‘He has gone ahead’ Isaiah 25:1-9: “And on this Mount [Zion] shall the Lord of hosts make for all peoples a feast of rich things [symbolic of His coronation festival inaugurating the reign of the Lord on earth, in the wake of a background of gloom, judgment, and terror], a feast of wines on the lees—of fat things full of marrow, of wines on the lees well refined.” (v6)
As we turn on the next phrase in the “Shepherd Psalm’; that is Psalm 23, we cannot help but notice that King David appears to change the metaphor –from the good shepherd to the Gracious Host: ‘You prepare a table before me in the presence of my enemies.’ Metaphor, a figure of speech that describes an action or object in a way that isn’t literally true, but helps explain an idea or make a comparison. Metaphor states that one thing is another thing! For instance, when I say, ‘’Dude, I am drowning in work,’’ I’m using qualities associated with one thing—the urgency and helplessness of drowning—to convey meaning for another thing—the work I’ve got to do.
With the way King David applied the use of metaphor in this Psalm, many commentators take this as a natural division in the Psalm, believing that it is written in two parts: the first using the figure of a shepherd and his sheep, and the second using the figure of a banquet table with the host and the guest. One writer says: ‘It’s a pity that King David didn’t finish his Psalm by staying with the one figure of a shepherd, rather than bringing in the concept of a banquet and a host. It seems to me to lose the sweet simple melody and to close with strange heavy chords when it changes to a scene of banquet hospitality.’
For me, that conclusion is quite wrong, for despite the seeming change of metaphor, King David actually keeps the shepherd figure right to the end, and King David only digressively brought in other areas in life where the good shepherd also functions in our life. When David referred to a ‘table’, bear in mind that he was not thinking of an indoor house banquet, but of the high, flat-topped plateaus or mountain or hill where the sheep were taken up to graze in the summertime; you can visualize it when you see some of these Fulani people with the cows on a flat hill grazing especially on our cassava crops. Prior to taking his sheep onto this higher ground, a smart good caring and concerned shepherd would leave his sheep on the present grazing low-point and go up the grazing high ‘table’ ground, flat-topped plateaus alone with his rod and staff on direct safety grounds to see if there were any wild animals or poisonous weeds or snakes and, if there were, he would plan his grazing programme to either avoid that area or take whatever steps were necessary to eradicate or chase them away before bringing in his sheep to graze. The sheep arriving on the glorious high tableland would not, of course, realize what the shepherd has done for them, but they owed their safety and security and good providence decision to the fact that the shepherd had gone before them to prepare for them a ‘table’ in the presence of their enemies. Do you now get the idea? This is exactly what our good shepherd, our Lord God does for us in life, even before we were born, He has already planned out every aspect of our life and aim to guiding us through His Spirit, which we call destiny but time without number, we humans distort and foolishly rearranged things ourselves by not being led by the Holy Spirit of our Lord God Almighty, too bad, which is why again some of us finds it very difficult to achieve God’s aims in our life and we complain and grumble seeking for who to blame, some will blame it to their birth circumstances or conditions, others will blame it on the polygamous or single parentage! But no matter how you see it I want you to know today that Igbos says, ‘ihe na eme anyi si anyi n’aka’ and the English man say, ‘as you make your bed so shall you lie on it’!
