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”Here am I; send
me.” And God said, ”Go, and tell this people, Hear ye indeed,
but understand not; and see ye indeed, but perceive not.”
Isaiah did go and preach to the people, but as God predicted,
they heard without understanding and looked without seeing.
We, like Isaiah,
live in times when few have ears to hear the word of God and
eyes to see His glory, His warnings, or His signs of the times.
The fact that few will see or hear does not lessen our duty
to say, ”Here am I, send me.” God is still calling out a people
for His name, one here and one there. The laborers are few.
This is no time to be unemployed as a laborer for God. The
work is there. The harvest is plenteous. What possible excuse
can we give for standing idly by when there is so much work
to be done? Oh, there are lots of. excuses we can give. As
in the parable Jesus gave us, ”I have bought a piece of ground...
another said I have bought five yoke of oxen, and another
said, I have married a wife and therefore I cannot come.”
These all have their counterparts in modern excuses. The piece
of ground is often a beach house or mountain cabin or place
on the desert or it can even be our garden at home. At any
rate. we cannot go campaigning because Saturday is the only
day we have to tend to it. The oxen can easily be our automobiles
which instead of transporting us to the work of the Lord carry
us over hill and dale in the pursuit of this world’s goods.
Wives haven’t changed since the time of Jesus and often the
husband or wife makes an excellent excuse for not doing what
we didn’t want to do anyway.
When it comes to
preaching the truth, to telling others of our hope, we often
feel like Moses who told God, ”0 my Lord, I am not eloquent.”
But God replied, ”Who made man’s mouth? have not I the Lord?
Now therefore go.”
The difference
between those who go and those who find excuses for staying
home from the Lord’s work is not that the one going feels
adequate and the other inadequate but rather that the doers
and goers do and go feeling that of their own selves they
can do nothing but that if God be for them, then who can be
against them. And so, with Paul they exclaim ”I can do all
things through Christ which strengtheneth me” and away they
go to do the best they can. Surprisingly they find that the
more they try to do, the more they are able to do and though
woefully inadequate, nevertheless with God’s grace the work
gets done and the laborers learn and benefit as much or more
than those to whom they have come to minister.
Paul tells us that
he ”kept back nothing that was profitable unto you, but have
shewed you, and have taught you publickly, and from house
to house.” Are we keeping back anything from those around
us because we are ashamed to go house to house? Are we keeping
quiet instead of trying to teach for fear we might be asked
something we can’t answer and thus be embarrassed? Are our
feelings so important to us that we would rather preserve
them than risk being shown up?
Paul said, ”I
am not ashamed of the gospel of Christ: for it is the power
of God unto salvation to everyone that believeth.” Are we?
Jesus warned that some would b: ashamed of his Gospel and
he said that ”whosoever therefore shall be ashamed of me and
of my words in this adulterous and sinful generation; of him
also shall the Son of man be ashamed, when he cometh in the
glory of his Father with the holy angels.”
If we follow Isaiah’s
example, we will say ”Here am I, send me” and God will say
to us ”Go and tell this people,” and soon Jesus wi11 say to
us, ”Come ye blessed of my Father, inherit the kingdom prepared
for you from the foundation of the world.”
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