Today’s Scripture Reading (December
9, 2013): Isaiah 36
I recently
watched a documentary on the RMS Titanic disaster. There was really nothing new
that the documentary had to offer about the disaster, but there were some
interesting pictures of the Titanic and her sister ship, the Olympic. But once
again I was reminded about the senselessness of the tragedy. The Titanic
suffered from the same weaknesses that seem to have plagued humanity from the
beginning of time. First it sacrificed safety for opulence. And the Titanic also
sacrificed safety for economic savings, and both of these sacrifices were made
possible because of the supreme arrogance of the ship designers. The idea that
the Titanic was unsinkable was never something that the designers of the ship had
ever put forward in their advertising for the new ship. The myth of “the
unsinkable Titanic” was really placed into the mind of the public by a
newspaper article that called the new line of ships “virtually unsinkable,” but
the owners of the Titanic never denied the rumor. And on the fateful night that
the Titanic was lost, the crew consistently ignored warnings of the ices field
that lay ahead. It was as if such warnings only pertained to lesser ships, not
the mighty Titanic. Arrogance in every theatre of life seems to always end up
ushering us into disaster, and that was exactly what happened to the Titanic –
they sped full speed ahead into an ice field that they knew was there, and as a
result the ship would also quickly sink to the bottom of the North Atlantic.
The Assyrian
army almost 2800 years ago suffered from the same disease. The Assyrians
conquered only to find the things that they could take from other civilizations
(come and make a bargain with my master), and the success that they had enjoyed
at precisely that task had created a great arrogance within them. No one had
said that the Assyrian Empire was unsinkable, but the leaders of the empire
were starting to believe that they really were.
And so the
General of the Army surrounding the city of Jerusalem makes an incredible
offer. I will give you two thousand horses if you have soldiers to put on them
for the final battle. The idea behind the offer is that he believed that the
armies of Judah were so pitiful that even if he was to take two thousand of his
own horses (weakening his own forces in the process) and gives them to Judah,
they are still vastly out matched. It was a message that Assyria hoped that
Hezekiah would hear and understand. The war had already been decided before the
first arrow was shot in the battle for Jerusalem. Assyria had won and Hezekiah
had lost – and nothing was going to change that truth.
Except that
it was not a truth that God understood. Assyria’s language of arrogance was a language
that was foreign to One that Israel served. God hears the voice of humility,
and that was a language that Assyria seemed unable to speak. But humility was a
language that Hezekiah had mastered. And the result was that God was about to
move in a very real and unexpected way. The unsinkable Assyrian Empire was
about to sink, and like the unsinkable Titanic, arrogance was the reason that
they were going to go down.
Tomorrow’s Scripture Reading: Isaiah
37
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