True Thankfulness Isaiah 25:1-9:
Now let us read Isaiah 25:1-9;
O Lord, You are my God; I will exalt You, I will praise Your name, for You have done wonderful things, even purposes planned of old [and fulfilled] in faithfulness and truth. 2 For You have made a city a heap, a fortified city a ruin, a palace of aliens without a city [is no more a city]; it will never be rebuilt. 3 Therefore [many] a strong people will glorify You, [many] a city of terrible and ruthless nations will [reverently] fear You. 4 For You have been a stronghold for the poor, a stronghold for the needy in his distress, a shelter from the storm, a shade from the heat; for the blast of the ruthless ones is like a rainstorm against a wall. 5 As the heat in a dry land [is reduced by the shadow of a cloud, so] You will bring down the noise of aliens [exultant over their enemies]; and as the heat is brought low by the shadow of a cloud, so the song of the ruthless ones is brought low. 6 And on this Mount [Zion] shall the Lord of hosts make for all peoples a feast of rich things [symbolic of His coronation festival inaugurating the reign of the Lord on earth, in the wake of a background of gloom, judgment, and terror], a feast of wines on the lees—of fat things full of marrow, of wines on the lees well refined. 7 And He will destroy on this mountain the covering of the face that is cast over the heads of all peoples [in mourning], and the veil [of profound wretchedness] that is woven and spread over all nations. 8 He will swallow up death [in victory; He will abolish death forever]. And the Lord God will wipe away tears from all faces; and the reproach of His people He will take away from off all the earth; for the Lord has spoken it. 9 It shall be said in that day, Behold our God upon Whom we have waited and hoped, that He might save us! This is the Lord, we have waited for Him; we will be glad and rejoice in His salvation.
Introduction:
Gratitude ought to be our consistent attitude and praise ought to be more than just a phase but all too often those of us who have been greatly blessed by God’s providence do not thank or bless God gratefully or gracefully enough. We simply fail to maintain a thankful heart and a bold expression of gratitude to our God, why because we don’t normally think deeply about God’s doings in our lives and see all what it stands for!
For instance we read that Lord Jesus once healed ten lepers, but only one returned to give Him thanks. Then our Lord Jesus asked, "Where are the nine?" We can accurately say that ninety percent of those blessed with healing that day gave no thanks to the Lord for their New Found Health. I wonder if the same percentage of those listening to this message are living without giving appropriate thanks and praise and attention to the Lord for the wonderful blessings and provisions He has given us. Sometimes we are grateful when we get well or discover that the diagnosis from our doctor finds nothing of consequence wrong with our health, but what about the days we live without an illness at all- is there any gratitude for good health itself?
A radio program once existed called, “Job Center of the Air.” The host said that more than 2,500 people had gotten jobs through the broadcast but only ten people had bothered to write a thank you note for the help they had received. So you can see that it appears Ingratitude seems to be ingrained in the hearts of the ungrateful. We often take the blessing and turn away without any thought to offering the thanks that is worthy of being offered. It is very important to realize here that certainly giving thanks to God and others is something that should be identified with every true God's people! But today we do not have enough God’s people to teach others how to be thankful for everything we receive from God and from people!
A retired school teacher in her eighties was overjoyed to get a letter from a former student thanking her for her role in his life. She immediately responded to the letter writing, "I cannot tell you how much your letter meant to me. You will be interested to know that I taught school for 50 years and yours is the first note of appreciation I have ever received." Do you see that! What about you, do you show appreciation and give thanks to God and people?
It is shameful to live as unthoughtful and ungrateful Christians in life who just live like others. Much of what we see around us in the lives of those we know and meet is a cold, impersonal, and reveals an uncaring attitude. We must not let the calloused and detached nature of our generation rob us of our gratitude-attitude which we are not deeply thinking about. One person wrote, "Thankfulness to God is only needed as frequently as a heart beat." Indeed, every heartbeat is a gift from God; and not only to God, we should be grateful even to people!
We need the spirit of the little boy in school who was asked if there was something for which he was thankful. He replied that he was most thankful for his eye glasses. When asked why he was thankful for his eye glasses, he replied, "My glasses keep the boys from hitting me and the girls from kissing me!" He might change his mind about the kisses once he is a little older.
