Supernatural Manifestation; Isaiah 6
ZADOK PUBLICATIONS - Dr. C. R. OLIVER
June 1, 2014
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Introduction:June 1, 2014 Supernatural Manifestation Isaiah 6 (Note to the Reader: please take a moment to read through Isaiah 6 first, and then ready yourself to review a few observations about this glorious Supernatural Manifestation.) Nothing changes a ministry so much as a Sovereign Act of God, whether it is a revival, a miracle or a voice from heaven. Such experiences affect the person greatly. For instance, this one was an affirmation of Isaiah's life and ministry. It is one thing to prophesy about matters which rise up in one's spirit, while it is another to receive direct words from heaven in the person of the Living God. Throughout history these kinds of events have been both rare and treasured, and they offer several dynamics we can glean from them. A. Supernatural Manifestations are life changing. (Review these seven venues.)First, Supernatural Manifestations reveal how close heaven is to earth.B. SNM's demand a hearing among the saints: in other words, the prophet is obliged to pass to others the sacred trust afforded the encounter. Isaiah stopped and gave a record of this encounter right in the middle of ten chapters of prophecy. (Revelation 12 does the same. It stops the action of the prophecy and overviews history.) ![]() ISAIAH (©) as portrayed by Guy T Rowe High and Lifted Up After five chapters of prophetic words given him by the Lord, God causes an "action stop" and brings Isaiah into His Presence. It happened in the year King Uzziah died. The death of Uzziah was a major event. Why? Uzziah was a king who followed the Lord in righteousness for most of his years, but later exalted Himself before God by offering incense on the altar in the Temple. This duty was only to be performed by priests from the tribe of Levi, and Uzziah was not qualified, though King. Eighty priests rebuked him as an earthquake shook the Temple area. God struck Uzziah with leprosy, and he was forced to live in a separate apartment, away from the Palace and to make his son his emissary (whose mother was a Zadok [Read 2 Chronicles 25-27 for the account]).Isaiah 6:1 Uzziah reigned for 53 years, and God had prospered him enormously and given him everything his heart could desire. The Lord gave him victory over his enemies, great treasures, much productivity in goods and even caused creative genius to surround him. His death was like "the end of an era." Uzziah's death was a historical landmark for Judah and Israel. Transition was in the making for Judah because of change in governmental leaders and officialdom. What greater time for God to reveal, "Who is on the real throne of command" than now? Without warning, He appears, not to the earthly governance, but to the prophet. Though Isaiah was privileged to enter the courts of the Palace and interact with the splendor of Uzziah, he was not prepared by any past experience for entrance to the Splendor of the court of heaven. Exalted Power created a spectrum that caused all former scenes of glory to fade into insignificance.Isaiah 6:1-2 Isaiah 6 has engendered many sermons and much verbiage over the years, but waxing eloquently about the splendor of God's court will not be the aim of this study. What we desire to discover is why, at this point in time, did God choose to reveal Himself fully? Since Adam and Eve's time, with the exception of Enoch and Job (and very few others), the Lord has more or less concealed Himself in some form or fashion. Abram, for instance, encountered Melchizedek and paid Him tithes and on various other occasions heard God's voice and beheld His power. On one occasion the Covenant Flame came and passed through the halves (Genesis 15). In another time, instructions came to sacrifice Isaac and then to not. All these were substitute forms when compared to His full manifestation. Moses saw a burning bush and it changed His life direction. On the mountain, he beheld the glory of God through a covering hand pressing him away from the full power of His Presence. Upon many other times, he received direction from the Most High, but never like the fullness of Isaiah. Jacob wrestled with the angel and struggled to his hurt, but did not see the face of God. Many people saw visions, dreamed dreams, experienced the hand of intervention, but did not see God face to face. However, after the Isaiah encounter, a door seemed to open and God allowed several of His saints to enter the portals of glory. Ezekiel saw the heavenly Temple and was carried in the Spirit to behold the sins of the priests and prophets, but never with the display afforded Isaiah. Later in his ministry, God showed him the heavenly Temple and the place of His dwelling. Zechariah, who also ministered during the life of Uzziah, was ushered into the judgment place of heaven and saw his filthy robes and the accusing finger of satan. There, He experienced a personal cleansing and fresh ministry robes for his service. His life was never the same. Daniel experienced the Hand of God moving across the drawing board of Belshazzar, but not the face of God. Peter, James and John were present at the Transfiguration where they heard the voice of God. John the Baptist also heard His voice. John, on the isle of Patmos, was taken into the court of heaven by Revelation. Peter's sheet of disdain came down repeatedly, but still just His voice. Paul's Damascus experience envisioned the very person of the Glorified Christ. As in the case of Isaiah, once a person is ushered into the presence of the Most High, His life is never the same. Everything changes for that person, for every consideration of life revolves around that moment. Take each of the aforementioned men and see if their life was ever the same after their "meeting with the Most High." The interaction between Isaiah and the court of heaven bears reviewing. Note, not once did he call this a "vision." He was there by transport; he was a participant.