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A Godly Fear

 “Oh, that you would rend the heavens and come down, That the mountains might quake at Your presence—As fire kindles the brushwood, as fire causes water to boil—To make Your name known to Your adversaries, That the nations may tremble at Your presence!”  (Isa 64:1-2).  What a prayer! What an image! I have always found this passage riveting. Actually, these final chapters of Isaiah are fascinating because they describe eschatological events. Eschatology is the study of the end times, and the Bible has lots and lots to say about the topic. It is in this setting that we find our verses. Isaiah longs for the day when God will reveal Himself to the nations. He will no longer be out of sight, hidden away by the heavens. Isaiah prays that God would rend the heavens much as we read of the curtain of the holy of holies being sundered in two at the Crucifixion (cf. Matt 27:51). In other words, Isaiah is praying, “rip open the heavens and reveal Yourself as at Sinai when the mountai...

Purify Yourself!

  This sentence in 1 John stood out to me during my Scripture reading this morning: “Everyone who has this hope purifies himself, just as He is pure” (1 John 3:3). I have preached these verses a number of times and this always convicts me.     One of John’s constant emphases in his first epistle is righteousness. He begins with his authoritative eyewitness message in chapter 1 that brings us into fellowship with the Father and Son (1:1-4). Those who believe the gospel message and come to know the Father will from that moment on be marked by righteous living. He describes this with a metaphor: light. First, he sets forth this proposition: “God is light and in Him there is no darkness at all” (1:5). He immediately follows up by saying that all who claim to know God must walk in the light, and anyone who does not is demonstrably a liar. Since God is holy and righteous, so must we be. If anyone hears about God’s righteous character and concludes that they do not sin (or even ...