17 July 2012

Isaiah 6


I was humming “Holy, Holy, Holy” the other day, one of my favorite hymns, and it got me to thinking of one of my favorite chapters in the Bible; Isaiah 6. “Holy, Holy, Holy” is written with this chapter in mind. Therefore, for today’s blog let me try to explain it. 

Uzziah died in 740 B.C.

1In the year that king Uzziah died I saw also the LORD sitting upon a throne, high and lifted up, and his train filled the temple.
First of all, Uzziah was a good king of Israel and Isaiah was in the temple praying about how someone was going to replace this Godly king.  This is when Isaiah looks up and sees this vision of the Lord God. I want to try to give you a picture of this; the Mercy Seat, or the Ark of the Covenant was in the Temple, as I pointed out in my blog about the Temple

 For those of you that have not read that blog, if you remember the first Indiana Jones movie, the Ark of the Covenant is what they are chasing after for the entire movie. God said that He sat there in between the wings of the Cherubim on the Ark of the Covenant. That was His throne on earth. The whole temple was to be an earthly version of Heaven. So if Isaiah was transported in sprit to the Temple in Heaven, or that God came and indwelled the earthly temple so Isaiah could have a vision of Him, we do not know.  
Another word picture I want you to get is the verse that says God’s train fills the Temple. First, most ladies will pick up on the idea that the train is like the train of a fancy dress. One time when a train is important to a woman is on her wedding gown. This is the idea that is going on here, but the train is of God’s Royal Robe and it fills the temple. The Temple is no small place and the picture here is that God is so big that he takes up every little piece of the temple. It gives us the grandeur of God and the idea that He is big enough to be everywhere at once. 
 

 2Above it stood the seraphims: each one had six wings; with twain he covered his face, and with twain he covered his feet, and with twain he did fly.
Now God adds to the picture. Let us first discuss Seraphim; most people would tell you that this is an angel and when they come to the word Cherubim, they would say that it is an angel, but there is more to it than that. These are both angelic beings, but have different functions. Seraphim, translated from Hebrew, means burning ones. This goes with every time you see an angel in the Bible, they describe it has having robes the glow or burn white. Seraphim are the angelic beings that deal with man. We see later that it is a Seraphim that takes a hot coal to Isaiah and burns his mouth to purge his sin. You see, the word Angel in Hebrew means messenger, therefore, the angel we see the most in the Bible is the Seraphim, because they deal with man.
Seraphim also do not look like the angels you see depicted in all the paintings, they have six wings. We also see the respect they have for God, the use two wings to cover their face, this is to shows that they do not even fell worthy to look upon God. With two they cover their feet, maybe a better translation of would be the lower part of there body to include what we would call private areas, if the angels have private areas. And the last pair they use to fly.  

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