Ill -This coming Thursday our nation participates in a National Holiday called Thanksgiving, said the narrator. This day commemorates the harvest which God gave to the Plymouth Colony after that first terrible winter in America. For many years Thanksgiving was only observed by certain states and in particular areas of the country. A woman named Sarah Hale was determined to make the holiday a nationwide celebration of God's blessings upon America. Year after year she flooded the newspapers with articles and letters to the editors. She wrote to Presidents: Millard Fillmore the 13th President of America 1850 to 1853 after being Vice 1849 to 1850, Franklin Pierce an American politician who served as the 14th President of America 1853 to 1857 and James Buchanan the 15th President of America 1857-1861 who served immediately prior to the American Civil War pleading for them to set aside a day of Thanksgiving annually in America in thanksgiving to God for His numerous blessings. In 1863 her entreaties did not go unnoticed and because of them President Abraham Lincoln proclaimed the last Thursday in November of each year as a day of Thanksgiving Day to our Almighty God. Lincoln lived to celebrate only two such holidays before he was gunned down at Ford's theater. Hale lived into her nineties and celebrated many Thanksgiving Days with her family and friends. Thank God she is not around today trying to get such a day established. Can you imagine what would be the outcry from the American Civil Liberties Union ACLU and other liberal factions within our society if a President at this our time tried to establish a religious holiday for all of America or even other nations to celebrate by giving thanks to God for all His blessings? Sad, isn’t it? Because so many things will be considered and there will be lots of debates on it without fruitfulness because it will be opposed by different religion who would like it to be their own way! Hence you hear our Lord say that the world would not know Peace, until there will be a Unity of Religion whereby it will be easy for everyone to say, ‘Blessed is He that Comes in the Name of the Lord’. When Lord Jesus Christ came, assuming everybody in the entire world was able to say of Him, ‘Blessed is He that Comes in the Name of the Lord’ He would not have been killed! This killing of One who comes in the Name of the Lord, is the biggest Problem facing the world today because of the world’s present dangerous Religious Diversity in failing to realize the ‘Oneness’ of our Lord God Almighty and how do you think it can be stopped or salvaged? Only when our world peoples are able say with their mouth and heart, ‘Blessed is He that Comes in the Name of the Lord’! Anything that does not come with the NAME of the Lord has a Question.
Maybe you heard about the little boy who was warned not to use religious words in his presentation in other not to offset the world’s religious beehive, but was directed to give a report on the founding of America and how can he do that when the Pilgrims were Christians. Nevertheless, The little young fellow stood up and read the following from a 3 X 5 index card:
“The Pilgrims came here seeking freedom of you know what. They landed at Plymouth Rock and gave thanks to you know who. Because of them, we can worship each Sunday, you know where!” What a wonderful piece of writing in a turbulent religious world, it will be important for us to know briefly something about Plymouth Rock, it was established in 1620; it became part of the Dominion of New England in 1686; in 1691 Plymouth and Massachusetts Bay Colony were combined and today it is made up of Bristol county, Plymouth county, and Barnstable county all in Massachusetts in America. Plymouth Colony included parts of New England, centered around Plymouth, Barnstable, and Bristol counties in Massachusetts, U.S. and when you hear the name New England, do not think it is part of Europe, rather this New England region, is Northeastern United States which was discovered against great odds by Separatists Pilgrims who made the famous 1620 voyage aboard the ship Mayflower and founded Plymouth Colony, but they were ordinary English men and women, New England including the states of Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and Connecticut, the region was named by Capt. John Smith, who explored its shores in 1614 for some London merchants. It was the site of the first permanent settlement of/by Europeans in New England and the second in North America; today the original colony of Plymouth is a living museum and attend reenactment of the First Thanksgiving when settlers, English pilgrims, a group of religious separatists from the Church of England who helped found the nation celebrated the autumn harvest. Today how many Nations have a national thanksgiving to God in appreciations to Him!
Now I want you to look with me at Isaiah 25:1-9. Though this passage is not about thankfulness for daily, earthly blessings, it does present to us three great tenets for true thankfulness.
I want us to reflect upon the subject of True Thankfulness as we look at this Bible passage today. There are three important points for us to consider:
I. A PERSONAL RELATIONSHIP WITH GOD PRECEDES TRUE THANKFULNESS:
In Spiritual terms, you cannot be thankful to a God whom you do not know. Imagine an atheist who wakes up one morning grateful to be alive but doesn't know who to thank for keeping him alive? Or consider the atheist who is in an accident and realizes in that moment that his life has been spared. I can hear him say, "Thank .... uh ... um ... well, I'm thankful!" but Prophet Isaiah said, "O Lord, You are my God; I will exalt You, I will praise Your name, for You have done wonderful things, even purposes planned of old [and fulfilled] in faithfulness and truth.”
