sermon

God Saves His Stubborn Children from Plans of Self-Salvation (Isaiah Sermon 32)

November 18, 2012

Israel has plans of self-salvation, but God reminds His stubborn people to wait patiently for His better salvation, both then and eternally.

Open in your Bibles, if you would, to Isaiah chapter 30. Looking this morning, at this magnificent chapter. One of the hardest parts of the Christian life, I think, is waiting. God is calling on us to wait as he does. That I can prove it’s part of the Christian life is not difficult. You can think about the end of 1 Thessalonians 1, where Paul celebrates the conversion of the Thessalonians. And the report that came back to him of what God had done in those people. He says, “They tell how you turned to God from idols to serve the living and true God and to wait for his Son from Heaven, Jesus Christ who rescues us from the coming wrath.” Do you see those two verbs? To serve and to wait, that’s what we’re called on to do. We’re called on to wait on the Lord. And so there are many verses in the New Testament that celebrate, that command, patience, the need for perseverance or patience. That we must wait under the hand of God. That we must humble ourselves and array ourselves under his mighty hand. That in due time, he may lift us up.

And that waiting is hard, but it’s absolutely essential to our salvation. “Consider it pure joy, my brothers, whenever you face trials of many kinds, because you know that the testing of your faith develops perseverance.” Patience. What’s that for but waiting? Perseverance must finish its work so that you’ll be mature and complete, not lacking anything. So the journey from immaturity to maturity is a long one, it doesn’t happen quickly, and you must have patience. And you must have patience during trials, that’s the hard part. Waiting is hard, but it’s essential to our future inheritance. It says in Hebrews 6:12 that we are to, “Imitate those who, by faith and patience, inherit what has been promised.” You won’t inherit without patience, so you must wait. You must wait day after day, it’s just a central part of the everyday Christian life, but it’s also a unique challenge for some people who are going through extreme trials.

I think about the Parishes, they have been waiting for Andy’s healing since the accident happened, and they continue to wait. It’s a severe trial of waiting. I think about our brothers and sisters in persecuting parts in the world. I think about pastors that are incarcerated for their faith, and they’re waiting for their release, they’re waiting for God to answer their prayers, so are their wives and their children and their churches, waiting that God would set them free. There’s some under chronic pain, severe pain, and they’re just waiting for deliverance, just waiting to be set free. God is just saying, ‘No, not yet. You just need to wait.’

And the gist of this text here is that if we don’t wait under God’s hand, we are displaying faithlessness, a sinful faithlessness. We need to wait, as one pastor put it, “In God’s place and at God’s pace.” It’s good to remember that, isn’t it? Wait where God has you, and wait there as long as God wants you to stay there. Let him choose the pace and in many cases it’s gonna be a lot slower than you want. God wants us to wait. To wait on him, because that’s what he’s doing, he’s waiting. And I know it’s not easy, but it’s of the essence of faith. And what I wanna do in this sermon today is to teach you how to wait. To teach you how to wait on the Lord. To teach you how to let God’s word speak hope into your heart so that you wait well. Because we’re so impatient.

Do you see that in your own life? I see it in myself, and I wouldn’t say every time I drive, but many times that I drive. I must know that when everybody ahead of me is driving too slowly, something’s wrong with all those people. Sooner or later, the Spirit says, ‘No, it’s you.’ [laughter] Driving home just the other day, and one slow driver turned off and the next one turned on right in front of me. And I said, “Meet the new boss, same as the old boss.” I said that out loud. Didn’t I? Some kids who were with me. Didn’t I say that out loud? “Meet the new boss, same as the old boss.” I was impatient that day. Now, it’s funny we laugh, but this is a plague to my soul. It is unbelief to not wait under God’s hand. It’s unbelief. And in our text, God calls it out. He calls his stubborn children out for not waiting for him and waiting on him, for making plans of their own, going their own way. ‘Cause here’s the deal, when you are on the highway of life, and God’s providence calls on a mudslide, like happened to us in Nepal, and you’re stopped. There are two ways to show unbelief in that situation, two different ways. The first is to grow overwhelmed with discouragement and quit the journey. It happens in divorce, it happens in a lot of settings. To just give up the ministry, people turn their backs and say, ‘This is just too hard,’ they give up the mission field. They give up the ministry, and I’m not saying that it’s wrong to leave the mission field, or to even leave the ministry of God leads to do something else. But there are some situations in which it’s done by unbelief because the people aren’t willing to wait. So they quit, ’cause it’s hard, they quit. That’s one way. The other way, again, to stay with the bumper to bumper, traffic stop analogy, is to pull off on the shoulder and go four wheeling. You know what I’m saying? To go across someone’s front lawn, ‘Now I have got a four-wheel drive, let’s see what it can do.’ Take matters in your own hands and go in a way God has not told you to go, not by his Spirit, to go solve the problem yourself and get rolling again. And we do that, we do both of those. We quit or we just take matters in our own hands and go when God is telling you to wait on him.

So that’s what Isaiah 30 is about. The context here is, again the southern kingdom of Judah, King Hezekiah and Assyria, that vicious conquering nation is coming, they’re coming. They’re probably already there. They are probably already fighting and coming. And Judah has basically four choices: they can go out and meet them in battle, they can fight them, and then retreat to the fortress of Jerusalem and fight them there. The problem with that is they’re gonna lose. The Assyrians are far stronger than they are, and they’re gonna lose, they’ve won everywhere. They can submit to them, they can surrender. The problem is with that is that many of the men are gonna die, women ravished and the whole nation enslaved, ’cause that’s just who the Assyrians were. They can send emissaries with gold and silver to some powerful nation nearby, to ally with them and come help them militarily. Or they can repent from their sins and wait on God for supernatural deliverance. And what they choose to do is that third option. It’s just regular habit pattern of that little southern kingdom of Judah, they do it again and again and again, you just have to trace it out. Maybe I have noticed the pattern. But when the northern kingdom of Israel threatened them militarily. They were enemies, they were not allies, they were enemies. When the northern kingdom of Israel threatened them, they made an alliance with Syria, Damascus. When Israel and Syria threatened them together, they made an alliance with Assyria, the vicious northern empire. One commentator said that’s very much like a mouse being threatened by a larger mouse asking a cat for deliverance, ‘Sure, I’ll come help you. I’ll be happy to. I’m coming right your way.’ Devours in both. Now threatened by Assyria, what do they do? Turn to Egypt and make the same kind of mistake, the same kind of alliance. When God was calling on them to repent and to wait.

God gives timeless, unchanging counts, and look at verse 15, Isaiah 30, and verse 15, “This is what the Sovereign Lord, the Holy One of Israel, says: “In repentance and rest is your salvation. In quietness and trust is your strength.”” That’s his advice through the prophet, ‘This is what I’m telling you to do, you wanna be delivered? Do that.’ And then in verse 18, very, very sweetly, very beautifully, he says this, and this is really for me, verse 18, the centerpiece of the chapter. I’m gonna translate a little bit differently than NIV, “The Lord waits to be gracious to you; he exalts himself to show you compassion. For the Lord is a God of justice. Blessed are all who wait for him!” So at the beginning of verse 18, the Lord is the one waiting, at the end of the verse, he speaks a word of blessing to all of those who will join him in waiting. God waits. It’s mysterious, the Sovereign God, “All day long, I have held out my hands to a disobedient and obstinate people.” He’s a waiting God, and yet sovereign over people’s hearts, it’s a mystery to me, but he waits. He waits for the right time for everything in the fullness of time, he does all things. And at end of that verse, verse 18, he promises a blessing to you if you’ll wait on him. But in this chapter, these people were seizing control, taking hold of the situation and moving out, four-wheeling, if you know what I’m saying, going across people’s lawns and fields of corn to get where they wanted to go.

I. Woe to Those Who Make Plans to Save Themselves (vs. 1-7)

So look at verses 1-7, you see that, “”Woe to those”, says the prophet, “Who make plans to save themselves.” God speaks a word of prophetic judgment. A prophetic woe. In verse one, “Woe to the obstinate children,” declares the Lord, “to those who carry out plans that are not mine, forming an alliance, but not by my Spirit, heaping sin upon sin.”” So he speaks his prophetic word of woe to Judah for doing this. He calls them obstinate children, stubborn children, stubborn in their own ways. They are his children. Isaiah 1:2 says, “Hear, O heavens! Listen, O earth! For the Lord has spoken: “I reared children and brought them up, but they have rebelled against me.” So these are the stubborn children, the obstinate children, he’s talking to them. And what is their sin? Well, making and trusting in and acting on plans that don’t come from God. ““They’re carrying out plans that are not mine,” declares the Lord, “Forming an alliance, but not by my Spirit.”” They are moving out, away from God, doing it their own way. And God is able to give wisdom and counsel, he’s able to send godly messengers, prophets who will speak the truth. We’ll talk about them a little bit later. But God is able to tell you the truth, he’s able to speak to you, he’s able to direct you. Look at verse 21, “Whether you turn to the right or to the left, your ears will hear a voice behind you saying, ‘This is the way; walk in it.'” God is able to give counsel, He’s able to give advice, but they’re not listening, they’re not asking, they’d already made up their mind what they’re gonna do. They were not waiting under God’s mighty hand. And so in verse two, “Who go down to Egypt without consulting me; who look for help to Pharaoh’s protection, to Egypt’s shade for refuge.” Do you see that phrase? Without consulting me.

Convicting for me is the simple question: How many prayerless decisions do I make in a day? How many times do I decide weighty things and don’t even ask God? It’s convicting. It’s convicting. They didn’t even ask me. They just went to Egypt without consulting me. And he said, “Heaping sin upon sin.” What that means is there was sin that was bringing the Assyrians, now they’re adding to the sin. And what was the sin? The violation of God’s laws. Their sexual immorality, their idolatry, their false religions, their drunkenness, their love of luxury, all of these things. These are the sins, that’s the sin, and now they’re heaping sin upon sin by seeking to remedy the problem themselves, saving themselves. Instead of falling on their faces and asking God’s forgiveness, they send emissaries down to Egypt with gold to form an alliance, “But not by my Spirit,” says the Lord.


“Convicting for me is the simple question: How many prayerless decisions do I make in a day? How many times do I decide weighty things and don’t even ask God? It’s convicting.”

This is the essence of my problem and yours as well, isn’t it? Moving out, not consulting God, not asking his wisdom, not moving by the power of the Spirit, doing your own thing in the flesh? And why Egypt of all places? Why go back to Egypt? Have we forgotten our history? Centuries before God beat them, badly, remember? They were your captors, you were enslaved by them. 400 years. And God sent Moses and God bared his holy arm and poured out wrath on Egypt, 10 dreadful plagues. And then when Pharaoh pursued with his army, God destroyed the whole army in the Red Sea. Egypt is nothing. So why would you go to a defeated enemy like that that enslaved you? Why go back to Egypt? Why would you do that? And God had said specifically, in Deuteronomy, right before they entered the promised land, ‘Don’t go back to Egypt. Don’t ever go back there again.’ It says in the instructions to the king in Deuteronomy 17:16, “The king moreover,” he says, “Must not acquire great numbers of horses for himself or make the people return to Egypt to get more of them, for the Lord has told you, “You must not go back that way again.” No one who puts his hand to the plow and looks back is fit for the kingdom of heaven. Don’t look back, remember Lot’s wife. Don’t look back. Why are you going back to Egypt for help? Have you forgotten who crushed Egypt? He’s the one you ought to be dealing with. And he says very plainly, the prophet says, ‘It’s not going to help you. It will not help you.’ Look at verse three, “But Pharaoh’s protection will be your shame, Egypt’s shade will bring you disgrace.” Shame and disgrace follow that kind of bad decision making. Shame and disgrace follows, moving out, four-wheeling, so to speak, pulling out on the shoulder and going across someone’s yard because you can’t wait on God and ask him what to do and wait for his timing. It brings shame and disgrace. It’s not going to help you. Verses four and five, “Though they have officials in Zoan and their envoys have arrived in Hanes, everyone will be put to shame because of a people useless to them, who bring neither help nor advantage, but only shame and disgrace.” I don’t think Isaiah could have said it any more plainly. It will not help you, don’t send the money. Don’t do it.

