A frequently quoted passage from the Old Testament
comes from Isaiah 55. It reads:
…my thoughts are not your thoughts, neither are
your ways my ways… As the heavens are higher than the earth, so are my ways
higher than your ways and my thoughts than your thoughts (vss. 8-9).
I’ve often heard this passage used to justify
people embracing incoherent beliefs or to explain why we can trust God when we
don’t understand what God is doing. But this passage is not talking about
embracing the mystery of God. It’s about something much more profound and
challenging in light of the tension around racial division that we are
experiencing in our world today. To explain this, let me provide a little
background.
God called Abraham to be a unique covenant partner
with him and to eventually form a unique nation through which “all peoples on
earth will be blessed” (Gen. 12:1-3). This calling follows immediately after
God’s judgment on Babel where people had to be scattered because they were
trying to reach heaven on their own. (See post on Reversing Babel.) God, who
always starts new projects with a “mustard seed” and who is always incredibly
patient, began selectively carving out a distinct nation from among the
descendants of Abraham.
For his own sovereign reasons, God decided to work
with Isaac’s lineage instead of Ishmael’s and with Jacob’s rather than Esau’s.
He then steered the descendants of Jacob down into Egypt to incubate them as a
distinct tribe for four centuries. When they had grown to a sufficient size,
and when the destructive sin of the Canaanites had become intolerable (Gen.
15:16), God delivered them out of Egypt, and planted his people in “the
promised land.”
In doing all this, God was raising up a distinct
people for himself who would know him and walk in his ways. But the ultimate
goal, we must always remember, was to use this chosen nation to bless the whole
world. Indeed, God wanted Israel to be a nation of servant priests whom he
would use to reverse Babel—that is to reunify humans by graciously bringing
heaven down to us—and bring the whole world back together under his loving
Lordship.
This vision of a reunited and reconciled humanity
is hammered home with increasingly clarity and strength throughout the Old
Testament. For example, Jeremiah looks forward to the time when “all nations
will gather in Jerusalem to honor the name of the Lord” (Jer. 3:17; 27:7).
Zechariah prophesies of a time when the Lord will “be king over the whole earth”
so that he will be the only Lord confessed among all people (Zech 14:9). And
Joel prophesies of a time when God’s Spirit would be poured out “on all people”
(Joel 2: 28).
But the prophet who most forcefully captures God’s
vision of a reunited and reconciled humanity is Isaiah. From the start the
Israelites (like so much of the church today!) had a tendency to define
themselves over and against other people rather than as the servants of other
people. They were guilty of their own form of ethnic idolatry. Through Isaiah
the Lord confronts this idolatry and reiterates his age-long goal of reaching
all people.
In chapter 55, for example, the Lord announced that
anyone who was thirsty or hungry was invited to come and feast at his banquet
table for free (vss. 1-2). He promised all who came to his feast that he would
bring them into the “everlasting covenant” that he “promised to David” (vs. 3).
For, the Lord says, David was raised up not just to be the earthly king of the
Jews but to be a “witness” and “ruler” for all people (vs. 4). It’s clear from
this that God’s goal was always to incorporate all people into his covenant
with Israel. This universal goal, as well as God’s promise to have a king like
David rule all people, is in principal fulfilled in Christ.
The Lord reiterates his universal goal further when
he goes on to say that his chosen people will “summon nations you know not, and
nations you do not know will come running to you” because the Lord “has endowed
you with splendor” (vs. 5). And he called on all the “wicked” of the world to “forsake
their ways” while promising to “freely pardon” them if they would do so (vs.
7).
Inviting all to the banquet table of Yahweh was, in
fact, the job of the Israelites all along. But, as I said above, many had
unfortunately forgotten this. At this point we read about the thoughts of God.
Let me quote it again:
…my thoughts are not your thoughts, neither are
your ways my ways… As the heavens are higher than the earth, so are my ways
higher than your ways and my thoughts than your thoughts (vss. 8-9).
He’s talking about his vision to reach all humans!
He is in effect saying to his chosen people; Your way of thinking is narrow,
ethnically centered, and idolatrous.
But my way of thinking has always been universal.
As high as the heavens are above the earth is how much broader is my heart for
humanity than yours.
While people since Babel have always had a tendency
to exalt their own tribe over others, God’s heart has always been to eventually
reverse Babel and reunite humanity under him.
God’s “higher ways” are found throughout Isaiah.
For example, Isaiah prophesies of a day when “the mountain of the Lord’s temple
will be established as the highest of the mountains” so that “all nations will
stream to it” (Isa 2:2). He foresees a time when “all people” will behold “the
glory of the Lord” (Isa 40:5) as they gather together at God’s “holy mountain”
(Isa 56:7). This will be a time when “the Sovereign LORD will make
righteousness and praise spring up before all nations” (Is. 61:11) as he
gathers “the people of all nations and languages” to “come and see my glory”
and as he inspires “all people” to “come and bow down before” him (Isa 66:18,
23).
God’s ways are not our ways, for our ways tend to
be in line with Babel. It was true of ancient Israel, and it tends to be true
of the Church today. But, fortunately, God’s ways always ultimately triumph.
And the one in whom they triumph is Jesus Christ. – Greg Boyd
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