( In the Song of Songs, when the Shulamite saw her lover riding on a palanquin carried by sixty armed warriors, accompanied by smoke and great power-she never viewed Him the same way. He was no longer the Shepherd Boy, but the King [Song of Solomon, Chapter 3]). He saw the throne and all that surrounded it. The Splendor was enhanced by the Seraphim and their statements:Isaiah 6:1 (Why are the first words heard by the prophet a trilogy of Holiness? Without Holiness no one will see the Lord. His directive to "Be Holy as I am Holy," is not optional. Somehow, we must re-introduce the church to the God with whom they say they identify-Isaiah's God was not Jerusalem's God. Sadly, the church's god is not the God of the whole earth. Modern ecclesia hold, more often than not, to a form of Idol (conjured by humanizing the One for whom Kingdom and Power and Glory belong).Isaiah 6:3 The songs of Zion have been lost, along with harps in the willows. Wouldn't the morning worship service get serious if Seraphim showed up? The jangle of choruses undulating to the beat of a drum would fall silent if smoke filled the sanctuary and the posts of the building shook with the words HOLY , HOLY, HOLY wafting across pulpit and pew. HOLY is a greater command call than "attention!" (Observe the difference in worshipers, should they hear the call to worship as "HOLY! HOLY! HOLY!" Instead of an altar call at the end of a sermon, there would be free falling confession and humbling of spirit and cries for mercy-then and only then would the remedy for our great national need be applied!) This confession came from a prophet! (This came from a prophet who, for five chapters, had been faithful to deliver God's message.) This confession came from "a man of God," who all his life exemplified in character and lifestyle the highest form of Godliness. (What would your confession be? I assure you it would differ from the church's printed program. I dare say that until the audiences, that gather on Sunday, encounter the Living God, no such confession will be forthcoming.)Isaiah 6:5 Isaiah 6:6-7 (Notice how personal this encounter is.)The remedy for Isaiah's sins was applied by a messenger from the Throne. Remedy for us must come the same way, but not without repentance and humble contrition. The Messenger from heaven (Jesus) stands ready to apply the remedy to our need, but are we willing to fall before Him and cry out "I am a man of unclean lips and I dwell among people of unclean lips?" Isaiah's confession did not stop heaven's action.. Cleansed people get called to service. Without contrition and cleansing there is no call. Herein lays the massive problem of the church: too little contrition and too many trying to answer a non-existent call! The airways are full of such; the bookshelves strain from piles of their useless diatribe; the proliferation of ministry organizations and non-profit endeavors is overwhelming. Lost is the one ingredient necessary to have the God kind of success; it is humble contrition. Jesus knew this and chided the Pharisees for their focus on legacy and looseness. The ONLY ONE who can summon for service is on His throne. Far too many languish in a service that He did not commission! That, however, was not the case of Isaiah.Matt 15:7-14 Whether His call is a Macedonian vision or an Isaiah summons, it must be heard by a pure heart and responded to by the same (Note: the use of "US" in verse 8).Isaiah 6:8 Nothing substitutes for the Divine Call. We have lost that element sadly. Mission work is more often based on humanitarian need rather than Divine Order. Social ministries crowd out God's work in most religious settings. "Go Ye" was tempered by "tarry ye, until you are endued with power." (Now it is, "we must hurry or the window of opportunity may close." God can open a door no man can close.) Some say Isaiah volunteered. I say that the call was for Him and no other-He was the only one standing there and He knew it. He voiced his willingness and God gave him a message. When one preaches the message God gives, one gets the response God ordains. The problem is we have heard much preachment and very little of which God has given. The Lord was very specific with His message and its results. (No great crowds, high attendance or accolades would come from the message assigned.) When Isaiah asked, "How long?" the Lord gave no termination date-only an indicator --"until there is no one out there to hear it."Isaiah 6:8-9 A God directed message will bring God kind of results. Isaiah's assignment demanded exactness and repetition. (Notice, there will be a distant remnant, "the Holy seed." That should shout to us in these last days when so many are expecting the worst. Prepare for it, "Become Holy.")Isaiah 6:9-10 Isaiah now had his platform for ministry. Not only did He have a new sense of the Sublime, he would never be deterred from his mission. He knew the end result would be rejection by his hearers, but his job was to make sure they heard. If one will look now at Isaiah's prophecies which came after the illumination, a rather glowing difference appears. Undergirding every message he pronounced was the compact one God gave him. When God spoke, Isaiah listened and was careful to incorporate in every message those truths. He knew his audience would be held accountable, in the judgment, for every word spoken. God's commission compelled him. Who, today, preaches with such urgency? Who is he that his very being is so wrapped in his message that he groans for those who hear it and fears only one thing: not completing his task. Who weeps for the condition of the multitudes? Who confronts sin and calls for God's Divine Order? Look at this passage in Ezekiel to understand how important being invested really is. This scene is at the Temple in Jerusalem. Isaiah's prophecies gave exact times, places and events, unlike the nebulous messages of modern "prophets." He didn't consult the news media or the popular opinions of his day, although he commented on politics, economics and government. Because he was faithful, God gave him insight to days yet to come. He was not politically correct, socially correct, verbally correct, but he was God correct!Ezekiel 9:3-7 No opponent could sway him: He had seen the Lord and heard His call! No weapon could threaten him; he had been commissioned by the King. No harassment could insult him: He knew their hearts in advance. (Assignment: go back and review all the listed aspects delivered at the beginning of this study and seek to apply them. The Lord will greatly illuminate you.) Until Next month, Dr. Cosby R. Oliver, PhD. |
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