Surely they are like stubble; the fire will burn them up. They cannot deliver themselves from the power of the flame. There will be no coals to warm them or fire to sit beside. Sermons
I. THE UNSATISFYING ORACLES. "Thou art wearied." You have tried them so often without results of guidance and good. All is vain. Men go here and there, but, alas! too often to those who are the most likely to fall in with their desires and whims. Like Absalom, men consult counsellors like Ahithophel, who pander to their folly. Then, when times of real emergency and anxiety come, when the poor tired heart needs rest and peace, it is led to new pleasures, new excitements and interests, until weariness ensues. How contrasted is the Christian's lot! "Commit thy way unto him." II. THE MANIFOLD FAILURE. It is a failure all round. Think of the multitude of counsellors. Men go to a minister instead of to the Bible; or to a priest instead of to a Saviour; or to their passions instead of their conscience; or to man instead of to God. Humbly let us seek the heavenly guidance. "The meek will he guide in judgment: and the meek will he teach his way." - W.M.S.
Behold, they shall be as stubble. : — The flame is no comfortable fire for warmth, no hearth-fire (Isaiah 44:16) to sit in front of; but, on the contrary, consuming, eternal, i.e. annihilating flames (Isaiah 33:14).(F. Delitzsch, D. D.) I. With reference to the FIRST SENTENCE. 1. One of the most striking thoughts which it conveys to the mind is this, that the punishment of the wicked will be easily inflicted. "They shall be as stubble." Nothing can be more easy than to kindle stubble when it is fully dry. Oh, ungodly and impenitent man, there is that in thyself to-day which, let alone and permitted to ripen, will bring a hell upon thee. Thou hast in thyself the power of memory, and that power shall become a vehicle of sorrow to thee. Thou hast, beside thy memory, a conscience; a con. science which thou hast striven to silence; but, even drugged and gagged as it is, it sometimes makes thee feel unhappy. You will then find that you cannot palliate the guilt of sin. Thy memory and thy conscience shall be as two great millstones grinding thee to powder. Then, added to thy memory and to thy conscience, there shall come thy increased knowledge. Thou knowest enough now to leave thee without excuse, but then thy knowledge shall increase so as to leave thee without pretence of apology. Thou shalt then perceive the craft of the tempter who deluded thee. Thou shalt then see the blackness and the filthiness of sin as thou dost not see it now. Then shalt thou understand the greatness and the goodness of the God whom thou hast despised; thou shalt then discern the glory of the heaven which thou hast lost; thou shalt then begin to get an idea of that eternity which shall roll over thy head for ever. Beside, think of thy companions. Shut up fifty drunkards and profane men together, and would they not soon make a hell for themselves without any interposition of Divine power? What will it be when they are bound up in bundles; when the tens of thousands of those who obey not Christ shall find themselves in their own place? 2. This punishment shall be most searching and terrible. The metaphor of fire is used in Scripture because it is that which of all things causeth the most pain, and is the most searching and trying. As fire consumes, and so reaches to the very essence of things, so shall the wrath to come reach to the very essence and subsistence of the soul. 3. This destruction will be most inevitable. "They shall not deliver themselves from the power of the flame." There is hope now; there shall be no hope then. The Lord Jesus, though the most loving of spirits, was the most awful of preachers; and in His sermons, while there is everything that could melt and woo, there is no lack of the great and terrible thunderbolt, and the sounding forth of wrath to come, and the judgment which must await the impenitent. II. BUT OUR TEXT NOW CHANGES ITS FIGURE. "Thus saith the Lord, There shall not be a coal to warm at, nor fire to sit before it"; by which is meant that there shall be nothing in hell that can give the sinner a moment's comfort; nothing. III. And now our text bids us "BEHOLD," therefore I pray ye turn not away your eyes from this meditation. 1. Children of God, behold it; it will make you grateful. Does not the thought of the misery from which you have escaped make you love your Saviour? And oh, will it not make you love poor sinners too? 2. But specially, you that are unconverted, the text says, "Behold." It is a gloomy subject for you to think upon, but better to think of it now than to think of it for ever. ( C. H. Spurgeon.) People Babylonians, IsaiahPlaces BabylonTopics Able, Anyone, Behold, Burn, Burned, Burns, Coal, Coals, Consumes, Deliver, Dry, Fire, Flame, Oneself, Power, Safe, Save, Seated, Sit, Stems, Stubble, Themselves, Truly, Warm, WarmingOutline 1. God's judgment upon Babylon and Chaldea6. For their unmercifulness 7. Pride 10. And over-boldness 11. Shall be irresistible Dictionary of Bible Themes Isaiah 47:14 1424 predictions Library Humility is the Root of Charity, and Meekness the Fruit of Both. ...Humility is the root of charity, and meekness the fruit of both. There is no solid and pure ground of love to others, except the rubbish of self-love be first cast out of the soul; and when that superfluity of naughtiness is cast out, then charity hath a solid and deep foundation: "The end of the command is charity out of a pure heart," 1 Tim. i. 5. It is only such a purified heart, cleansed from that poison and contagion of pride and self-estimation, that can send out such a sweet and wholesome … Hugh Binning—The Works of the Rev. Hugh Binning The Iranian Conquest How Christ is the Way in General, "I am the Way. " Isaiah Links Isaiah 47:14 NIVIsaiah 47:14 NLT Isaiah 47:14 ESV Isaiah 47:14 NASB Isaiah 47:14 KJV Isaiah 47:14 Bible Apps Isaiah 47:14 Parallel Isaiah 47:14 Biblia Paralela Isaiah 47:14 Chinese Bible Isaiah 47:14 French Bible Isaiah 47:14 German Bible Isaiah 47:14 Commentaries Bible Hub |