Actually, in verses six and seven, Isaiah takes a bit of a humorous look. He says I wanna speak in oracle about the animals of the desert between Judah and Egypt. Let’s talk about the animals. So it’s a little, “oracle about the animals of the Negev:” he says, “Through a land of hardship and distress,” it’s almost like a little vignette, like a mini motion pictures. You get to this picture in your mind, “Through a land of hardship and distress, desert land, picture deserts, and lions and lionesses and adders and darting snakes. The envoys are moving through, the envoys carrying their riches on donkeys’ backs, their treasures on humps of camels to that unprofitable nation, to Egypt, whose help is utterly useless. Therefore, I call her Rahab, the do-nothing.” So just picture in your mind’s eye, these poor beasts of burden, carrying precious metals that are inevitably dense and heavy, those poor animals, those poor donkeys and camels, and all of it for nothing, as they go down to Egypt. The envoys will certainly welcome them gladly and take their money, but nothing good is gonna come from it. Verses 1-7, God speaks a word of woe to Judah for even doing it. The fact that they add sin to sin, and they will not deal with God, who is the real issue, instead they’re making their own plans and moving out in their own direction.

II. Woe to Those Who Want God’s Prophets to Speak Pleasant Lies (vs. 8-17)

In verses 8-17, he speaks a word of woe to those who want prophets to speak pleasant lies to them. And it’s interesting, Isaiah in verse eight was commanded to write this prophecy down. Thank God he did, that’s why we’re here today, looking at his words, ’cause God told him to write it, write it down. And so, the writing prophets, they have left for us a record of God’s word, and it’s timeless, He’s speaking to us today. God intended to speak to us today, because he commanded Isaiah to write it down. So look at verse eight, “Go now, write it on a tablet for them, inscribe it on a scroll, that for the days to come it may be an everlasting witness.” So, they had the word and even more written down, but they didn’t listen. They’re not listening to it. The hardness of their heart is exposed, verse nine, “These are rebellious people, deceitful children, children unwilling to listen to the Lord’s instruction.” Again and again in Isaiah, it’s “Hear, O heavens! Listen, O earth!” again and again, God speaks and we must listen. But these are rebellious children, and they are not willing to listen. God again and again sent, what he called, my servants, the prophets, ‘I sent my servants, the prophets to you and you just didn’t listen.’

So whenever there was this external threat, God would send a message telling them what to do. Go out and surrender, stand and fight, go out, but don’t bring any weapons, just go and sing and I’ll destroy them. I mean, he’ll tell them, it’s something different every time, but ‘Just listen to me and I’ll tell you what to do.’ But the people didn’t wanna listen. Now, that doesn’t mean they didn’t want preaching, oh, they want preaching, they want a certain kind of preaching. They wanted some people to come and tell them some things, they were eager for that. Look at verses 10-11, “They say to the seers,” prophets, ““See no more visions!” and to the prophets, “Give us no more visions of what is right! Tell us pleasant things, prophesy illusions. Leave this way, get off this path and stop confronting us with the Holy One of Israel!”” Oh, is that powerful. They didn’t want God, they didn’t want the consuming fire, they didn’t want the Holy One of Israel. So they’re talking to Isaiah and to other true prophets saying, Stop doing this, stop it. Stop talking to me about God’s holiness. Stop talking to me about God as the consuming fire. I don’t wanna hear it anymore. Stop it. Leave this way, get off this path. Stop preaching like that. Tell us pleasant things. Funny or happy things. Lie to me. Just make me happy. It’s the regular tragic history of the Jewish nation as recorded in Scripture. Stephen nailed them for it in Acts seven, “You stiff-necked people,” he said to the Sanhedrin, “With uncircumcised hearts and ears! You’re just like your fathers: You always resist the Holy Spirit. Was there ever a prophet your fathers did not persecute?” Is there even one? Jesus said the same thing, “You build tombs for the prophets and decorate the graves of the righteous, and you say, “If we had lived in the days of our forefathers, we wouldn’t have taken part with them in shedding the blood of the prophets.”” But Jesus said, ‘So you testify against yourselves that you’re the descendants of those who murdered the prophets. Fill up then the measure of the sins of your forefathers, go ahead and do it, kill me,’ which they did.

This is a tragic thing. Again and again, think of the examples, think of wicked king Ahab. Remember that, when he’s gonna go out to fight Ramoth-Gilead, and he’s got godly king Jehoshaphat next to him, remember? And they got all these false prophets saying, ‘Go and succeed, you’re going to win. It’s gonna be awesome.’ I don’t think they said awesome, but anyway, ‘You’re just gonna be great. You’re gonna be victorious.’ And Jehoshaphat with that sensitivity from the Lord, he’s like, ‘Isn’t there a prophet of the Lord that we could inquire of? I don’t care if you’ve got 5000 of these guys, they’re worthless. Are there any prophets of the Lord?’ Do you remember what Ahab said? ‘Well, there is one, but I hate him, because he always says bad things about me.’ [chuckle] Well, I think you might wanna listen, King Ahab to Micaiah, son of Imlah. Remember Jehoshaphat said, ‘The king should not say that.’ I don’t know how he said that, but that’s what he said. Or in Jeremiah’s day, they wanted “priests and prophets alike. To treat the wound of the people as though were not serious. To say ‘Peace, peace,’ when there is no peace.” That’s what they wanted. But then when Jeremiah told the truth, they put him in a miry pit, they put him in prison. And Jonathan, in the secretary’s house, they put him in prison, they persecute him. And so, Paul gave a clear warning about all this, this phenomenon here in verses 10-11. He says in 2 Timothy 4:3-4, “For the time will come when men will not put up with sound doctrine. Instead to suit their own desires, they will gather around them a large number of teachers to say what their itching ears want to hear. They will turn their ears away from the truth and turn aside to myths.”

So, the fundamental test of a true prophet of God then and a true teacher, pastor, teacher, now is the willingness to bring the whole counsel of God’s word, no matter what the people think, no matter what the people say, to tell the truth. This was the little boy, Samuel’s test, that he had to go tell Eli that his house was going to be destroyed because of his sin. Every pastor faces the pressure of shaping his message to suit the taste of the people. Everyone does. Every proclaimer of God’s word has to make this fundamental choice that Paul talks about in Galatians 1:10, “Am I now trying to win the approval of men, or of God? Or am I trying to please men? If I were still trying to please men, I would not be a servant of Christ.” Flannery O’Connor put it this way, “The truth does not change according to our ability to stomach it.” So we’re not going to change it based on whether it’s palatable, or as Paul said later in Galatians 4:16, “Have I now become your enemy by telling you the truth?” But apparently, back in Isaiah’s day, that’s exactly how it was. He became their enemy by telling the truth.

So what pleasant things did the people want to hear? Well, the 21st century version would be, ‘I’m okay, you’re okay. The future is bright, God’s happy with us. Everything’s just how it should be. Let’s eat.’ Something like that. Or, ‘It’s not time to eat yet, I’ll tell you some fun stories, I’ll entertain you until the time’s up.’ This will make them very popular with their hearers. But Jesus said, “Woe to you when all men speak well of you, for that’s how they spoke of the false prophets.” I meditate on that. It’s like, what is it about these guys that everyone likes what they say, because they say things that everyone likes? Moralistic diatribe, fun stories, different things that we could all agree on. But they stay away from those things that confront people with the Holy One of Israel, put it that way. Well, in verses 12-14, the future for this people who turn away is dark indeed. “Therefore,” do you see the word therefore in verse 12, because you want the tickling ears, because you don’t want to be confronted with the Holy One of Israel, I love what it says, ‘Stop confronting us with the Holy One of Israel. Therefore, this is what the Holy One of Israel says.’ In other words, he’s not going away. [chuckle] This is his universe. We’re in his living room, he’s not going anywhere. So, “Therefore, this is what the Holy One of Israel says: “Because you have rejected this message, and relied on oppression and depended on deceit, this sin will become for you like a high wall, cracked and bulging, that collapses suddenly, in an instant. It will break in pieces like pottery, shattered so mercilessly that among its pieces, not a fragment will be found for taking coals from a hearth or scooping water out of a cistern.” So they’re telling lies, they see a seer is coming, they need a wall of protection, right? So they build up a wall of lies, and he says ‘It’s poor construction, don’t you see it’s leaning over, the mortar isn’t setting. There’s cracks in it. It’s coming down. I wouldn’t stand under this wall if I were you, ’cause it’s coming down.’

Reminds me of when we want to visit Haiti after the earthquake, and we saw a school that had been condemned and the construction there would not have been accepted in the US, there was no rebar, there were some other things, and it was just dangerous. And so, there are already broken pieces of cinder block all over the place, but many of it hadn’t fallen yet, and they just condemned it, ’cause they can see what’s gonna happen. And that’s what Isaiah’s saying here, it’s the same thing, this bulging wall of lies, and it’s just gonna come down on your head. It’s going to destroy you.

But here we come in verse 15 to the text I’ve already read, God’s beautiful, central invitation stands. This is our hope. This is the joy. “This is what the Sovereign Lord, the Holy One of Israel says, ‘In repentance and rest is your salvation, in quietness and trust is your strength.'” So God speaks, this Holy One of Israel, speaks a word of grace, he speaks a word of blessing to us, the word of counsel. “In repentance and rest, in quietness and trust,” that’s where your salvation is. Repentance is literally turning in: turning away from your sins, and rest means don’t venture forth on some path God didn’t tell you to go on. Stay here, stay put under the mighty hand of God. Submit yourself unto God’s mighty hand, rest under his hand, rest under it. In quietness is: be at peace under God’s hand. The opposite I think of impatience is quietness based on faith, you’re quiet under God’s plan, trusting Him to work it out. And your heart is not murmuring, you’re quiet. So quietness, and you’re accepting what’s happening as the sovereign will of God. And then ultimately, as always, trust faith, ultimately it’s faith. Trust in me, believe in me, and I will save you. He says it again and again, By faith alone, “The righteous will live by faith,” Habakkuk 2:4, it’s what he gives them. It’s his timeless counsel, repentance, rest, quietness and trust.

But look at the people’s reaction, “But you would have none of it.” It’s just the pain, the pathos of that statement. ‘I told you what to do, but look what you’re saying to me, but you would have none of it. You said no.’ Do you see that word right in the text, ‘You said no.’ Who are they saying no to? To God who said in repentance, rest, quietness and trust. They said, no, not that. We have a better plan. We have a better plan. We’re gonna flee on horses, we got some good horses. God says ‘Fine, I’ll give your enemies better horses.’ ‘Oh, we’re gonna be swift, we’re gonna ride swift,’ ‘Therefore your pursuers will be swift, ’cause they’re not your issue, I am.’ I mean, do you feel the tragedy of that? God told them repentance, rest quietness, and trust. And they said, ‘No, no, I don’t want it.’

And so, this section makes plain the key issue, how people respond to the word of God spoken by the prophets. They rejected the words of warning and judgment and woe. They rejected those words, they wanted pleasant things, they wanted illusions, they wanted sweet, happy things. They didn’t wanna hear any more about the Holy One of Israel. And so, judgment is going to come on them. God told them that repentance and rest, quietness and trust would be their salvation, but they said, ‘No, they’re going to run.’ God said, ‘Okay, then you’re going to run.’ And in the end, the end result will be total desolation, there’ll be no and left. Now, that didn’t get fulfilled with Assyria, that got fulfilled with Babylon over a century later, when Lamentations begins with these words, “How desolate lies the city once so filled with people.” 

III. Transforming Grace to Those Who Wait Upon the Lord (vs. 18-26)

Well, aren’t you glad the chapter doesn’t end there? Aren’t you glad that there’s words of grace, there’s words of forgiveness and mercy? And so, in verses 18-26 God gives transforming grace to those who will simply wait on the Lord. Verse 18, “Yet the Lord waits to be gracious to you; he exalts himself to show you compassion. For the Lord is a God of justice. Blessed are all who wait for him!” So God is waiting for us so that we will wait for him. And the wheels of redemptive history are turning, God’s providential sovereign controller is turning, and his plan is unfolding and he’s waiting for it to all happen. And he’s waiting, so he can show us compassion. And he exalts himself, he makes much of himself through the miracles of Jesus and through the preaching of the apostles and of the church for 20 centuries, and all of God’s mighty works, he exalts himself so that he can show you compassion, isn’t that incredible? So that you’ll call in the name of the Lord and be saved, “For the Lord is a God of justice.” Huh. Justice that produces salvation. How can those be put together? Well, you know, what’s the answer? How do justice and our salvation come together in the cross of Jesus Christ? That’s how it all comes together. We’ll get to in a minute, but justice, God is a God of justice and he will do what is right, and he longs to show you compassion. So, I have a blessing to give you, blessed are all you people who wait on him. Salvation comes to those who wait on the Lord, God will give us grace. And he’s gonna work it step by step, verse 19, God works in his people to cry out to the Lord, “For a people shall dwell in Zion, in Jerusalem; you shall weep no more. He will surely be gracious to you at the sound of your cry, As soon as he hears you, he will answer you,” “Everyone who calls on the name of the Lord will be saved.” Cry out to me, he’s gonna work a change in their hearts, they’re not going down to Egypt with gold anymore, they’re done with that, they’re done with the side shows, and they realize now they are getting what they deserve for their sins. They have turned away from their sins and wickedness. They’ve turned away from that and they have turned in faith, in quietness, in trust to God, and they are now crying out to God, ‘Oh God, would you deliver us? Save us.’