So you can see Prophet Isaiah knowing God and His capability; said that because he had a personal relationship with the Lord and knows who he is addressing Him with ‘MY God’!
King David also used this same idiom. He wrote, "The Lord is MY Shepherd." Disciple Thomas said, "My Lord and My God." Apostle Paul penned, "My God shall supply all your needs." This phraseology using the word ‘MY’ is common throughout the Bible. In each case, the writer was speaking of God as “MY” God because he knows Him personally and has had encounters with Him. Thanking God is not thanking “fate,” it is thanking the “Friend Closer Than A Brother.”
We do not proclaim gratitude to Lord God Almighty by simply saying, "Thank goodness," we rather say, "I thank You my God!" there must be some element of being specific.
I've heard some people say, "Thank goodness." Now, let me ask, who is "goodness"? Lord Jesus said, "There is none good but God." The man who instead of saying ‘thank You God’, said ‘thank goodness’, is it that calling the Name of God is heavy in his mouth or that he does not know God? It is difficult to thank someone you don't know. Isaiah had a personal relationship with God and that is why he thanked Him specifically and personally. All of us who know the Lord need to be careful in our thanksgiving to the Lord! Some people even spell ‘God’ and ‘Lord’ with small letters, again which portrays your perception of God! Yet you hear people sing O tua ka Chineke anyi di, Agidigba—O! To you is our God really Big? If He is, always regard Him thus!
A. Thankfulness is Personal but not Private;
Someone may say, "Well, I am thankful to God, but I don't like to make a public display of it, it is a private matter." It is important to know that Gratitude in the Bible was Open and Forceful. Thankfulness that does not break out in an open display is lacking inside the unseen heart. A truly thankful person cannot hide his or her thankfulness to God! Watch a child open a gift and you will see wide-eyed gratitude inside the unseen heart, instead of voicing it out.
Of course, even children are prone to be ungrateful. One preacher tells of his daughter asking for some coins from her father. The dad placed some pennies in her hand. She saw that he had some more shiny silver coins and asked for some more of the coins. So, he gave her a couple quarters and some dimes. He then asked, "Now, what do you say?" He expected a "thank you" from his daughter who stood there with a handful of coins. The little girl said, "I want more!" Sadly, we often treat our Heavenly Father the same way. That is ingratitude on our part!
In our passage today we note that the word "exalt" is written in a Hebrew form which is intensive. For example, if you wrote a sentence regarding the word jump, you might say, "The man jumped at the news of a promotion at his job." But if you wrote this in the intensive form, you would write, "The man leaped for joy, hopped and skipped gladly, when he heard the news of his job promotion." This is exactly what Prophet Isaiah meant when he said, "I will exalt, openly, gladly, and with great excitement, I will praise my God!" Christian thankfulness is personal but it is not private. If you have a biblical kind of gratitude, you will show it with intensity and openly too!
B. Thankfulness Is Worship But Involves Will;
Sometimes we think of praising God on those occasions that we get what we asked for or exactly what we want. Actually, the way gratitude is expressed in this text today is a matter of will and commitment. "I will," said Isaiah. In other words, he made a commitment to praise God whether he felt like it or not. That may seem strange, but that is the way we have to deal with gratitude in our life. You don't feel your way into an attitude of gratitude; rather, you must praise your way into a new way of feeling. In a biblical sense, gratitude begins with who God is and not just with what God has done for us. Sure, there is a prompting of thankfulness when things go our way and God gives us exactly what we want or need; however, God deserves our praise and thankfulness at all times. We must "will" to be thankful in order to practice gratitude correctly.
Many in the congregation today are going through tough times. You may be visiting the doctor often and taking powerful medications for an illness. Some of you are likely going through some kind of treatments. Others are waiting on the results of tests that a doctor has performed. Still others are brokenhearted because of a failed relationship or a prodigal child or grandchild. We could go on with examples of lost jobs, financial troubles, grief, loneliness - well, you get the point. God has not left you, even if you feel that He has. He loves you. He has plans for you. Just say, "I will praise my God." When we use our will to praise God, it helps pull us up out of the circumstances and helps us stand on God's promises and go ahead praising God.
