39:7; Isa. 3:5, 12; 9:4; 14:2, 4; 53:7; 58:3; 60:17; Dan.
11:20; Zech. 9:8; 10:4.
Isaiah use of nagas
in chapter 58 helps us get a sense of the meaning of this verb where
God answers the peoples' question regarding fasting...
Why have we fasted and You do not
see? Why have we humbled ourselves and You do not notice?’ (Jehovah
answers) Behold, on the day of your fast you find your desire, and
drive hard (nagas; Lxx = huponusso = to sting, prick and so to
prod or goad) all your workers. (Is 58:3)
In another use of nagas
we read...
Now the men of Israel were
hard-pressed (nagas) on that day, for Saul had put the
people under oath, saying, “Cursed be the man who eats food before
evening, and until I have avenged myself on my enemies.” So none of
the people tasted food.(1Sa 14:24)
The NAS translates
nagas as drive hard(1), driver(1), exact(2), exacted(1),
hard-pressed(2), oppressed(2), oppressor(4), oppressors(2),
overseers(1), ruler(1), taskmaster(1), taskmasters(5).
The
Septuagint
translates nagas with the
Greek verb sumpipto (literally = fall together) which means to
collapse (Lk 6:49), to experience inward breakdown (collapse). The
sense in the context seems to be that the people shall experience an
inward breakdown as all the pillars of society are removed by
Jehovah.
Grogan writes that...
The people were showing too great a
tendency to put their trust in human beings (Is 2:22). The prophet
warned them that the objects of their trust were to be removed. Those
traditionally respected—"the old," "the honorable," (Is 3:5)—will be
violently replaced by the manifestly inadequate and by the base
oppressor.
(Gaebelein,
F, Editor: Expositor's Bible Commentary OT 7 Volume Set: Books -
Grogan, G. Isaiah. Zondervan Publishing
or
Pradis = computer version)
Each one by another -
Literally "man against man".
Each one by his neighbor
- Literally "A man against his neighbor".
The youth will storm against
the elder - A description of chaos and anarchy (cp Jdg 21:25)
Storm (proudly defy) (07292)
(rahab) means to press one's plea or be in a state of
contention with someone, especially describes verbal or legal strife.
Rahab denotes a loud-mouthed, tempestuous and then even arrogant attitude. The idea
is to act fiercely against, to act boisterously, to act arrogantly, to
press upon as in Pr 6:3 (importune).
Rahab - 4x in the OT -
Ps. 138:3; Pr 6:3; Song 6:5; Isa. 3:5
The
Septuagint translates
rahab in this
verse with the verb
proskopto
(word
study) which literally means to strike against
(Mt 4:6), to make contact with someone in a bruising or violent manner
(Mt 7:27 "burst against), to cause offense or displeasure.
Proskopto in its literal use
pictures a traveler who bumps against an obstacle and is caused to
stumble.
Young adds that...
When respect for age goes, moral
anarchy is at hand. Youths will storm against, that is, they will act
insolently or will press on against the aged. Respect for old age had
been coupled in the law with the fear of God, “Thou shalt rise up
before the hoary head, and honour the face of the old man, and fear
thy God: I am the Lord” (Lv 19:32). When all authority passes, respect
for age also passes. One evidence of the degeneration of a government
and people is seen in the manner in which the aged are treated. What
is here pictured is a war of all against all. (Ibid)
Inferior
(07034)(qalah)
is from a root which signifies the lowering of another’s social
position and is frequently (as in this verse) used as the antonym of
"glory and honor" (kabod). The idea is the person who is lightly
esteemed or even despised.
Veritable "nobodies" are coming
against those who are Judah and Jerusalem's to be respected.
Young rightly observes
that...
Disrespect for age and for those
deserving of respect is a sign of pure barbarism. In such times, when
the government itself is no longer responsible, the lowest classes
gain the upper hand. It is a time when neither life nor property is
safe, and when the decencies of life are constantly violated. Good
government is one of God’s best gifts to a sinful race. How great then
is the sin of those who refuse to concern themselves with their
responsibilities as citizens of the state! (Ibid)
Comment: Beloved, does this
not make you weep over modern American pop culture which in so many
ways displays gross disrespect for parenteral authority (cp children
suing their parents for what in former days was deemed acceptable
corporeal punishment!)
The
Septuagint translates
qalah in this verse with the adjective atimos meaning
literally without honor and thus those who are disrespected, despised
or considered insignificant (in this context) in the Judean society.
Qalah - 6v in OT - Dt
25:3; 27:16; 1Sa 18:23; Pr 12:9; Is 3:5; 16:14 and rendered in the NAS
as degraded(2), dishonors(1), inferior(1), lightly esteemed(2).
Honorable
(03513)
(kabod) is from a root word meaning weighty or heavy and here
speaks of a "weighty" person in society, one who is honorable,
impressive, worthy of respect and which is the meaning in >50% of
uses. Kabod is used to describe God in Is 3:8 (literally
= the eyes of His glory)
The
Septuagint translates
kabod in this verse with the adjective entimos (en = in
+ time = honor, respect, reverence, esteem) meaning literally "in
honor" and thus those who are respected, esteemed to be somebodies of
considerable worth or those who are highly regarded.
The inferior against the
honorable - "the lightly esteemed against the honoured" (YLT) The
NET Bible has a picturesque rendering of this phrase = "riffraff
will challenge those who were once respected". Honor
will take a backseat in this society in which the moral order is
turned upside down.
The picture is that
of a society whose underpinnings are broken and which is therefore in
total disarray. This is inevitably what happens when God removes the
pillars of a society. Beloved, can we as believers in Jesus Christ
read these passages and not lament and mourn over the current state of
affairs in America, where we have seen prayer and Bible reading
removed from schools for over 3 decades. Are we not reaping the bitter
harvest from these God rejecting seeds as we witness the foundations
of a once strong moral structure crumbling before our very eyes? I
cannot write these words without thinking of God's encouraging words
of mercy in the midst of His warnings of wrath when He declared...
If I shut up the heavens so that
there is no rain, or if I command the locust to devour the land, or if
I send pestilence among My people, and My people who are called by My
name humble themselves and pray, and seek My face
and turn from their wicked ways ( =
repentance - see word study),
then
(once all 4 conditions are met!) I will hear from heaven, will
forgive their sin, and will heal their land. (2Chr 7:13,
14)
God was speaking to Israel in
this passage but the principle surely applies to His Church. Dear
believer, are you praying this prayer urgently and incessantly for
America? If not please consider making this prayer a priority, for in
the absence of a heaven sent revival, America is destined for far more
difficult times as we continually remove every vestige of God from our
society. |
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