Poor Isaiah. He was serving exactly where God wanted
him. There was no question that he was fulfilling his ministry – his calling.
And yet he despaired over his lack of results. He didn’t know if the seeds he
had planted would ever bear fruit. Paul reminds us in I Corinthians 15: 58, “Always give
yourself fully to the work of the Lord, because you know that your labor in the
Lord is not in vain.” Many Christians work hard in the fields of the Lord with
very little to show for it, but as John Calvin said, the results are “not always visible to the
eyes of men.” Someone else observes that despondency arises when we
listen to ourselves instead of looking to God as our source of power.*
This verse in Isaiah is remarkable for two reasons: 1)
Isaiah is not afraid to speak his mind to God; and 2) God’s answer follows
immediately behind his complaint. If you could take a peek at one of my prayer
journals, you would find many entries that sound just like this. Before the ink
has dried on my whining, God’s answer flows right out of my pen onto the paper,
showing me how shallow my faith can be.
To Isaiah, God reveals that everything is in his hands – and what else does Isaiah –
or we – need to know?
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