Turning the street signs
How can a whole society lose its moral
way?
The fifth chapter of Isaiah gives a clear indication of the process. And in an effort to visualize this, I am,
once again, on the streets of my town.
This time, I’m looking at signs.
As a reminder, Isaiah 5 is a chapter heavy with the pronouncement of coming judgment. God has been provoked by his people and his anger has been kindled. What ignited that fire?
As a reminder, Isaiah 5 is a chapter heavy with the pronouncement of coming judgment. God has been provoked by his people and his anger has been kindled. What ignited that fire?
For they have
rejected the law of the LORD Almighty
And spurned the word of the Holy One of
Israel.
Therefore
the LORD’s anger burns against his people…. (Is. 5:24-25)
This is what I’m after in the photo
above. (With
the help of a little Photoshop magic, of course. I should be so lucky.) The key to living guilt-free is to convince
yourself that you’re on the right path.
Turn the street sign. Think that the road you’re taking is what God intended.
But how does a society do that? Earlier, Isaiah called out the process:
Woe to
those who call evil good
and good evil
who put
darkness for light
and light for darkness,
who put
bitter for sweet
and sweet for bitter.
Woe to
those who are wise in their own eyes
and clever in their own sight. (Is. 5:20-21)
As soon as I read that verse, I thought
of the “tessellations” of the great M.C. Escher. Light transitions into darkness. Reality shifts. But it’s a gradual process.
The first step is renaming. Redefining.
Changing the agreed-upon norms.
We see this in our own time. Sexuality is the obvious one. The
guidelines God called good and sweet, we have gradually come to deride as puritanical,
outdated, intrusive. Even hateful. Our shifting mores are driven by an
exaltation of self. What I want, I
should have.
But there are more subtle out-workings of
this individual-over-all mentality. For
example, America has a rising teacher shortage – due, in part, to the
burgeoning demands of parents for special treatment for their children. Yes, he didn’t turn his homework in on
time, but how dare you mark him down!
Standing at a corner by the river, I
think, I wish it were this easy. If only
choices (and their repercussions) were as obvious as two conflicting arrows. (Or overt street signs.) But I know from my
own heart that the shift to self-centered norms has subtle beginnings. Not making time for people. Neglecting intercessory prayer. Reading Scripture perfunctorily. Superficial repentance.
Changing the street sign doesn’t alter
the destination of the street. I can tell myself that this road in my town doesn’t end up in the
river, but if I go down it, I’m going to end up wet. Sure, the warning is obvious. If I’m not oblivious.
Israel, in Isaiah’s time had dulled themselves
to God’s direction. They forced God to
bring severe measures to set them right.
I pray that we won’t face the same.
Almighty God, Holy One of Israel, forgive
our disregard of your way for us.
Sometimes, we know we’re wrong and we forge ahead. More often, Lord, we subtly redefine your
norms to suit our wants. Teach us, by
your Spirit, to walk rightly before you.
For your path is always good, sweet and bathed in light.
Reader: As always, I’d love to hear
what you think.
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