Secondly, God transforms the hearts of his people to heed his word, to listen to his counsel. Verses 20-21, “Although the Lord gives you the bread of adversity and the waters of affliction,” it’s one of the strangest meals that God feeds his people. You go overseas, go on the mission field, you’re gonna eat some strange food. Remember Elizabeth Elliot said, “Where he leads, I will follow, what he feeds, I will swallow.” [laughter] And she ate some strange things in the jungles of Ecuador, very strange foods. This is the strangest, why would God feed his own beloved children the bread of adversity and the waters of affliction? Because He’s sanctifying you, and He’s saying, ‘Here, eat this.’ And you say, ‘Yes, Lord,’ and you eat it. You eat it because it’s good for you, even though it’s bitter in your mouth, it’s good for you, and you patiently chew it and you swallow every bit of it until God is done showing you adversity and affliction. You wait, wait under his mighty hand. Wait under the affliction, wait under the pain, wait under the unknowing of what’s gonna happen. Just wait under him and let him guide you. Says, “Your teachers will be hidden no more; with your own eyes you will see them. Whether you turn to the right or to the left, your ears will hear a voice behind you, saying, ‘This is the way; walk in it.'” That of course, is ultimately fulfilled in the indwelling Holy Spirit, isn’t it? The spirit of truth, who will live with you and be in you, and he will guide you, it says, into all truth. 

‘So he will direct you to turn neither to the right nor to the left,’ that’s Deuteronomy language of complete obedience to the law. “So be careful,” Deuteronomy 5:32-33, “So be careful to do what the Lord your God has commanded you; Do not turn aside to the right or to the left. Walk in all the way that the Lord your God has commanded you, so that you may live and prosper and prolong your days in the land that you will possess.” Now, your ears will hear a voice behind you, and God will transform you and you will walk in that straight and narrow way, and turn neither to the right nor to the left. God will transform also the hearts of the people to despise their idols that caused all the trouble and throw them away. Hate them. Genuinely hate those idols. Verse 22, “Then you will defile your idols overlaid with silver and your images covered with gold; you’ll throw them away like a menstrual cloth and say to them, ‘Away with you!'” What you used to love, you now hate ’cause God hates it, and you throw it away.

It’s transformation, complete transformation. And then God pours out transformation on the whole land, though it was cursed, it was under the curse of Deuteronomy and the curse of the law of Moses, it had become like a desert. It’s going to flourish. And the curse will be removed. Verse 23-26, “He will send you also rain for the seed you sow on the ground, and the food that comes from the land will be rich and plentiful. And in that day your cattle will graze in broad meadows, and the oxen and donkeys at work the soil will eat fodder and mash, spread out with fork and shovel. In the day of great slaughter, when the towers fall, streams of water will flow on every high mountain and every lofty hill. The moon will shine like the sun, and the sunlight would be seven times brighter like the light of seven full days, when the Lord binds up the bruises of his people and heals the wounds he inflicted.” It’s the land flowing with milk and honey again. And better than ever before, brighter than it ever was before, shining like the light of seven full days. Oh, how beautiful is that?

IV. Terrifying Wrath to the Enemies of God

Final section of Isaiah 30 is God’s wrath against his enemies. Says ‘You don’t need Egypt, you need me. [chuckle] I can take care of Assyria, I can crush Assyria in ways that you will never forget.’ These are terrifying verses dear friends, terrifying. But listen to them, verses 27 and following, “Behold the name of the Lord comes from afar, with burning anger and dense clouds of smoke; his lips are full of wrath, and his tongue is a consuming fire. His breath is like a rushing torrent, rising up to the neck. He shakes the nations in the sieve of destruction; he places in the jaws of the people a bit that leads them astray. And you will sing as on the night you celebrate a holy festival; your hearts will rejoice as when people go up with flutes to the mountain of the Lord, to the Rock of Israel. The Lord will cause men to hear his majestic voice and will make them see his arm coming down with raging fire, with raging anger and consuming fire, with cloudbursts, and thunderstorm and hail. And the voice of the Lord will shatter Assyria; with his scepter, he will strike them down. And every stroke the Lord lays on them with his punishing rod will be to the music of tambourines and harps. As he fights them in battle with the blows of his arm.” Verse 33, “Topheth has long been prepared; it has been made ready for the king. Its fire pit has been made deep and wide, with an abundance of fire and wood; the breath of the Lord, like a stream of burning sulfur, sets it ablaze.”

Final act of this drama in Isaiah 30 is the wrath of the Lord poured out on his enemies. The Assyrians are mere mortals, you don’t need Egypt, you need God. God can handle them easily. And the images of wrath here are powerful, God’s name comes from afar. God is zealous for his namesake. He’s gonna move out powerfully to defend his name, he’s gonna come with burning anger and dense clouds of smoke with raging torrents of fire. A lot of the anthropomorphic images here of God having body parts is powerful, his lips filled with wrath, his tongue, a consuming fire, his breath like a rushing flood, drowning all his enemies. It’s by the mouth of the Lord. You see it? By how he speaks, he speaks, and they are judged. It’s that simple. And he does it to the nations that are against him, puts them in a sieve of destruction, and leads them by the jaw where he wants them to go. The Assyrian army will be destroyed instantly, and we’ll talk about that in Isaiah 37. The people of God will celebrate wildly as they are delivered and God gets the glory. And Topheth, a place where they burned garbage outside of Jerusalem, New Testament version is Gehenna, is a picture of hell. A picture where all of this wreckage of the nations is gathered and it’s burning with sulfur coming from the mouth of the Lord forever and ever.

So, how does Isaiah 30 preach the gospel of Jesus? Well, I already hinted at it, couldn’t hold back. Only in the cross of Christ are justice and grace coming together, only in the cross of Christ does God deliver sinners like us from his wrath with grace and mercy and compassion. Jesus, the Son of God, came into this world to be our sin bearer. He came to stand under Topheth for us, to take the stream of burning sulfur into himself and absorb it completely, so that we would not suffer in hell forever and ever, that’s what Jesus came to do.

And in the double exchange of the Gospel, that he came to take our wickedness on himself and extinguished the wrath of God forever, “There is therefore now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus.” And to give you his perfect righteousness and to restore you beautifully, like these verses say, and to pour out grace and to give you a heart of supplication, so you cry out against your idols and throw them away, ’cause you hate them and you yearn for righteousness and you hunger and thirst for it, ’cause you have a new nature now, and you yearn to walk in the straight and narrow, not turning aside to the right or left, and you now have the indwelling Holy Spirit, and the Spirit tells you where to go. In conjunction with his written word and not separate from it, please don’t misunderstand, and do not elevate that voice inside you telling you where to go to the word of God. Test everything you hear in your heart by the word. But the Holy Spirit leads us and guides us, ’cause he is the spirit of truth. And how beautiful is that?

And so, final word for you is the same faith that saves your soul, will also teach you how to get through the trials God has planned for you. He’s going to throw some boulders in your highway. He’s going to put a mudslide across your path. Don’t cut and run, don’t give up, and don’t go four-wheeling, don’t pull off on the shoulder and go over someone’s lawn. Wait under God’s mighty hand, and in due time, he will lift you up.


“Don’t cut and run, don’t give up, and don’t go four-wheeling, don’t pull off on the shoulder and go over someone’s lawn. Wait under God’s mighty hand, and in due time, he will lift you up.”

Now we’re coming to a time of the Lord’s Supper, it’s a time for us to prepare ourselves. If God has spoken to you today, if you’re convicted of your sins, go to him in grace. If you’ve never trusted in Christ as your Lord and Savior, you came here to hear the Gospel, you just heard it. All you have to do is believe in Jesus, trust in him. Don’t come and take from the Lord’s Supper. This is for people who have already testified to their faith in Jesus by water baptism, so if that’s you, please come. But if you trusted in Christ, been baptized, but you know you’re a sinner, it’s for sinners. Jesus shed his blood for sinners like you and me, so come. And it’s also for us as the family of God to draw together around the table and love each other and realize we’re going to heaven together because of the grace of God.

Let’s close in prayer. Father, thank you for the word of Isaiah. Thank you for this sermon, thank you for what Isaiah 30 tells us about the power of God to deliver us from the true danger that faces us, not the Assyrians, but your own justice and wrath expressed on Judgment Day and in hell, you’ve come to deliver us if we’ll just listen to you, tell us the truth, we will turn away from our sins in repentance and turning and rest and trust is our salvation. Thank you for this message, in Jesus name, Amen.

Context: The southern Kingdom of Judah, under the leadership of King Hezekiah and his scheming counselors, were faced with the invasion of the mighty Assyrian Empire under Sennacherib. This terrifying foe, with its overwhelming military power and undefeated military record, threatened Judah’s very existence. The people of Judah were faced with four options: 1) they could submit to the Assyrians without a fight and suffer the consequences for the rebellion they had already put up against Senncherib (this would mean death for many, heavy taxation, the execution of all soldiers, the raping of women, and future slavery under a foreign tyrant; 2) they could resist the Assyrians on the battlefield and then in the walled fortress of Jerusalem (this would mean death for most of their soldiers and starvation for many of their citizens within the walls… but it might result in Assyria growing weary and retreating from the walls of Jerusalem); 3) they could make an alliance with another Gentile nation—Egypt was the most likely one— who might be able to intervene and protect them from the Assyrians; 4) they could repent of their sins against the Holy One of Israel, humble themselves under His mighty hand and seek a miraculous deliverance from the Lord.

Judah’s choice is very much like the ones we face every day, even in the 21st century… in fact, the same questions have faced every generation of believers. Can we control our circumstances by making our own plans for self-salvation? Or can we submit to God in repentance and trust in His power to save us from all our foes.

God’s counsel, right in the middle of this chapter, has never changed:

Isaiah 30:15 This is what the Sovereign LORD, the Holy One of Israel, says: “In repentance and rest is your salvation, in quietness and trust is your strength

This promise of salvation is based on what He says in verse 18:

Isaiah 30:18 the LORD longs to be gracious to you; he rises to show you compassion.
For the LORD is a God of justice. Blessed are all who wait for him!

This chapter is filled with ancient words… words that were born in a dire circumstance that arose over twenty-seven centuries ago—circumstances that in most ways have NOTHING WHATSOEVER to do with our lives—these ancient words spoken to address ancient circumstances turn out to be astonishingly relevant to us today… relevant to teach us how an unchanging God commands us to seek eternal salvation in the midst of our own daily trials

To learn to live by repentance and rest, quietness and trust in Him… to learn to face all the small and great trials of our lives by faith in a God who longs to be gracious to us and who rises to show us compassion… to learn to WAIT FOR HIM while you suffer… because an enemy is coming far more powerful than the Assyrian army… that enemy is DEATH, and the sting of death is sin and the power of sin is the law… law exposes our sin, and the wages of sin is death

And apart from the same God who first spoke these timeless words twenty-seven centuries ago, there is NO DELIVERANCE from death

This ancient chapter will speak to us today, right now, by the power of the Holy Spirit

It will tell us to seek salvation in Jesus Christ alone, and to learn to live out daily deliverances from smaller trials by the same faith that will deliver us from our final enemy, death!!

I.   Woe to Those Who Make Plans to Save Themselves (vs. 1-7)

Isaiah 30:1-7 “Woe to the obstinate children,” declares the LORD, “to those who carry out plans that are not mine, forming an alliance, but not by my Spirit, heaping sin upon sin; 2 who go down to Egypt without consulting me; who look for help to Pharaoh’s protection, to Egypt’s shade for refuge. 3 But Pharaoh’s protection will be to your shame, Egypt’s shade will bring you disgrace. 4 Though they have officials in Zoan and their envoys have arrived in Hanes, 5 everyone will be put to shame because of a people useless to them, who bring neither help nor advantage, but only shame and disgrace.” 6 An oracle concerning the animals of the Negev: Through a land of hardship and distress, of lions and lionesses, of adders and darting snakes, the envoys carry their riches on donkeys’ backs, their treasures on the humps of camels, to that unprofitable nation, 7 to Egypt, whose help is utterly useless. Therefore I call her Rahab the Do-Nothing.