C. Thankfulness Is Exclusive But Also Inclusive;
In Bible terms, only those who know the Lord can give true thanks to Him. But the opportunity to know Him is open to all. Look at verse six. God has made this feast of rejoicing available to "all" people. No one is excluded who truly desires to have a personal relationship with God.
The picture of the heavenly feast is very appropriate for our consideration. Thanksgiving involves a meal for family and/or friends. One day, in heaven, we are going to sit down to a great feast with our Lord and Savior. It is called the Supper of the Bridegroom. Now listen to this narrator, at one of the sessions of the colloquiums (an academic conference or meeting) prior to my doctoral graduation from Trinity Theological Seminary, Jayne and I were privileged to hear one of the most knowledgeable archaeologists from Israel speak on interesting discoveries which had been made in the Holy Land (territory of the modern state of Israel and Palestine). One of those involved the symbolic meaning of certain meals among people during Bible days. Dr. Carter revealed that certain meals were held for the specific purpose of establishing or restoring relationships with people. When a person was invited to such a meal, it established a bond between the person giving the meal and the person receiving it. It was always a time of great celebration. He stated that this was the picture Lord Jesus was creating with the story of the Prodigal Son. The boy was treated to a meal of restoration to full family privileges. Likewise, that is the picture in the Lord's Supper. From these two pictures or figures established by our Lord Jesus Christ, it celebrates the bond those who accept Christ's invitation are invited to the meal which establishes a bond--relationship with Him. The idea is one of irrevocable union! Are you in it?
Is there a person here today who is unsure if you have that personal relationship with God? Well, God invites you to His Son, Jesus Christ, who is the Bread of Life and the Water of Life. When you come to Him in believing faith, you are partaking of life-giving food for your soul. And one day you will sit there at a great banquet feast in heaven. You can join the family of God around the table of thanksgiving today - a thanksgiving for something far beyond food and drink - a thanksgiving for the forgiveness of sin, the presence and indwelling of Lord Jesus Christ in your life and a future in heaven with Christ our Lord. He invites you to come to Him today! When we come to the end of this message, you will get the opportunity to accept Lord Jesus as your Lord and Savior. I hope you will open your heart now to allow Him to speak to you and call you to Himself.
For all those who have received the gift of life through Christ, praise, thankfulness and exaltation are to be part of your existence. We have been lifted out of the miry clay. We have been rescued from the brink of death. We have been pulled out of the grasp of an enemy who was torturing us. We now have new life! No matter what else is going on in our lives, we are redeemed and no one can take that from us. Praise the Lord. Exalt the Lord. Thank the Lord!
II. A HISTORICAL RELATIONSHIP WITH GOD PRECEDES TRUE THANKFULNESS:
A man came to the preacher and said, "Preacher, I need help. Lately, every time my wife and I get into an argument, she becomes historical." The preacher said, "Sir, I think you mean that every time you get into an argument your wife becomes hysterical." The man replied, "No, I mean she becomes historical, because she brings up everything I ever did wrong in my life!"
You and I can only be thankful if we have a historical relationship with God. What do I mean? I mean that we must have an awareness or records of His blessing across the history of our lives. In fact, we can go back even further and see how God has worked in our families, in our nation, in our history and even in Bible days, just to bless us today! When we review or pull together the history of what God has done for us from far back, we cannot help but be thankful to Him. One thing every Christian can be thankful for today is the fact that God does not bring up everything you did wrong in your life. In fact, He forgets it because of the blood of His Son. He remembers it no more. He places your sins in the depth of the sea. He separates your sins from you as far as the East is from the West. "Love makes no lists of wrongs." Indeed, God has wiped the slate clean! Aren't you grateful? You ought to be - I ought to be. If you are grateful, then you need to show it no matter the current situation that you are in!
This is the point that Isaiah is making. Note that he said, "You have done marvelous things, things planned long ago." Isaiah was aware that God had worked in his behalf, and in behalf of others, and it brought him to his feet. He exalted and praised God with great vigor and enthusiasm. He exalted the God whom he knew and loved and cherished!
