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Isaiah 10

ABS

Chapter 10. A Nail in a Sure PlaceI will place on his shoulder the key to the house of David; what he opens no one can shut, and what he shuts no one can open. I will drive him like a peg into a firm place; he will he a seat of honor for the house of his father. All the glory of his family will hang on him: its offspring and offshoots—all its lesser vessels, from the bowls to all the jars. (Isaiah 22:22-24)This is the fourth picture of the Messiah in the book of Isaiah. He is presented here under the name Eliakim, the son of Hilkiah, to whom is to be given the key of the house of David, and he is “fastened as a nail in a sure place”. Section I—Shebna: The Contrasting FigureThe old painters used to heighten the effect of their visions of beauty by putting in the foreground some hideous picture of a reptile or a toad so that by the effect of contrast the picture itself might be made more striking through the effect of antithesis. In front of this picture of our Lord the prophet puts in contrast another figure. It is that of Shebna, the treasurer of the king’s house, a prominent official in the service of Hezekiah, who seems to have been puffed up with such egregious vanity that he had actually prepared for himself a splendid sepulchre in some prominent place, perhaps among the tombs of kings, that he might be buried with great honor. Isaiah is sent to him with a terrific message of rebuke and judgment. What are you doing here and who gave you permission to cut out a grave for yourself here, hewing your grave on the height and chiseling your resting place in the rock? Beware, the Lord is about to take firm hold of you and hurl you away, O you mighty man. He will roll you up tightly like a ball and throw you into a large country. There you will die and there your splendid chariots will remain— you disgrace to your master’s house! I will depose you from your office, and you will be ousted from your position. (Isaiah 22:16-19) It is in the place of this corrupt and selfish official that Eliakim, the faithful one, is to be appointed. He is to exhibit in his character and public administration qualities so different and so lofty that the picture of Eliakim soon passes into the higher vision of the Son of God Himself, of whom he becomes the honored type. Shebna is a fearful example of official corruption, of personal vanity, and of that sordid earthliness that would even make the grave itself the means of exploiting its ambition and its pride. The judgment of God is revealed from heaven against the spirit of worldliness and selfishness in every form. Some of our Lord’s most solemn parables were intended to show the fearful doom of the man that lives only to amass money and win success in this world. One of these parables is the story of the rich man who added to his barns and storehouses and kept saying to his soul: “You have plenty of good things laid up for many years. Take life easy; eat, drink and be merry” (Luke 12:19). But God said to him, “You fool! This very night your life will be demanded from you. Then who will get what you have prepared for yourself?” Then the Master points out the heart searching moral: “This is how it will be with anyone who stores up things for himself but is not rich toward God” (Luke 12:20-21). Another of these solemn parables portrays the doom of the selfish worldling on the other side of death. It is the picture of Dives and Lazarus. There is nothing said against the character of this rich man. He was not a bad man, so far as we know, but he simply lived for himself, and this is what we are told of him: “The rich man also died and was buried.” He had a funeral, as Shebna planned to have, and doubtless it was a splendid one. But oh! the sequel: “In hell, where he was in torment.” He begged that Lazarus, the wretched beggar that had often lain at his door, might be sent with a drop of water to cool his burning tongue. The only fault uttered against him by Father Abraham was: “Son, remember that in your lifetime you received your good things, while Lazarus received bad things, but now he is comforted here and you are in agony” (see Luke 16:19-31). Are you meeting the great responsibility which increased wealth brings to every man? Are you recognizing your means as a sacred trust? Are you “laying up in store… against the time to come” (1 Timothy 6:19) and investing your wealth “where moth and rust do not destroy, and where thieves do not break in and steal?” (Matthew 6:20). Section II—Eliakim: The Lofty FigureOver against this hideous character of vainglory and selfishness arises the lofty figure of Eliakim. His Name