A.  God Speaks WOE to Stubbornly Rebellious Children

Isaiah 30:1 “Woe to the obstinate children,” declares the LORD, “to those who carry out plans that are not mine, forming an alliance, but not by my Spirit, heaping sin upon sin

1.   “Woe” = a word of prophetic warning, that certain judgment is coming because of a specific pattern of sin

2.   God speaks this word of woe through Isaiah the prophet to the southern Kingdom of Judah… the Jews… the descendents of Abraham… His chosen people

3.   He calls them His “obstinate children”…

a.  His children by adoption… God adopted the nation of Israel and called them His “firstborn son” to Pharaoh, King of Egypt, when He spoke through Moses saying “Let my people go!!”

Exodus 4:22-23 Then say to Pharaoh, ‘This is what the LORD says: Israel is my firstborn son, 23 and I told you, “Let my son go, so he may worship me.” But you refused to let him go; so I will kill your firstborn son.'”

b.  When God brought the Jews out of Egypt, He says He carried them:

Deuteronomy 1:31 There you saw how the LORD your God carried you, as a father carries his son, all the way you went until you reached this place.”

c.  At the beginning of this book, God lamented aloud for the rebellion of his children

Isaiah 1:2 Hear, O heavens! Listen, O earth! For the LORD has spoken: “I reared children and brought them up, but they have rebelled against me.

d.  Here in this chapter, God is again lamenting the stubborn rebellion of His children by adoption… they REFUSE to LISTEN to His word!!! They are determined to go their own way

e.  The Hebrew word translated “obstinate” is a strong one… some translate it by STUBBORN… it refers to the hardness of their hearts in doing something that God has specifically warned them against

B.  Their Sin: Making, Trusting in, and Acting on Plans That Don’t Come From God

Isaiah 30:1 ¶ “Woe to the obstinate children,” declares the LORD, “to those who carry out plans that are not mine, forming an alliance, but not by my Spirit

1.   Later in this chapter, God will tell them that He has the power to guide them step by step…

Isaiah 30:21 Whether you turn to the right or to the left, your ears will hear a voice behind you, saying, “This is the way; walk in it.”

2.   God was clearly willing to guide Hezekiah and the Jewish people by means of His word, His prophets… but they were stubbornly unwilling to listen

3.   Earlier in Isaiah, when threatened by the alliance between Syria and the northern kingdom of Israel in the days of King Ahaz, they sought to make an alliance with Assyria to deliver them… though God warned them not to do it, they did it anyway

4.   That was like a mouse threatened by a rat asking a huge cat for help… the cat (Assyria) was delighted to devour them both

5.   Now that Assyria has come to threaten them, it seems they’re going to make the same mistake again… to form a political alliance to deliver them—this time with Egypt!!

Isaiah 30:2 who go down to Egypt without consulting me; who look for help to Pharaoh’s protection, to Egypt’s shade for refuge.

6.   This is their stubborn way… to see a danger coming and to seek a refuge of their own making

C.  Heaping Sin Upon Sin

1.   God says that in doing this, the people are heaping one sin on top of another

2.   It was their sins that brought the threatened invasion on to begin with… their idolatries, their false worship, their injustice to the poor and needy, their sexual immorality, their drunkenness, their love of luxury

3.   God responds by threatening an invasion from a powerful Gentile nation… and instead of falling on their faces in repentance and trust, they send emissaries down to Egypt to make an alliance “BUT NOT BY MY SPIRIT”

4.   God did not command them to do it… they were acting on their own

5.   This is the essence of our problem as well!! We do whatever seems right in our own eyes, and forget to inquire of the Lord… we make plans that are not of His Spirit, and carry them out, thinking they will deliver us from the trouble we are facing

D.  Why Go Back to EGYPT????

1.   The symbolism of Israel seeking help from the nation that formerly ENSLAVED them is devastating!!!

2.   God rescued them from 400 years of bondage in Egypt and brought them out of that country by signs and wonders, destroying Pharaoh’s army at the Red Sea

3.   Why in the world would they want to go backwards, seeking military help from the very nation that God powerfully defeated??

4.   In Deuteronomy 17, God made it plain how HATEFUL it was to Him for any Jewish king to ever go back to Egypt again for help:

Deuteronomy 17:16 The king, moreover, must not acquire great numbers of horses for himself or make the people return to Egypt to get more of them, for the LORD has told you, “You are not to go back that way again.”

E.  Egypt Will Not Help Them!!!

Isaiah 30:3 But Pharaoh’s protection will be to your shame, Egypt’s shade will bring you disgrace.

1.   Pharaoh cannot protect them

2.   Actually, Egypt’s so-called help will only bring the Jews disgrace

Isaiah 30:4-5 Though they have officials in Zoan and their envoys have arrived in Hanes, 5 everyone will be put to shame because of a people useless to them, who bring neither help nor advantage, but only shame and disgrace.”

F.  Isaiah’s Humorous Look at the Envoys Travelling to Egypt

Isaiah 30:6-7 An oracle concerning the animals of the Negev: Through a land of hardship and distress, of lions and lionesses, of adders and darting snakes, the envoys carry their riches on donkeys’ backs, their treasures on the humps of camels, to that unprofitable nation, 7 to Egypt, whose help is utterly useless. Therefore I call her Rahab the Do-Nothing.

1.   The oracle is addressed to the ANIMALS OF THE NEGEV… the desert between Judah and Egypt

2.   We are brought to watch these beasts of burden—these donkeys and camels— travelling through a dangerous desert land

3.   They are heavily laden with gold and silver, led by envoys—messengers—from the officials of Judah to give to Pharaoh, King of Egypt

4.   The journey is a dangerous one, a land of hardship and distress, or lions and lionesses, of adders and even “dragons”—so both real and imaginary threats

5.   But the Jewish leaders are very willing to run these risks if they can secure the help of Egypt against Assyria

6.   BUT Egypt is UNPROFITABLE… her help is UTTERLY USELESS

7.   So the Lord calls her “Rahab the Do Nothing”!!

8.   “Rahab” is an ancient name for a powerful beast, threatening and imposing, but in this case, immobile… like some huge animal basking in the sun and unwilling to move

G.  Summary: God speaks a word of WOE to Judah and her leaders who make a plan to form an alliance with Egypt, something God did not command; they are facing a real threat in Assyria, but they instead are heaping sin upon sin by following their own remedy

II.   Woe to Those Who Want God’s Prophets to Speak Pleasant Lies (vs. 8- 17)

A.  Isaiah Commanded to Write the Prophecy Down

Isaiah 30:8 Go now, write it on a tablet for them, inscribe it on a scroll, that for the days to come it may be an everlasting witness.

1.   This is the lasting legacy of the prophets… their WRITTEN WORDS

2.   God wanted to speak not only to that one generation, but to every generation that followed

3.   So He commanded Isaiah to write the prophecy down

4.   BUT the key issue is not what form the prophetic word comes to us, but what we do when we hear it!!

5.   In this section, God exposes the root problem with the Jews of Judah: they refuse to LISTEN to God’s word spoken through the true prophets

B.  Their Hardness of Heart Exposed

Isaiah 30:9 These are rebellious people, deceitful children, children unwilling to listen to the LORD’s instruction.

1.   Isaiah stood in a long line of servants of God, the prophets, who spoke to them in God’s name

2.   In every generation, the prophetic word stood over them to guide them, command them, correct them, rebuke them, give them hope

3.   But consistently these people stopped up their spiritual ears and made their necks like iron… they were stiff-necked, unyielding to the word of the Lord

4.   BUT that doesn’t mean they didn’t want ANY preaching at all, or any prophecies at all

C.  “Tickle Our Ears; Don’t Convict Our Hearts”

Isaiah 30:10-11 They say to the seers, “See no more visions!” and to the prophets, “Give us no more visions of what is right! Tell us pleasant things, prophesy illusions. 11 Leave this way, get off this path, and stop confronting us with the Holy One of Israel!”

1.   A powerful exposition of the essence of their rebellion against the Lord

2.   They wanted only HAPPY things!! They wanted to hear good things, things that made them feel good about their lives

3.   Look at what they say to the prophets”

a.  SEE NO MORE VISIONS!! [Visions of the Holy One of Israel, high and lifted up… with powerful angels crying out “Holy, holy, holy!!!”]

b.  GIVE US NO MORE VISIONS OF WHAT IS RIGHT [they don’t want to hear the truth…]

c.  TELL US PLEASANT THINGS!!! [We want to hear happy stories and funny tales, and promises of only good things in the future

d.  PROPHECY ILLUSIONS [Tell me lies… just as long as they’re happy lies]

4.   Clear warning: LEAVE THIS WAY, GET OFF THIS PATH… AND STOP CONFRONTING US WITH THE HOLY ONE OF ISRAEL!!!!!

D.  A True History of the Jews Then and of People in Every Generation

1.   In every generation, God sent His people prophets who would tell them the truth about their sins, and God’s judgments, and the terrible things that would happen in the future if they persisted in rebellion

2.   In every generation, the people stopped up their ears and refused to listen, and shot the messenger instead

3.   Think of what Stephen said right before they did it to him:

Acts 7:51-52 “You stiff-necked people, with uncircumcised hearts and ears! You are just like your fathers: You always resist the Holy Spirit! 52 Was there ever a prophet your fathers did not persecute?

4.   Think of these passages:

a.  Evil King Ahab, planning a military expedition against Ramoth Gilead, has surrounded himself with false prophets who are telling him what he wants to hear

1 Kings 22:7-8 But Jehoshaphat asked, “Is there not a prophet of the LORD here whom we can inquire of?” 8 The king of Israel answered Jehoshaphat, “There is still one man through whom we can inquire of the LORD, but I hate him because he never prophesies anything good about me, but always bad. He is Micaiah son of Imlah.”

b.  In Jeremiah’s day:

Jeremiah 6:13-14 prophets and priests alike, all practice deceit. 14 They dress the wound of my people as though it were not serious. ‘Peace, peace,’ they say, when there is no peace.

But when Jeremiah tried to warn the King and the people about the coming exile to Babylon, they put him in jail

Jeremiah 37:15-16 They were angry with Jeremiah and had him beaten and imprisoned in the house of Jonathan the secretary, which they had made into a prison. 16 ¶ Jeremiah was put into a vaulted cell in a dungeon, where he remained a long time.

c.  Paul’s warning

2 Timothy 4:3-4 For the time will come when men will not put up with sound doctrine. Instead, to suit their own desires, they will gather around them a great number of teachers to say what their itching ears want to hear. 4 They will turn their ears away from the truth and turn aside to myths.

5.   Fundamental test of a true teacher of the word of God: does He tickle the ears or proclaim the truth, even if it’s unpopular??

a.  Every pastor faces the pressure to shape the truth according to the tastes of his audience

b.  Every proclaimer of God’s word has to make a fundamental decision:

Galatians 1:10 Am I now trying to win the approval of men, or of God? Or am I trying to please men? If I were still trying to please men, I would not be a servant of Christ.

Flannery O’Connor: “The truth does not change according to our ability to stomach it.” [Quoted in Ray Ortlund’s Commentary]

Or, as the Apostle Paul put it:

Galatians 4:16 Have I now become your enemy by telling you the truth?

6.   This is precisely why Jesus wept and lamented over Jerusalem… it was the place where prophets went to die:

Matthew 23:37 “O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, you who kill the prophets and stone those sent to you, how often I have longed to gather your children together, as a hen gathers her chicks under her wings, but you were not willing.

7.   What “Pleasant Things” do people want to hear?

a.  “I’m Okay, You’re Okay, the Future is Bright, God is Pleased with Us, Everything is Just How It Should Be”

b.  Having established that, then preach funny or entertaining stories to take up the time… fill their ears with flattery and divert their minds with AMUSEMENTS

c.  This will make them VERY POPULAR with their hearers… but it is the essence of being a false prophet:

Luke 6:26 Woe to you when all men speak well of you, for that is how their fathers treated the false prophets.

d.  Fundamentally this was the issue: “STOP CONFRONTING US WITH THE HOLY ONE of ISRAEL!!!”

E.  The Future for That is Dark Indeed: Judgment Must Follow

Isaiah 30:12-14 Therefore, this is what the Holy One of Israel says: “Because you have rejected this message, relied on oppression and depended on deceit, 13 this sin will become for you like a high wall, cracked and bulging, that collapses suddenly, in an instant. 14 It will break in pieces like pottery, shattered so mercilessly that among its pieces not a fragment will be found for taking coals from a hearth or scooping water out of a cistern.”

