John W. Ritenbaugh
11/27/2017
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The LORD
has made bare His holy arm in the eyes of all the nations;
And all the ends of the earth shall see the salvation of our God. Depart! Depart! Go out from there, Touch no unclean thing; Go out from the midst of her, Be clean, You who bear the vessels of the LORD. Isaiah 52:10-11
And all the ends of the earth shall see the salvation of our God. Depart! Depart! Go out from there, Touch no unclean thing; Go out from the midst of her, Be clean, You who bear the vessels of the LORD. Isaiah 52:10-11
Looking at this in its context, we see that it is speaking
first of the exodus of the Jews from their captivity in Babylon, but it is also
a prophecy, speaking of a future exodus from a future captivity—from the
Babylon that is now forming in this present age. This is very timely for us.
While the Jews were in their seventy years of captivity in
ancient Babylon, they did not have the freedom or opportunity to maintain
either ritual or spiritual cleanliness, as they would have had in their
homeland. About 300 years later, the celebration of Hanukkah—meaning
"dedication"—arose from the Jews' attempts to cleanse the worship of God following
Antiochus Epiphanes and the Greek army's defilement of the Temple during
warfare.
These verses are an urgent command, reminding them of their
responsibility to cast off personal defilement of any paganism (or, as we would
say today, any worldliness) picked up during their captivity. This had to be
done to restore the true worship of the true God when they returned to
Jerusalem.
The Living Bible translates verse 11 as follows:
Go now, leave your bonds and slavery. Put Babylon and all
it represents far behind you—it is unclean to you. You are the holy people
of the LORD; purify yourselves,
all you who carry home the vessels of the LORD.
(Emphasis ours.)
Their responsibility is clear. Who would be carrying the
holy vessels? The priests. We need to note this inference since the whole
church is a priesthood, and is so designated in I Peter.
— John W. Ritenbaugh
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