A. There Must Be Remembering in our Rejoicing;
The songwriter said it best,
“Count your many blessings name them one by one,
And it will surprise you what the Lord has done!”
Recall the blessings of God and it will move you from Grumble Avenue to Glory Boulevard. When we remember what God has done for us, we are brought to our knees in humility and to our feet in rejoicing! This was the reason that God instituted memorials. In the Old Testament, God often had the people raise a banner or a pile of stones as a remembrance of some act of mercy He had performed on their behalf. He did this so that they and their children would not forget! I love the banner ministry in a church. When the choir sings and the people carry those banners forward in a service, I can't help but rise to my feet. Each of us can be a banner for the Lord. He redeemed us. We can praise Him and thank Him before the world. Never be ashamed of your gratitude to God - don't stow it - show it! We must remember to rejoice properly and we must raise up His banner to reveal it correctly.
B. There Must Be Thinking in our Thanking;
In that great passage found in Philippians 4:4 and following, Apostle Paul tells us one prerequisite to proper praise and peace with God. We must think of good things. We must keep a good thought! Stinking thinking leads to grumbling grouches, but thanking thinking leads to glorified gratitude! We must think the thoughts that remind us of God’s goodness toward us. Failing to do this leads believers to receive blessings from the Lord without giving Him praise or expressing gratitude to Him. To do that treats the Lord as some kind of glorified Santa Claus.
C. There Must Be Peace in our Praise;
What does this mean? Look at verse 1 again. Note that Isaiah said that God had done marvelous things in "perfect faithfulness". A lot of the things happening around Isaiah were not pleasant, but he praised God anyway! Why? Because Prophet Isaiah trusted the wisdom of God in His "perfect faithfulness"
Corrie Ten Boom, in “The Hiding Place”, relates an incident which taught her this principle. She and her sister, Betsy, had just been transferred to the worst German prison camp they had seen yet – Ravensbruck, Nazi Germany’s largest female-only camp where more than 120,000 women from all over Europe were imprisoned. Upon entering the barracks, they found them extremely overcrowded and flea-infested, jumping insect that feeds on blood. Their Scripture reading that morning, from 1 Thessalonians, reminded them to rejoice always, pray constantly, and give thanks in all circumstances. Betsy told Corrie to stop and thank the Lord for every detail of their new living quarters. Corrie at first flatly refused to give thanks for the fleas, but Betsy persisted. She finally succumbed. During the months spent at that camp, they were surprised to find how openly they could hold Bible study and prayer meetings without guard interference; you know that many people do not realize that if these things that are happening in terms of herdsmen are not put in check, with time no Christian will worship. It was several months later when they learned that the guards would not enter the barracks because of the fleas. (Corrie Ten Boom, The Hiding Place.) Can you now see how God used what we will otherwise not welcome to create the atmosphere we want, which is why because He knows more than we do, hence He requires thanks from us in all situations!
In order to thank God properly, we must learn to thank God for the fleas. Like Paul, we must glory in our infirmities that the power of God may rest upon us! To believe that God is working in our behalf even when things are not going as we like is the true test of a thankful heart and a true child of God!
III. AN ETERNAL RELATIONSHIP WITH GOD PRECEDES TRUE THANKFULNESS:
Part of that which made Isaiah thankful was the eternal nature of God's blessings upon him. Look with me at Isaiah 25:6-9. The Christian has a thankful heart because he knows he has something which the world, the devil, time and space cannot take from him.
A. There is Victory because Corruption is Removed (8);
Sin disgraced us, but our Savior graced us. Through His love Christ Jesus granted us grace and removed our sin. The songwriter exulted in praise at the thought of forgiven sin:
“My sin, oh the bliss of this glorious thought
My sin not in part, but the whole
Is nailed to the cross and I bear it no more
Praise the Lord, Praise the Lord O my soul!” (Words, Horatio Spafford; Music, Philip Bliss)
Our sinful stains have been removed in His life giving blood. We are thankful because we have the assurance in eternity and we know that sin will never touch us there. When I got saved, I was removed from the penalty of sin. Now that I am saved, I am kept from the power of sin. I cannot be corrupted again. One day, thank God, I will be removed from the presence of sin. If such thoughts cannot elicit or evoke or draw out thanksgiving from you, you need to check on your salvation to see if it is real!