1.   The people’s desire to hear pleasant things was their defense against a scary future

2.   Assyria was coming… they needed a defense…

3.   They were building a wall to protect themselves… but any skilled contractor could see the future in a high wall that is cracked and bulging… it will collapse IN AN INSTANT and kill everyone taking refuge under its shadow

Illus. Cinder-block walls in Haiti after the earthquake, built hastily without re-bar and good masonry techniques… after the earthquake, the walls of this school were bowed out noticeably and the structure was condemned… it didn’t take a genius to see what was going to happen

So it was with the refuge the Jews had taken under the shadow of a wall built by oppression and deceit… it was going to collapse and kill everyone huddling at its base

F.  God’s Central Invitation Stands!!!!!

Isaiah 30:15 This is what the Sovereign LORD, the Holy One of Israel, says: “In repentance and rest is your salvation, in quietness and trust is your strength

1.   The Jews were threatened with invasion and death; their answer was to send gold on the backs of camels to Egypt to rent an army

2.   Instead, God told them what to do to be saved:

3.   Notice how verse 15 begins: Solemnly, with the clear names of God

Vs 15: This is what the Sovereign LORD, the Holy One of Israel, says

a.  The very one they wanted Isaiah to stop proclaiming was standing in front of them offering them a clear path to salvation

b.  God would put His sovereign power to work for their salvation if they would only do these things

4.   In REPENTANCE and REST… in QUIETNESS and TRUST is your salvation

a.  Repentance = turning away from the path of sins that have led to this judgment to begin with

b.  Rest = not venturing forth in your own plans and forming alliance but not by His Spirit

c.  Quietness = being at peace under the mighty hand of God, resting in Him, knowing that nothing can come to you except by the will of this sovereign God

d.  Trust = faith… frankly, in the end, this is the consistent message of the Bible… we are saved by faith alone

Isaiah 7:9 If you do not stand firm in your faith, you will not stand at all Habakkuk 2:4 the righteous will live by his faith

G.  The People’s Tragic Response to this Clear Invitation from the Lord: REJECTION

Isaiah 30:15-17 This is what the Sovereign LORD, the Holy One of Israel, says: “In repentance and rest is your salvation, in quietness and trust is your strength, but you would have none of it. 16 You said, ‘No, we will flee on horses.’ Therefore you will flee! You said, ‘We will ride off on swift horses.’ Therefore your pursuers will be swift! 17 A thousand will flee at the threat of one; at the threat of five you will all flee away, till you are left like a flagstaff on a mountaintop, like a banner on a hill.”

1.   They wanted NONE of God’s sweet invitation to repentance and rest, quietness and trust

2.   They simply said NO… we have a better plan than returning to the Lord

3.   “We will flee on horses…” we will run away from the invaders… or perhaps flee to go get the Egyptians that we have hired to fight for us

4.   God says, “Alright, you will flee then”

5.   They answer back, “We will ride off on SWIFT HORSES!!”

6.   God has the final word: “Therefore, your pursuers will be swift.”

7.   There is no escaping God’s judgments… if you reject His sweet invitations to repentance and rest, quietness and trust, nothing remains except the carefully measured out judgment at the hands of a God who cannot be bested

8.   The final result: total desolation of the city when everyone has run away

H.  Summary: This section makes plain the key issue: how the people respond to the word of God spoken by the prophets; they rejected the words of warning and judgment, and demanded instead a PLEASANT MESSAGE… they hated to hear about the “Holy One of Israel”… so judgment would come upon them; God told them that repentance and rest, quietness and trust were their salvation… but they had plans of their own. The end result: DESOLATION

But thankfully, this was not to be God’s final word in Isaiah 33… instead, God moves out by Sovereign Grace to transform everything

III.   Transforming Grace to Those Wait Upon the Lord (vs. 18-26)

A.  The Hinge Verse

Isaiah 30:18 Yet the LORD longs to be gracious to you; he rises to show you compassion. For the LORD is a God of justice. Blessed are all who wait for him!

1.   God declares His deepest longing: to show grace and compassion to His sinful, stubborn, wrong-headed people

2.   Literally: the Lord WAITS to be gracious…

a.  God is waiting for His timetable to reveal His grace to His people

b.  When the wheels of His sovereign plan have turned into place, He will move out in power to show grace to His people

c.  God is a God who WAITS, and waits patiently… He allows His sovereign control of events to have the proper impact on the people

3.   “Grace” = the key to God’s dealings with us

a.  A commitment in the heart of God to do His people good, despite the fact that they deserve judgment

b.  From that grace flow everything needed for our salvation

c.  The people’s own plans for self-salvation will amount to destruction, so God must step in and TRANFORM EVERYTHING by His sovereign grace

d.  Notice that God’s grace perfectly harmonizes with His justice: God is a God BOTH of grace and of justice

e.  The blessing still goes to the people who WAIT FOR GOD as God waits on His perfect timing to show His people grace

B.  First Step: God Works in His People to Cry Out to the Lord

Isaiah 30:19 For a people shall dwell in Zion, in Jerusalem; you shall weep no more. He will surely be gracious to you at the sound of your cry. As soon as he hears it, he answers you.

1.   As God gives His people the bread of adversity and the water of affliction (vs. 20), the people will cry out to Him for deliverance

2.   And these verses are true:

Romans 10:13 Everyone who calls on the name of the Lord will be saved.

Psalm 50:15 call upon me in the day of trouble; I will deliver you, and you will honor me.

C.  Second: God Directly Transforms the Hearts of His People to Heed His Word

Isaiah 30:20-21 Although the Lord gives you the bread of adversity and the water of affliction, your teachers will be hidden no more; with your own eyes you will see them. 21 Whether you turn to the right or to the left, your ears will hear a voice behind you, saying, “This is the way; walk in it.”

1.   This is the power of God’s grace… and it is fulfilled in the transformation of the human heart to hear direct guidance from the Lord

2.   This is the essence of the New Covenant promise

Ezekiel 36:26-27 I will give you a new heart and put a new spirit in you; I will remove from you your heart of stone and give you a heart of flesh. 27 And I will put my Spirit in you and move you to follow my decrees and be careful to keep my laws.

Hebrews 8:10-11 This is the covenant I will make with the house of Israel after that time, declares the Lord. I will put my laws in their minds and write them on their hearts. I will be their God, and they will be my people. 11 No longer will a man teach his neighbor, or a man his brother, saying, ‘Know the Lord,’ because they will all know me, from the least of them to the greatest.

3.   This is fulfilled in the indwelling Holy Spirit, who guides us directly into all truth

John 16:13 But when he, the Spirit of truth, comes, he will guide you into all truth.

4.   The essence of the Spirit-filled life is to hear the voice of the Spirit guiding you in the paths of God’s commands

Deuteronomy 5:32-33 So be careful to do what the LORD your God has commanded you; do not turn aside to the right or to the left. 33 Walk in all the way that the LORD your God has commanded you, so that you may live and prosper and prolong your days in the land that you will possess.

Romans 8:4 in order that the righteous requirements of the law might be fully met in us, who do not live according to the sinful nature but according to the Spirit.

D.  God Transforms the Hearts of the People to Purge Themselves of Idols

Isaiah 30:22 Then you will defile your idols overlaid with silver and your images covered with gold; you will throw them away like a menstrual cloth and say to them, “Away with you!”

1.   The idolatry that led to the Assyrian invasion to begin with will be ended forever

2.   God will so work in the hearts of His people that they will HATE the sins that brought about His judgments and they will see through the thin covering of gold over the wooden image they had made

3.   They will see that to live for any created thing rather than the Creator is the essence of sin

4.   And they will throw away their idols forever and live only for God’s glory

E.  Finally: God Will Transform Creation Itself for Maximum Fruitfulness

Isaiah 30:23-26 He will also send you rain for the seed you sow in the ground, and the food that comes from the land will be rich and plentiful. In that day your cattle will graze in broad meadows. 24 The oxen and donkeys that work the soil will eat fodder and mash, spread out with fork and shovel. 25 In the day of great slaughter, when the towers fall, streams of water will flow on every high mountain and every lofty hill. 26 The moon will shine like the sun, and the sunlight will be seven times brighter, like the light of seven full days, when the LORD binds up the bruises of his people and heals the wounds he inflicted.

1.   This is a reversal of the curses on the Land that were part of the Mosaic Covenant

a.  Abundant rain as opposed to the drought that was the curse

b.  Abundant harvests, not famine

c.  Rich grazing land for all the cattle the people would own; plenty of fodder for the animals that work the fields

d.  Even the sun and moon will give enhanced light… perfectly illuminating the Promised Land for maximum harvests

2.   Ultimately HEALING for all the wounds God’s judgments brought on creation

3.   It is a reversal of the curses on the earth that were part of Adam’s judgment in the Garden of Eden

IV.   Terrifying Wrath to the Enemies of God (vs. 27-33)

Isaiah 30:27-33 See, the Name of the LORD comes from afar, with burning anger and dense clouds of smoke; his lips are full of wrath, and his tongue is a consuming fire. 28 His breath is like a rushing torrent, rising up to the neck. He shakes the nations in the sieve of destruction; he places in the jaws of the peoples a bit that leads them astray. 29 ¶ And you will sing as on the night you celebrate a holy festival; your hearts will rejoice as when people go up with flutes to the mountain of the LORD, to the Rock of Israel. 30 The LORD will cause men to hear his majestic voice and will make them see his arm coming down with raging anger and consuming fire, with cloudburst, thunderstorm and hail. 31 The voice of the LORD will shatter Assyria; with his scepter he will strike them down. 32 Every stroke the LORD lays on them with his punishing rod will be to the music of tambourines and harps, as he fights them in battle with the blows of his arm. 33 Topheth has long been prepared; it has been made ready for the king. Its fire pit has been made deep and wide, with an abundance of fire and wood; the breath of the LORD, like a stream of burning sulfur, sets it ablaze.

A.  The Final Act of this Drama: The Wrath of the Lord Poured Out on His Enemies

B.  The Assyrians Are Mere Mortals… And God Can Deal with the Easily

C.  The Images of Wrath are Powerful

1.   God’s “Name” comes from afar… God moves out powerfully to defend His honor

2.   He comes with “burning anger and dense clouds of smoke”

3.   There are anthropomorphic images of God as filled with wrath: lips filled with wrath, tongue a consuming fire, breath a rushing torrent (flood) drowning all His enemies

4.   The “nations” God shakes in a sieve of destruction… testing them and then crushing them

5.   He leads them by a bit exactly where He wants them to go, and then destroys them

6.   All of this is done simply by the word of His power

Isaiah 30:30-31 The LORD will cause men to hear his majestic voice and will make them see his arm coming down with raging anger and consuming fire, with cloudburst, thunderstorm and hail. 31 The voice of the LORD will shatter Assyria; with his scepter he will strike them down.

D.  The Assyrian Army Destroyed Instantly

Isaiah 37:36 Then the angel of the LORD went out and put to death a hundred and eighty-five thousand men in the Assyrian camp.

E.  The People of God Celebrating Greatly

Isaiah 30:29 And you will sing as on the night you celebrate a holy festival; your hearts will rejoice as when people go up with flutes to the mountain of the LORD, to the Rock of Israel.

Isaiah 30:32 Every stroke the LORD lays on them with his punishing rod will be to the music of tambourines and harps, as he fights them in battle with the blows of his arm.

F.  Topheth: A Fire Pit of God’s Wrath

Isaiah 30:33 Topheth has long been prepared; it has been made ready for the king. Its fire pit has been made deep and wide, with an abundance of fire and wood; the breath of the LORD, like a stream of burning sulfur, sets it ablaze.

1.   In the Valley of Ben Hinnom just outside the gates of Jerusalem is a huge pit the people used to burn their garbage…

2.   The bodies of the 185,000 dead Assyrians and all their now worthless possessions would have to be disposed of; scripture does not tell us what happened to all of them, but it wouldn’t surprise me if they were burned in a vast firepit like the one described here

3.   In the New Testament, it is a consistent image of the fires of hell; the word “hell” in the Gospels is usually “geenna” for “Gehenna”, this firepit where the refuse of Jerusalem is burned

4.   At the end of the Book of Isaiah:

Isaiah 66:24 And they will go out and look upon the dead bodies of those who rebelled against me; their worm will not die, nor will their fire be quenched, and they will be loathsome to all mankind.”