  1. His name is very suggestive. It means “whom God raised up.” Just as Shebna stood for death and the grave, Eliakim stands for the resurrection, for a life that seeks its portion not in the natural world, but in the new creation which Christ has ushered in. In keeping with this is his father’s name, Hilkiah, which means, “God is his portion.” This also leads our minds to that higher world of which Shebna knew nothing, and to which Jesus Christ is ever opening our faith and hope. His Administration
  2. His administration is described in beautiful terms: “He will be a father to those who live in Jerusalem and to the house of Judah” (Isaiah 22:21). Just as we are accustomed to call Washington “the father of his country,” so this good man was a paternal governor over the people, and finely represents our blessed coming King, He rules the world with truth and grace, And makes the nations prove The glories of His righteousness And wonders of His love. His Sash and Robe3. The sash and robe with which he was to be clothed represent our blessed Lord in His life service. The sash always stands for service, in contrast with the loose robes that express self-indulgence and ease. While Shebna was living for pleasure, Eliakim was girded for work. Our blessed Master is always represented, even in heaven, as a girded priest, busy in His high offices of intercession and dominion. No sinecure of luxury or selfish glory has He set yonder, but a place of unceasing and faithful ministry as He bears our iniquities, sympathizes with our sorrows and there represents us before the Father, while at the same time He directs all the wheels of Providence from His mediatorial throne in the interests of His people and His kingdom. Like Him, Christian life is strenuous toil and holy activity. No time for trifling in this life of mine; Not thus the path the blessed Master trod, But strenuous toil each hour and power employ, Always and all for God. The Key of David4. The key of David was given to him. Our Lord applies this to Himself in the third chapter of Revelation, in His message from the throne to the church in Philadelphia: “What he opens no one can shut, and what he shuts no one can open” (Revelation 3:7). There can be no doubt, therefore, about the application of the figure to the Lord Jesus Christ. He carries this key upon His shoulder, which is quite customary in oriental countries for officials entrusted with the care of some great household. The reference to His shoulder reminds us of the former picture of Jesus Christ in this book: “The government will be on his shoulders” (Isaiah 9:6). Jesus Christ holds the keys of heaven and earth and hell. How many things He opens for us!—the gates of heaven, the gates of prayer, the closed pathway of difficulty, the doors of service, the hearts of men. And how many things He shuts for us: the blessed hand of God which holds us so that none can pluck us out of His hand; the blessed ark of safety, like Noah, of whom it is said, “Then the Lord shut him in” (Genesis 7:16); the mouths of lions and the tongues of wicked men and women, which He alone can shut and keep shut. Blessed Prince of the house of David! Let us give Him all the keys of all the chambers of our being, of all the treasure houses of our life, and we will find that He is able to keep that which we have committed to His trust against that day (2 Timothy 1:12). A Nail
  3. Much is represented by the figure of a nail in a sure place. This is a very striking figure, and may refer either to the pegs by which the Arab secures his tent or the iron spikes which they were accustomed to fasten in the masonry of their buildings, at once securing the walls of the building and at the same time becoming a hook on which they hung their valuables inside the house. A Sure Place A. This is a nail in a sure place. The Lord Jesus Christ is not a guess, a possibility, a theory. He is a mighty certainty. All the assaults of skepticism have only succeeded in establishing Him more firmly in the sure place which He holds in the Word of God, in the hearts of His people and in the plan of redemption. When we trust Him we know that we are resting on a solid rock, and that all else “is sinking sand.” His kingdom is the only certainty of the future. Our best systems of government, our highest forms of civilization, will all pass away, but “[God’s] kingdom is an everlasting kingdom, and [his] dominion endures through all generations” (Psalms 145:13). The only stable investment for our lives is there. The Glory of His Family B. On this nail the prophet said, should be hung “all the glory of his family” (Isaiah 22:24). This does not merely refer to His inheritance in the throne of David, but rather to His heirship to all the glory of His heavenly Father. Truly He could say, “All things have been committed to me by my Father” (Matthew 11:27) and again, “The Father judges no one, but has entrusted all judgment to the Son” (John 5:22). All the glory, all the power, all the authority of the Father has been handed over to the Lord Jesus, so that in receiving Him as our portion we are joint heirs with Him of all the glory of His Father’s house. The Head of a New Race C. He is the Head of a new race. The “offspring and the offshoots” (Isaiah 22:24) referred to here signify what our Lord Jesus Himself has expressed in one of His last messages in the Apocalypse: “I am the root and offspring of David” (Revelation 22:16). He is the real head of David’s house, and at the same time the heir of David’s throne. David sprang from Him quite as truly as He sprang from David. Still more the truth is implied which the apostle expresses so forcibly in First Corinthians, where he speaks of the Adam race and the Christ race: “For as in Adam all die, so in Christ all will be made alive” (1 Corinthians 15:22). There are two races of men in this world: one is the race of humanity born from Adam and inheriting his curse and his doom; the other is the Christ race born from the loins of the Lord Jesus, the second Adam, and inheriting His righteousness and His glory. It is only this new race that can ever enter the kingdom of heaven. The old race is doomed and must pass away under the penalty of sin, but the Christ race shall dwell forevermore and inherit all the glories of Christ, its Head. To which of these do you and I belong, dear friend? Has your life been reborn from the heart of Jesus Christ, and through Him are you the heir of God and the joint heir of Jesus Christ? The Vessels D. Still further we are told that they shall hang upon Him all vessels, both large and small, the cups and the flagons, the vessels of the kitchen and the vessels of the feast, the vessels of commonplace need and service and the vessels of high and holy joy and ministry. A very deep and practical truth is here expressed. Jesus Christ is the source and the supply of all our needs. These vessels represent the needs of our lives, the temporal and spiritual supplies for which we must go continually to Him. The idea is that we do not have the blessing within ourselves. We are not self-contained depositories of grace, but we come to Him moment by moment and hang upon Him our every need—the little vessels of commonplace life and testing, the flagons of higher and holier joy that stand for the hours of rapture and the moments of blessing. The whole weight of our need hangs upon Him, and all our future hopes are dependent likewise upon our Lord and Head. How blessed to know that there is nothing which we cannot bring to Him! There’s no time too busy for His leisure, There’s no task too hard for Him to share, There’s no soul too lowly for His notice, There’s no need too trifling for His care, There’s no place too humble for His presence, There’s no pain His bosom cannot feel, There’s no sorrow that He cannot comfort, There’s no sickness that He cannot heal.

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