B. There is Victory because Condemnation is Removed (7);
The shroud is the veil which was placed over the face of a condemned person who was lead out to be hanged. God has removed and taken the covering off of us and we are free from the death sentence that was upon us. The shackles are removed and we walk out of the prison of sin into the bright sunlight of freedom in Christ!
C. There is Victory because the Coffin is Removed (8);
Death is swallowed up in victory. Note the similarity with the passage by Paul in 1 Corinthians 15 and the passage we read in Isaiah. Tears are wiped from our eyes forever. The last enemy is destroyed. To a Christian, death is not a period but simply a comma!
Speaking of death, did you hear about the woman in Lebanon, Indiana whose husband died? This actually happened and was reported by Associated Press. Mrs. Sam Brown came to the obituary desk because her husband had died. She brought along four pages of obituary, telling all about Sam but then she was told that to publish such an obituary would cost twenty-give cents per word. So she said, "Then just print 'Sam Brown died.'" The obituary writer told her that there was a minimum of seven words for a death notice. The woman pondered, and on her fingers she counted to seven and then she said, "Well, then just print 'Sam Brown dies, 88 Ford for sale.'" (Associated Press, 4-27-92). See how the woman was forced to make fun of death!
When Andy Russell of Tarzana, California passed away recently, his devoted three-year old grandson, Bobby, wanted to know what had happened to grandpa. So the chore of explaining about death fell to the boy's dad. Dad said, "Bobby, God saw that grandpa was very sick and so because he did not want him to hurt anymore, he sent the angels to get him." To which little Bobby astonished and wide-eyed replied, "The whole team?" (Associated Press, 6-12-92). The little lad thought the California Angels Baseball team had come for grandpa! Another fun.
Thank God that one day death will be a laughing matter. We will dance on the streets of gold! We will rejoice with those who have gone before us. Isaiah is exalting God in the present as he looks out into the future at what God is going to do with everything including death! Today our major problem is our lack of foresight and vision that makes us unable to see far to perceive what our God is doing for us.
"O death, where is your sting. O grave, where is your victory. The sting of death is sin and the strength of sin is the law, but thanks be to God who gives us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ!" Thank Him, dear people, thank Him! Thank Him for the personal relationship. Thank Him for the historical relationship. Thank Him for the eternal relationship! Praise His holy name forever and ever!
Conclusion:
A number of years ago the late-night television host, Johnny Carson, had the great L.A. Dodger pitcher Orel Hershiser on his program. During Carson’s 27th anniversary program he replayed the segment with Hershiser, who had been a star of the World Series the previous year. Carson commented that people could see Hershiser singing in the dugout between innings. He asked the ace pitcher what songs he sang. Hershiser was an outspoken Christian, and he told Carson that he would gladly sing the song he sang most of the time to calm his nerves in a tight game. Carson, and the audience, were stunned when Hershiser sang, “Praise God from whom all blessings flow. Praise Him all creatures here below. Praise Him above ye heavenly hosts. Praise Father, Son and Holy Ghost, Amen!”
There was a pause and then the audience broke into applause. Carson ended his 27th Anniversary program playing that tape and expressing that it was one of the most beloved incidents he had in those years doing The Tonight Show.”
Go ahead, Praise God! Even the world will be impressed. Most of all, your praise pleases God, blesses you and serves to reach a lost world! Express your gratitude to God! Exalt the Lord!
Now, to those of you who have never trusted Lord Jesus as your Lord and Savior, today is your day to know the joy of God's richest blessing - the joy of salvation. I ask you to come to Him our Lord Jesus today and forever!
O Father and my God, what comfort and security I have from knowing that no situation or circumstances will ever come about in my life which You have not anticipated and foreseen, always help me Lord in all things. You have surveyed every path ahead –so lead me on Lord; I will follow. In Your name Lord Jesus Christ I pray. Amen!