Jesus spoke of hell in this manner:

Mark 9:47-48 And if your eye causes you to sin, pluck it out. It is better for you to enter the kingdom of God with one eye than to have two eyes and be thrown into hell, 48 where “‘their worm does not die, and the fire is not quenched.’

V.   The Gospel of Jesus Christ in Isaiah 30

A.  The Danger We Face: Not Assyria, But Death, Judgment and Hell

Revelation 20:11-12 Then I saw a great white throne and him who was seated on it. Earth and sky fled from his presence, and there was no place for them. 12 And I saw the dead, great and small, standing before the throne, and books were opened. Another book was opened, which is the book of life. The dead were judged according to what they had done as recorded in the books.

Revelation 20:15 If anyone’s name was not found written in the book of life, he was thrown into the lake of fire.

Revelation 14:10-11 he, too, will drink of the wine of God’s fury, which has been poured full strength into the cup of his wrath. He will be tormented with burning sulfur in the presence of the holy angels and of the Lamb. 11 And the smoke of their torment rises for ever and ever. There is no rest day or night

B.  We Face the Same Choice: Make a Plan to Escape, or Humble Ourselves Before God

Isaiah 30:1 “Woe to the obstinate children,” declares the LORD, “to those who carry out plans that are not mine, forming an alliance, but not by my Spirit, heaping sin upon sin;

C.  God Makes the Same Invitation to Us:

Isaiah 30:15 This is what the Sovereign LORD, the Holy One of Israel, says: “In repentance and rest is your salvation, in quietness and trust is your strength

Matthew 11:28-30 Come to me, all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest. 29 Take my yoke upon you and learn from me, for I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. 30 For my yoke is easy and my burden is light.”

D.  This Invitation is Based on the Same Grace from God

Isaiah 30:18 Yet the LORD longs to be gracious to you; he rises to show you compassion. For the LORD is a God of justice. Blessed are all who wait for him!

E.  The Promises of the Guidance of the Spirit Come to Us Only Through Christ

Isaiah 30:21 Whether you turn to the right or to the left, your ears will hear a voice behind you, saying, “This is the way; walk in it.

John 14:16-17 And I will ask the Father, and he will give you another Counselor to be with you forever– 17 the Spirit of truth. The world cannot accept him, because it neither sees him nor knows him. But you know him, for he lives with you and will be in you.

F.  The Consummation of the Land Will Be the New Heaven and New Earth

Romans 8:19-21 The creation waits in eager expectation for the sons of God to be revealed. 20 For the creation was subjected to frustration, not by its own choice, but by the will of the one who subjected it, in hope 21 that the creation itself will be liberated from its bondage to decay and brought into the glorious freedom of the children of God.

Revelation 21:1 Then I saw a new heaven and a new earth, for the first heaven and the first earth had passed away, and there was no longer any sea.

VI.   Applications

A.  Come to Christ!!

B.  Learn to Face Your Daily Trials by the Same Faith by Which You Hope to Live on Judgment Day

1.   When financial trials come upon you, what is your recourse? Is it “repentance and rest, quietness and trust” or is it anxiety, irritability, frustration, a better financial plan, a better paying job, what??

2.   How are you making “alliances but not by God’s Spirit” to solve the trials and afflictions you are facing?

C.  Learn to Delight in ALL of God’s Prophetic Message!!

1.   Don’t be like the people who said “Tell us PLEASANT THINGS, prophecy Illusions”

2.   Delight in the entirety of the prophetic message… even the convicting parts

D.  Learn to Hate the Idols in Your Life as The Passage Commands… to Hate the Created Things You Are Putting Faith in

E.  Learn to Walk More and More by the Power of the Spirit as He Teaches You the Word

Isaiah 30:21 Whether you turn to the right or to the left, your ears will hear a voice behind you, saying, “This is the way; walk in it.

Open in your Bibles, if you would, to Isaiah chapter 30. Looking this morning, at this magnificent chapter. One of the hardest parts of the Christian life, I think, is waiting. God is calling on us to wait as he does. That I can prove it’s part of the Christian life is not difficult. You can think about the end of 1 Thessalonians 1, where Paul celebrates the conversion of the Thessalonians. And the report that came back to him of what God had done in those people. He says, “They tell how you turned to God from idols to serve the living and true God and to wait for his Son from Heaven, Jesus Christ who rescues us from the coming wrath.” Do you see those two verbs? To serve and to wait, that’s what we’re called on to do. We’re called on to wait on the Lord. And so there are many verses in the New Testament that celebrate, that command, patience, the need for perseverance or patience. That we must wait under the hand of God. That we must humble ourselves and array ourselves under his mighty hand. That in due time, he may lift us up.

And that waiting is hard, but it’s absolutely essential to our salvation. “Consider it pure joy, my brothers, whenever you face trials of many kinds, because you know that the testing of your faith develops perseverance.” Patience. What’s that for but waiting? Perseverance must finish its work so that you’ll be mature and complete, not lacking anything. So the journey from immaturity to maturity is a long one, it doesn’t happen quickly, and you must have patience. And you must have patience during trials, that’s the hard part. Waiting is hard, but it’s essential to our future inheritance. It says in Hebrews 6:12 that we are to, “Imitate those who, by faith and patience, inherit what has been promised.” You won’t inherit without patience, so you must wait. You must wait day after day, it’s just a central part of the everyday Christian life, but it’s also a unique challenge for some people who are going through extreme trials.

I think about the Parishes, they have been waiting for Andy’s healing since the accident happened, and they continue to wait. It’s a severe trial of waiting. I think about our brothers and sisters in persecuting parts in the world. I think about pastors that are incarcerated for their faith, and they’re waiting for their release, they’re waiting for God to answer their prayers, so are their wives and their children and their churches, waiting that God would set them free. There’s some under chronic pain, severe pain, and they’re just waiting for deliverance, just waiting to be set free. God is just saying, ‘No, not yet. You just need to wait.’

And the gist of this text here is that if we don’t wait under God’s hand, we are displaying faithlessness, a sinful faithlessness. We need to wait, as one pastor put it, “In God’s place and at God’s pace.” It’s good to remember that, isn’t it? Wait where God has you, and wait there as long as God wants you to stay there. Let him choose the pace and in many cases it’s gonna be a lot slower than you want. God wants us to wait. To wait on him, because that’s what he’s doing, he’s waiting. And I know it’s not easy, but it’s of the essence of faith. And what I wanna do in this sermon today is to teach you how to wait. To teach you how to wait on the Lord. To teach you how to let God’s word speak hope into your heart so that you wait well. Because we’re so impatient.

Do you see that in your own life? I see it in myself, and I wouldn’t say every time I drive, but many times that I drive. I must know that when everybody ahead of me is driving too slowly, something’s wrong with all those people. Sooner or later, the Spirit says, ‘No, it’s you.’ [laughter] Driving home just the other day, and one slow driver turned off and the next one turned on right in front of me. And I said, “Meet the new boss, same as the old boss.” I said that out loud. Didn’t I? Some kids who were with me. Didn’t I say that out loud? “Meet the new boss, same as the old boss.” I was impatient that day. Now, it’s funny we laugh, but this is a plague to my soul. It is unbelief to not wait under God’s hand. It’s unbelief. And in our text, God calls it out. He calls his stubborn children out for not waiting for him and waiting on him, for making plans of their own, going their own way. ‘Cause here’s the deal, when you are on the highway of life, and God’s providence calls on a mudslide, like happened to us in Nepal, and you’re stopped. There are two ways to show unbelief in that situation, two different ways. The first is to grow overwhelmed with discouragement and quit the journey. It happens in divorce, it happens in a lot of settings. To just give up the ministry, people turn their backs and say, ‘This is just too hard,’ they give up the mission field. They give up the ministry, and I’m not saying that it’s wrong to leave the mission field, or to even leave the ministry of God leads to do something else. But there are some situations in which it’s done by unbelief because the people aren’t willing to wait. So they quit, ’cause it’s hard, they quit. That’s one way. The other way, again, to stay with the bumper to bumper, traffic stop analogy, is to pull off on the shoulder and go four wheeling. You know what I’m saying? To go across someone’s front lawn, ‘Now I have got a four-wheel drive, let’s see what it can do.’ Take matters in your own hands and go in a way God has not told you to go, not by his Spirit, to go solve the problem yourself and get rolling again. And we do that, we do both of those. We quit or we just take matters in our own hands and go when God is telling you to wait on him.

So that’s what Isaiah 30 is about. The context here is, again the southern kingdom of Judah, King Hezekiah and Assyria, that vicious conquering nation is coming, they’re coming. They’re probably already there. They are probably already fighting and coming. And Judah has basically four choices: they can go out and meet them in battle, they can fight them, and then retreat to the fortress of Jerusalem and fight them there. The problem with that is they’re gonna lose. The Assyrians are far stronger than they are, and they’re gonna lose, they’ve won everywhere. They can submit to them, they can surrender. The problem is with that is that many of the men are gonna die, women ravished and the whole nation enslaved, ’cause that’s just who the Assyrians were. They can send emissaries with gold and silver to some powerful nation nearby, to ally with them and come help them militarily. Or they can repent from their sins and wait on God for supernatural deliverance. And what they choose to do is that third option. It’s just regular habit pattern of that little southern kingdom of Judah, they do it again and again and again, you just have to trace it out. Maybe I have noticed the pattern. But when the northern kingdom of Israel threatened them militarily. They were enemies, they were not allies, they were enemies. When the northern kingdom of Israel threatened them, they made an alliance with Syria, Damascus. When Israel and Syria threatened them together, they made an alliance with Assyria, the vicious northern empire. One commentator said that’s very much like a mouse being threatened by a larger mouse asking a cat for deliverance, ‘Sure, I’ll come help you. I’ll be happy to. I’m coming right your way.’ Devours in both. Now threatened by Assyria, what do they do? Turn to Egypt and make the same kind of mistake, the same kind of alliance. When God was calling on them to repent and to wait.

God gives timeless, unchanging counts, and look at verse 15, Isaiah 30, and verse 15, “This is what the Sovereign Lord, the Holy One of Israel, says: “In repentance and rest is your salvation. In quietness and trust is your strength.”” That’s his advice through the prophet, ‘This is what I’m telling you to do, you wanna be delivered? Do that.’ And then in verse 18, very, very sweetly, very beautifully, he says this, and this is really for me, verse 18, the centerpiece of the chapter. I’m gonna translate a little bit differently than NIV, “The Lord waits to be gracious to you; he exalts himself to show you compassion. For the Lord is a God of justice. Blessed are all who wait for him!” So at the beginning of verse 18, the Lord is the one waiting, at the end of the verse, he speaks a word of blessing to all of those who will join him in waiting. God waits. It’s mysterious, the Sovereign God, “All day long, I have held out my hands to a disobedient and obstinate people.” He’s a waiting God, and yet sovereign over people’s hearts, it’s a mystery to me, but he waits. He waits for the right time for everything in the fullness of time, he does all things. And at end of that verse, verse 18, he promises a blessing to you if you’ll wait on him. But in this chapter, these people were seizing control, taking hold of the situation and moving out, four-wheeling, if you know what I’m saying, going across people’s lawns and fields of corn to get where they wanted to go.

I. Woe to Those Who Make Plans to Save Themselves (vs. 1-7)

So look at verses 1-7, you see that, “”Woe to those”, says the prophet, “Who make plans to save themselves.” God speaks a word of prophetic judgment. A prophetic woe. In verse one, “Woe to the obstinate children,” declares the Lord, “to those who carry out plans that are not mine, forming an alliance, but not by my Spirit, heaping sin upon sin.”” So he speaks his prophetic word of woe to Judah for doing this. He calls them obstinate children, stubborn children, stubborn in their own ways. They are his children. Isaiah 1:2 says, “Hear, O heavens! Listen, O earth! For the Lord has spoken: “I reared children and brought them up, but they have rebelled against me.” So these are the stubborn children, the obstinate children, he’s talking to them. And what is their sin? Well, making and trusting in and acting on plans that don’t come from God. ““They’re carrying out plans that are not mine,” declares the Lord, “Forming an alliance, but not by my Spirit.”” They are moving out, away from God, doing it their own way. And God is able to give wisdom and counsel, he’s able to send godly messengers, prophets who will speak the truth. We’ll talk about them a little bit later. But God is able to tell you the truth, he’s able to speak to you, he’s able to direct you. Look at verse 21, “Whether you turn to the right or to the left, your ears will hear a voice behind you saying, ‘This is the way; walk in it.'” God is able to give counsel, He’s able to give advice, but they’re not listening, they’re not asking, they’d already made up their mind what they’re gonna do. They were not waiting under God’s mighty hand. And so in verse two, “Who go down to Egypt without consulting me; who look for help to Pharaoh’s protection, to Egypt’s shade for refuge.” Do you see that phrase? Without consulting me.

