Isaiah 39:8 (NKJV)
8 So Hezekiah said to Isaiah, “The word of the LORD
which you have spoken is good!” For he said, “At least there will be peace and
truth in my days.”
Hezekiah is appropriately
remembered as one of the great heroes of the Old Testament era. When
Sennacherib, the King of Assyria, surrounded Jerusalem with his armies and
attempted to destroy the city, King Hezekiah entrusted himself to the Lord and
the Lord delivered Jerusalem in his mercy. But like all biblical heroes other
than our Lord Jesus, Hezekiah had his noticeable faults; and these faults
became more pronounced with age.
The text before us today
illustrates one of these faults. Hezekiah had just committed a severe sin by
kowtowing to envoys from Babylon. Rather than placing his trust in the Lord and
treating the envoys with appropriate discretion, Hezekiah gave the envoys a
royal tour of the entire palace, including the treasury. For his folly, God
announced through Isaiah that the kingdom would fall to Babylon.
“Hear the word of the Lord,” Isaiah declared,
“‘Behold, the days are coming when all that is in your house, and what your fathers have accumulated until
this day, shall be carried to Babylon; nothing shall be left,’ says the LORD.
‘And they shall take away some of your sons who will descend from you, whom you
will beget; and they shall be eunuchs in the palace of the king of Babylon.’”
This was Isaiah’s message of
doom. So how would you expect Hezekiah to respond to such a message? Don’t you
expect him to show contrition, repentance, sorrow, and confession of guilt? After
all, even King Ahab, the husband of Jezebel, knew the importance of contrition
when hearing a rebuke from the Lord! When told that he would witness the
destruction of his own family, Ahab humbled himself and went about in mourning.
As a result, God mitigated the punishment, delaying it until after the close of
Ahab’s life.
But how does Hezekiah respond
to Isaiah’s message? Hezekiah said to
Isaiah, “The word of the LORD which you have spoken is good!” For he said, “At
least there will be peace and truth in my days.” In other words, rather
than repenting in sackcloth and ashes, and perhaps averting the judgment of God
on his posterity, Hezekiah rejoices that he doesn’t have to worry about it
personally. “It’s not going to happen while I’m alive, so it’s no big deal.”
Talk about a self-centered attitude!
Yet often our culture thinks
and acts – and we ourselves think and act – in this same self-centered fashion.
The current national debt is approximately 18 trillion dollars – and yet our
representatives are passing additional “stimulus” packages to tax us into
prosperity. In addition to the skyrocketing national debt, average household
debt has reached unprecedented proportions. But our self-centeredness is
reflected in more than our pocket books. It is reflected in our attitudes as
well. How often do we consider the way in which our actions today will impact
the next generation – especially the next generation of our own family?
Adultery and covenantal unfaithfulness are rampant, the educational failure is
acute, understanding of God’s covenant blessings and curses is all but lost.
And yet we comfort ourselves, reasoning, “Will there not be peace and truth at
least in our days?”
As we come into the presence
of our Lord today, let us not act like Hezekiah. Let us bow before him and
confess that we have often failed to consider the way in which our actions will
affect future generations. Let us ask him to forgive our transgression and
grant us godly repentance. And let us kneel as we do so.
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