Convicting for me is the simple question: How many prayerless decisions do I make in a day? How many times do I decide weighty things and don’t even ask God? It’s convicting. It’s convicting. They didn’t even ask me. They just went to Egypt without consulting me. And he said, “Heaping sin upon sin.” What that means is there was sin that was bringing the Assyrians, now they’re adding to the sin. And what was the sin? The violation of God’s laws. Their sexual immorality, their idolatry, their false religions, their drunkenness, their love of luxury, all of these things. These are the sins, that’s the sin, and now they’re heaping sin upon sin by seeking to remedy the problem themselves, saving themselves. Instead of falling on their faces and asking God’s forgiveness, they send emissaries down to Egypt with gold to form an alliance, “But not by my Spirit,” says the Lord.


“Convicting for me is the simple question: How many prayerless decisions do I make in a day? How many times do I decide weighty things and don’t even ask God? It’s convicting.”

This is the essence of my problem and yours as well, isn’t it? Moving out, not consulting God, not asking his wisdom, not moving by the power of the Spirit, doing your own thing in the flesh? And why Egypt of all places? Why go back to Egypt? Have we forgotten our history? Centuries before God beat them, badly, remember? They were your captors, you were enslaved by them. 400 years. And God sent Moses and God bared his holy arm and poured out wrath on Egypt, 10 dreadful plagues. And then when Pharaoh pursued with his army, God destroyed the whole army in the Red Sea. Egypt is nothing. So why would you go to a defeated enemy like that that enslaved you? Why go back to Egypt? Why would you do that? And God had said specifically, in Deuteronomy, right before they entered the promised land, ‘Don’t go back to Egypt. Don’t ever go back there again.’ It says in the instructions to the king in Deuteronomy 17:16, “The king moreover,” he says, “Must not acquire great numbers of horses for himself or make the people return to Egypt to get more of them, for the Lord has told you, “You must not go back that way again.” No one who puts his hand to the plow and looks back is fit for the kingdom of heaven. Don’t look back, remember Lot’s wife. Don’t look back. Why are you going back to Egypt for help? Have you forgotten who crushed Egypt? He’s the one you ought to be dealing with. And he says very plainly, the prophet says, ‘It’s not going to help you. It will not help you.’ Look at verse three, “But Pharaoh’s protection will be your shame, Egypt’s shade will bring you disgrace.” Shame and disgrace follow that kind of bad decision making. Shame and disgrace follows, moving out, four-wheeling, so to speak, pulling out on the shoulder and going across someone’s yard because you can’t wait on God and ask him what to do and wait for his timing. It brings shame and disgrace. It’s not going to help you. Verses four and five, “Though they have officials in Zoan and their envoys have arrived in Hanes, everyone will be put to shame because of a people useless to them, who bring neither help nor advantage, but only shame and disgrace.” I don’t think Isaiah could have said it any more plainly. It will not help you, don’t send the money. Don’t do it.

Actually, in verses six and seven, Isaiah takes a bit of a humorous look. He says I wanna speak in oracle about the animals of the desert between Judah and Egypt. Let’s talk about the animals. So it’s a little, “oracle about the animals of the Negev:” he says, “Through a land of hardship and distress,” it’s almost like a little vignette, like a mini motion pictures. You get to this picture in your mind, “Through a land of hardship and distress, desert land, picture deserts, and lions and lionesses and adders and darting snakes. The envoys are moving through, the envoys carrying their riches on donkeys’ backs, their treasures on humps of camels to that unprofitable nation, to Egypt, whose help is utterly useless. Therefore, I call her Rahab, the do-nothing.” So just picture in your mind’s eye, these poor beasts of burden, carrying precious metals that are inevitably dense and heavy, those poor animals, those poor donkeys and camels, and all of it for nothing, as they go down to Egypt. The envoys will certainly welcome them gladly and take their money, but nothing good is gonna come from it. Verses 1-7, God speaks a word of woe to Judah for even doing it. The fact that they add sin to sin, and they will not deal with God, who is the real issue, instead they’re making their own plans and moving out in their own direction.

II. Woe to Those Who Want God’s Prophets to Speak Pleasant Lies (vs. 8-17)

In verses 8-17, he speaks a word of woe to those who want prophets to speak pleasant lies to them. And it’s interesting, Isaiah in verse eight was commanded to write this prophecy down. Thank God he did, that’s why we’re here today, looking at his words, ’cause God told him to write it, write it down. And so, the writing prophets, they have left for us a record of God’s word, and it’s timeless, He’s speaking to us today. God intended to speak to us today, because he commanded Isaiah to write it down. So look at verse eight, “Go now, write it on a tablet for them, inscribe it on a scroll, that for the days to come it may be an everlasting witness.” So, they had the word and even more written down, but they didn’t listen. They’re not listening to it. The hardness of their heart is exposed, verse nine, “These are rebellious people, deceitful children, children unwilling to listen to the Lord’s instruction.” Again and again in Isaiah, it’s “Hear, O heavens! Listen, O earth!” again and again, God speaks and we must listen. But these are rebellious children, and they are not willing to listen. God again and again sent, what he called, my servants, the prophets, ‘I sent my servants, the prophets to you and you just didn’t listen.’

So whenever there was this external threat, God would send a message telling them what to do. Go out and surrender, stand and fight, go out, but don’t bring any weapons, just go and sing and I’ll destroy them. I mean, he’ll tell them, it’s something different every time, but ‘Just listen to me and I’ll tell you what to do.’ But the people didn’t wanna listen. Now, that doesn’t mean they didn’t want preaching, oh, they want preaching, they want a certain kind of preaching. They wanted some people to come and tell them some things, they were eager for that. Look at verses 10-11, “They say to the seers,” prophets, ““See no more visions!” and to the prophets, “Give us no more visions of what is right! Tell us pleasant things, prophesy illusions. Leave this way, get off this path and stop confronting us with the Holy One of Israel!”” Oh, is that powerful. They didn’t want God, they didn’t want the consuming fire, they didn’t want the Holy One of Israel. So they’re talking to Isaiah and to other true prophets saying, Stop doing this, stop it. Stop talking to me about God’s holiness. Stop talking to me about God as the consuming fire. I don’t wanna hear it anymore. Stop it. Leave this way, get off this path. Stop preaching like that. Tell us pleasant things. Funny or happy things. Lie to me. Just make me happy. It’s the regular tragic history of the Jewish nation as recorded in Scripture. Stephen nailed them for it in Acts seven, “You stiff-necked people,” he said to the Sanhedrin, “With uncircumcised hearts and ears! You’re just like your fathers: You always resist the Holy Spirit. Was there ever a prophet your fathers did not persecute?” Is there even one? Jesus said the same thing, “You build tombs for the prophets and decorate the graves of the righteous, and you say, “If we had lived in the days of our forefathers, we wouldn’t have taken part with them in shedding the blood of the prophets.”” But Jesus said, ‘So you testify against yourselves that you’re the descendants of those who murdered the prophets. Fill up then the measure of the sins of your forefathers, go ahead and do it, kill me,’ which they did.

This is a tragic thing. Again and again, think of the examples, think of wicked king Ahab. Remember that, when he’s gonna go out to fight Ramoth-Gilead, and he’s got godly king Jehoshaphat next to him, remember? And they got all these false prophets saying, ‘Go and succeed, you’re going to win. It’s gonna be awesome.’ I don’t think they said awesome, but anyway, ‘You’re just gonna be great. You’re gonna be victorious.’ And Jehoshaphat with that sensitivity from the Lord, he’s like, ‘Isn’t there a prophet of the Lord that we could inquire of? I don’t care if you’ve got 5000 of these guys, they’re worthless. Are there any prophets of the Lord?’ Do you remember what Ahab said? ‘Well, there is one, but I hate him, because he always says bad things about me.’ [chuckle] Well, I think you might wanna listen, King Ahab to Micaiah, son of Imlah. Remember Jehoshaphat said, ‘The king should not say that.’ I don’t know how he said that, but that’s what he said. Or in Jeremiah’s day, they wanted “priests and prophets alike. To treat the wound of the people as though were not serious. To say ‘Peace, peace,’ when there is no peace.” That’s what they wanted. But then when Jeremiah told the truth, they put him in a miry pit, they put him in prison. And Jonathan, in the secretary’s house, they put him in prison, they persecute him. And so, Paul gave a clear warning about all this, this phenomenon here in verses 10-11. He says in 2 Timothy 4:3-4, “For the time will come when men will not put up with sound doctrine. Instead to suit their own desires, they will gather around them a large number of teachers to say what their itching ears want to hear. They will turn their ears away from the truth and turn aside to myths.”

So, the fundamental test of a true prophet of God then and a true teacher, pastor, teacher, now is the willingness to bring the whole counsel of God’s word, no matter what the people think, no matter what the people say, to tell the truth. This was the little boy, Samuel’s test, that he had to go tell Eli that his house was going to be destroyed because of his sin. Every pastor faces the pressure of shaping his message to suit the taste of the people. Everyone does. Every proclaimer of God’s word has to make this fundamental choice that Paul talks about in Galatians 1:10, “Am I now trying to win the approval of men, or of God? Or am I trying to please men? If I were still trying to please men, I would not be a servant of Christ.” Flannery O’Connor put it this way, “The truth does not change according to our ability to stomach it.” So we’re not going to change it based on whether it’s palatable, or as Paul said later in Galatians 4:16, “Have I now become your enemy by telling you the truth?” But apparently, back in Isaiah’s day, that’s exactly how it was. He became their enemy by telling the truth.

So what pleasant things did the people want to hear? Well, the 21st century version would be, ‘I’m okay, you’re okay. The future is bright, God’s happy with us. Everything’s just how it should be. Let’s eat.’ Something like that. Or, ‘It’s not time to eat yet, I’ll tell you some fun stories, I’ll entertain you until the time’s up.’ This will make them very popular with their hearers. But Jesus said, “Woe to you when all men speak well of you, for that’s how they spoke of the false prophets.” I meditate on that. It’s like, what is it about these guys that everyone likes what they say, because they say things that everyone likes? Moralistic diatribe, fun stories, different things that we could all agree on. But they stay away from those things that confront people with the Holy One of Israel, put it that way. Well, in verses 12-14, the future for this people who turn away is dark indeed. “Therefore,” do you see the word therefore in verse 12, because you want the tickling ears, because you don’t want to be confronted with the Holy One of Israel, I love what it says, ‘Stop confronting us with the Holy One of Israel. Therefore, this is what the Holy One of Israel says.’ In other words, he’s not going away. [chuckle] This is his universe. We’re in his living room, he’s not going anywhere. So, “Therefore, this is what the Holy One of Israel says: “Because you have rejected this message, and relied on oppression and depended on deceit, this sin will become for you like a high wall, cracked and bulging, that collapses suddenly, in an instant. It will break in pieces like pottery, shattered so mercilessly that among its pieces, not a fragment will be found for taking coals from a hearth or scooping water out of a cistern.” So they’re telling lies, they see a seer is coming, they need a wall of protection, right? So they build up a wall of lies, and he says ‘It’s poor construction, don’t you see it’s leaning over, the mortar isn’t setting. There’s cracks in it. It’s coming down. I wouldn’t stand under this wall if I were you, ’cause it’s coming down.’

Reminds me of when we want to visit Haiti after the earthquake, and we saw a school that had been condemned and the construction there would not have been accepted in the US, there was no rebar, there were some other things, and it was just dangerous. And so, there are already broken pieces of cinder block all over the place, but many of it hadn’t fallen yet, and they just condemned it, ’cause they can see what’s gonna happen. And that’s what Isaiah’s saying here, it’s the same thing, this bulging wall of lies, and it’s just gonna come down on your head. It’s going to destroy you.

But here we come in verse 15 to the text I’ve already read, God’s beautiful, central invitation stands. This is our hope. This is the joy. “This is what the Sovereign Lord, the Holy One of Israel says, ‘In repentance and rest is your salvation, in quietness and trust is your strength.'” So God speaks, this Holy One of Israel, speaks a word of grace, he speaks a word of blessing to us, the word of counsel. “In repentance and rest, in quietness and trust,” that’s where your salvation is. Repentance is literally turning in: turning away from your sins, and rest means don’t venture forth on some path God didn’t tell you to go on. Stay here, stay put under the mighty hand of God. Submit yourself unto God’s mighty hand, rest under his hand, rest under it. In quietness is: be at peace under God’s hand. The opposite I think of impatience is quietness based on faith, you’re quiet under God’s plan, trusting Him to work it out. And your heart is not murmuring, you’re quiet. So quietness, and you’re accepting what’s happening as the sovereign will of God. And then ultimately, as always, trust faith, ultimately it’s faith. Trust in me, believe in me, and I will save you. He says it again and again, By faith alone, “The righteous will live by faith,” Habakkuk 2:4, it’s what he gives them. It’s his timeless counsel, repentance, rest, quietness and trust.

But look at the people’s reaction, “But you would have none of it.” It’s just the pain, the pathos of that statement. ‘I told you what to do, but look what you’re saying to me, but you would have none of it. You said no.’ Do you see that word right in the text, ‘You said no.’ Who are they saying no to? To God who said in repentance, rest, quietness and trust. They said, no, not that. We have a better plan. We have a better plan. We’re gonna flee on horses, we got some good horses. God says ‘Fine, I’ll give your enemies better horses.’ ‘Oh, we’re gonna be swift, we’re gonna ride swift,’ ‘Therefore your pursuers will be swift, ’cause they’re not your issue, I am.’ I mean, do you feel the tragedy of that? God told them repentance, rest quietness, and trust. And they said, ‘No, no, I don’t want it.’

And so, this section makes plain the key issue, how people respond to the word of God spoken by the prophets. They rejected the words of warning and judgment and woe. They rejected those words, they wanted pleasant things, they wanted illusions, they wanted sweet, happy things. They didn’t wanna hear any more about the Holy One of Israel. And so, judgment is going to come on them. God told them that repentance and rest, quietness and trust would be their salvation, but they said, ‘No, they’re going to run.’ God said, ‘Okay, then you’re going to run.’ And in the end, the end result will be total desolation, there’ll be no and left. Now, that didn’t get fulfilled with Assyria, that got fulfilled with Babylon over a century later, when Lamentations begins with these words, “How desolate lies the city once so filled with people.” 

III. Transforming Grace to Those Who Wait Upon the Lord (vs. 18-26)

Well, aren’t you glad the chapter doesn’t end there? Aren’t you glad that there’s words of grace, there’s words of forgiveness and mercy? And so, in verses 18-26 God gives transforming grace to those who will simply wait on the Lord. Verse 18, “Yet the Lord waits to be gracious to you; he exalts himself to show you compassion. For the Lord is a God of justice. Blessed are all who wait for him!” So God is waiting for us so that we will wait for him. And the wheels of redemptive history are turning, God’s providential sovereign controller is turning, and his plan is unfolding and he’s waiting for it to all happen. And he’s waiting, so he can show us compassion. And he exalts himself, he makes much of himself through the miracles of Jesus and through the preaching of the apostles and of the church for 20 centuries, and all of God’s mighty works, he exalts himself so that he can show you compassion, isn’t that incredible? So that you’ll call in the name of the Lord and be saved, “For the Lord is a God of justice.” Huh. Justice that produces salvation. How can those be put together? Well, you know, what’s the answer? How do justice and our salvation come together in the cross of Jesus Christ? That’s how it all comes together. We’ll get to in a minute, but justice, God is a God of justice and he will do what is right, and he longs to show you compassion. So, I have a blessing to give you, blessed are all you people who wait on him. Salvation comes to those who wait on the Lord, God will give us grace. And he’s gonna work it step by step, verse 19, God works in his people to cry out to the Lord, “For a people shall dwell in Zion, in Jerusalem; you shall weep no more. He will surely be gracious to you at the sound of your cry, As soon as he hears you, he will answer you,” “Everyone who calls on the name of the Lord will be saved.” Cry out to me, he’s gonna work a change in their hearts, they’re not going down to Egypt with gold anymore, they’re done with that, they’re done with the side shows, and they realize now they are getting what they deserve for their sins. They have turned away from their sins and wickedness. They’ve turned away from that and they have turned in faith, in quietness, in trust to God, and they are now crying out to God, ‘Oh God, would you deliver us? Save us.’

Secondly, God transforms the hearts of his people to heed his word, to listen to his counsel. Verses 20-21, “Although the Lord gives you the bread of adversity and the waters of affliction,” it’s one of the strangest meals that God feeds his people. You go overseas, go on the mission field, you’re gonna eat some strange food. Remember Elizabeth Elliot said, “Where he leads, I will follow, what he feeds, I will swallow.” [laughter] And she ate some strange things in the jungles of Ecuador, very strange foods. This is the strangest, why would God feed his own beloved children the bread of adversity and the waters of affliction? Because He’s sanctifying you, and He’s saying, ‘Here, eat this.’ And you say, ‘Yes, Lord,’ and you eat it. You eat it because it’s good for you, even though it’s bitter in your mouth, it’s good for you, and you patiently chew it and you swallow every bit of it until God is done showing you adversity and affliction. You wait, wait under his mighty hand. Wait under the affliction, wait under the pain, wait under the unknowing of what’s gonna happen. Just wait under him and let him guide you. Says, “Your teachers will be hidden no more; with your own eyes you will see them. Whether you turn to the right or to the left, your ears will hear a voice behind you, saying, ‘This is the way; walk in it.'” That of course, is ultimately fulfilled in the indwelling Holy Spirit, isn’t it? The spirit of truth, who will live with you and be in you, and he will guide you, it says, into all truth. 

‘So he will direct you to turn neither to the right nor to the left,’ that’s Deuteronomy language of complete obedience to the law. “So be careful,” Deuteronomy 5:32-33, “So be careful to do what the Lord your God has commanded you; Do not turn aside to the right or to the left. Walk in all the way that the Lord your God has commanded you, so that you may live and prosper and prolong your days in the land that you will possess.” Now, your ears will hear a voice behind you, and God will transform you and you will walk in that straight and narrow way, and turn neither to the right nor to the left. God will transform also the hearts of the people to despise their idols that caused all the trouble and throw them away. Hate them. Genuinely hate those idols. Verse 22, “Then you will defile your idols overlaid with silver and your images covered with gold; you’ll throw them away like a menstrual cloth and say to them, ‘Away with you!'” What you used to love, you now hate ’cause God hates it, and you throw it away.

It’s transformation, complete transformation. And then God pours out transformation on the whole land, though it was cursed, it was under the curse of Deuteronomy and the curse of the law of Moses, it had become like a desert. It’s going to flourish. And the curse will be removed. Verse 23-26, “He will send you also rain for the seed you sow on the ground, and the food that comes from the land will be rich and plentiful. And in that day your cattle will graze in broad meadows, and the oxen and donkeys at work the soil will eat fodder and mash, spread out with fork and shovel. In the day of great slaughter, when the towers fall, streams of water will flow on every high mountain and every lofty hill. The moon will shine like the sun, and the sunlight would be seven times brighter like the light of seven full days, when the Lord binds up the bruises of his people and heals the wounds he inflicted.” It’s the land flowing with milk and honey again. And better than ever before, brighter than it ever was before, shining like the light of seven full days. Oh, how beautiful is that?

IV. Terrifying Wrath to the Enemies of God

Final section of Isaiah 30 is God’s wrath against his enemies. Says ‘You don’t need Egypt, you need me. [chuckle] I can take care of Assyria, I can crush Assyria in ways that you will never forget.’ These are terrifying verses dear friends, terrifying. But listen to them, verses 27 and following, “Behold the name of the Lord comes from afar, with burning anger and dense clouds of smoke; his lips are full of wrath, and his tongue is a consuming fire. His breath is like a rushing torrent, rising up to the neck. He shakes the nations in the sieve of destruction; he places in the jaws of the people a bit that leads them astray. And you will sing as on the night you celebrate a holy festival; your hearts will rejoice as when people go up with flutes to the mountain of the Lord, to the Rock of Israel. The Lord will cause men to hear his majestic voice and will make them see his arm coming down with raging fire, with raging anger and consuming fire, with cloudbursts, and thunderstorm and hail. And the voice of the Lord will shatter Assyria; with his scepter, he will strike them down. And every stroke the Lord lays on them with his punishing rod will be to the music of tambourines and harps. As he fights them in battle with the blows of his arm.” Verse 33, “Topheth has long been prepared; it has been made ready for the king. Its fire pit has been made deep and wide, with an abundance of fire and wood; the breath of the Lord, like a stream of burning sulfur, sets it ablaze.”

Final act of this drama in Isaiah 30 is the wrath of the Lord poured out on his enemies. The Assyrians are mere mortals, you don’t need Egypt, you need God. God can handle them easily. And the images of wrath here are powerful, God’s name comes from afar. God is zealous for his namesake. He’s gonna move out powerfully to defend his name, he’s gonna come with burning anger and dense clouds of smoke with raging torrents of fire. A lot of the anthropomorphic images here of God having body parts is powerful, his lips filled with wrath, his tongue, a consuming fire, his breath like a rushing flood, drowning all his enemies. It’s by the mouth of the Lord. You see it? By how he speaks, he speaks, and they are judged. It’s that simple. And he does it to the nations that are against him, puts them in a sieve of destruction, and leads them by the jaw where he wants them to go. The Assyrian army will be destroyed instantly, and we’ll talk about that in Isaiah 37. The people of God will celebrate wildly as they are delivered and God gets the glory. And Topheth, a place where they burned garbage outside of Jerusalem, New Testament version is Gehenna, is a picture of hell. A picture where all of this wreckage of the nations is gathered and it’s burning with sulfur coming from the mouth of the Lord forever and ever.

So, how does Isaiah 30 preach the gospel of Jesus? Well, I already hinted at it, couldn’t hold back. Only in the cross of Christ are justice and grace coming together, only in the cross of Christ does God deliver sinners like us from his wrath with grace and mercy and compassion. Jesus, the Son of God, came into this world to be our sin bearer. He came to stand under Topheth for us, to take the stream of burning sulfur into himself and absorb it completely, so that we would not suffer in hell forever and ever, that’s what Jesus came to do.

And in the double exchange of the Gospel, that he came to take our wickedness on himself and extinguished the wrath of God forever, “There is therefore now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus.” And to give you his perfect righteousness and to restore you beautifully, like these verses say, and to pour out grace and to give you a heart of supplication, so you cry out against your idols and throw them away, ’cause you hate them and you yearn for righteousness and you hunger and thirst for it, ’cause you have a new nature now, and you yearn to walk in the straight and narrow, not turning aside to the right or left, and you now have the indwelling Holy Spirit, and the Spirit tells you where to go. In conjunction with his written word and not separate from it, please don’t misunderstand, and do not elevate that voice inside you telling you where to go to the word of God. Test everything you hear in your heart by the word. But the Holy Spirit leads us and guides us, ’cause he is the spirit of truth. And how beautiful is that?

And so, final word for you is the same faith that saves your soul, will also teach you how to get through the trials God has planned for you. He’s going to throw some boulders in your highway. He’s going to put a mudslide across your path. Don’t cut and run, don’t give up, and don’t go four-wheeling, don’t pull off on the shoulder and go over someone’s lawn. Wait under God’s mighty hand, and in due time, he will lift you up.


“Don’t cut and run, don’t give up, and don’t go four-wheeling, don’t pull off on the shoulder and go over someone’s lawn. Wait under God’s mighty hand, and in due time, he will lift you up.”

Now we’re coming to a time of the Lord’s Supper, it’s a time for us to prepare ourselves. If God has spoken to you today, if you’re convicted of your sins, go to him in grace. If you’ve never trusted in Christ as your Lord and Savior, you came here to hear the Gospel, you just heard it. All you have to do is believe in Jesus, trust in him. Don’t come and take from the Lord’s Supper. This is for people who have already testified to their faith in Jesus by water baptism, so if that’s you, please come. But if you trusted in Christ, been baptized, but you know you’re a sinner, it’s for sinners. Jesus shed his blood for sinners like you and me, so come. And it’s also for us as the family of God to draw together around the table and love each other and realize we’re going to heaven together because of the grace of God.

Let’s close in prayer. Father, thank you for the word of Isaiah. Thank you for this sermon, thank you for what Isaiah 30 tells us about the power of God to deliver us from the true danger that faces us, not the Assyrians, but your own justice and wrath expressed on Judgment Day and in hell, you’ve come to deliver us if we’ll just listen to you, tell us the truth, we will turn away from our sins in repentance and turning and rest and trust is our salvation. Thank you for this message, in Jesus name, Amen.

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