By Howard Webber
After all God had done, providing a fertile soil, (all that would nourish), clearing the stones, (removing all that might obstruct health and growth), building a watchtower, (to watch over his precious vines), a wall/hedge, (KJV & v5), (to protect them), a winepress, (evidence of him anticipating a good crop), and planting the choicest of vines, (choosing the offspring of Abraham, his friend (Isaiah 41:8), one would have thought that Israel would have responded by giving God their best. But they sorely disappointed him. When he sought the good fruit he anticipated all he found was bad fruit, sour grapes (GNV): grapes that were not the result of the care and provision of the owner of the vineyard, but of a a vineyard that was a law unto itself. 'What more could have been done for my vineyard than I have done for it?' God cried, (v 4)
After all God had done, providing a fertile soil, (all that would nourish), clearing the stones, (removing all that might obstruct health and growth), building a watchtower, (to watch over his precious vines), a wall/hedge, (KJV & v5), (to protect them), a winepress, (evidence of him anticipating a good crop), and planting the choicest of vines, (choosing the offspring of Abraham, his friend (Isaiah 41:8), one would have thought that Israel would have responded by giving God their best. But they sorely disappointed him. When he sought the good fruit he anticipated all he found was bad fruit, sour grapes (GNV): grapes that were not the result of the care and provision of the owner of the vineyard, but of a a vineyard that was a law unto itself. 'What more could have been done for my vineyard than I have done for it?' God cried, (v 4)
What Isaiah describes here has been
repeated throughout human history and is a reoccurring theme in the bible: God
lavishing his loving kindness, his care and his provision upon man and man
responding with ingratitude and disobedience.
Right back at the beginning, God planted
man in a beautiful garden, the garden of Eden. The garden belonged to God and
he wished to delight in it, for it to be pleasing to him. He expected Adam to
bear good fruit, but instead of the good fruit God planned and hoped for, he
found bad fruit, Adam being a law to
himself. Adam and Eve had every sort of tree to eat from. They had all the
protection and every provision they could ever wish for. They only had one
prohibition, one thing forbidden, only one thing they were not to do... yet
they did it! One can imagine God's pain. One can imagine him crying out, 'What
more could I have done to have you please me?'
God protected and provided for David in
an amazing way when he was on the run from King Saul. When Samuel anointed him
to be king, that young shepherd boy could never have imagined all that God
would one day give him. Yet David went on to sin big-time, with sin that
included deceit, adultery and murder. It broke God's heart. Through the prophet
Nathan, (2 Samuel 12: 7-9), God cried out, 'I anointed you king over Israel,
and I delivered you from the hand of Saul. I gave your master's house to you,
and your master's wives into your arms. I gave you all Israel and Judah. And if
all this had been too little I would have given you even more. Why....why did
you despise the word of the Lord?'
In Jeremiah 2:21, God cried out again,
'I had planted you like a choice vine of sound and reliable stock. How then did
you turn against me into a corrupt, wild vine?'
Man's failure to produce the fruit he
desires is repeated time and again. It seems that God's man or woman is
incapable of being, (or doing for that matter), what pleases God. In Romans 7
St Paul said as much of himself, 'I do not do the good I want to do, but the
evil I do not want to do – this I keep doing.(v 19). For what I want to do I do
not do, but what I hate I do....(v 15). For I have the desire to do what is good,
but I cannot carry it out,' Paul knew that however much he tried, however good
and patient God was with him, he was incapable of producing the fruit that God
longed for in his life.
Jesus told a story in Luke 13:6-9 which
showed God's enormous patience with us. The fig tree bore no fruit whatsoever,
year on year. It deserved to be uprooted and burned, but the man who took care
of the vineyard begged to be given more time in which he would dig round it,
fertilise it and attempt to turn around its fortune. We know no more from lips
of Jesus, but I would suggest through what we have already studied, that it was
all to no avail.
1.
Have
we any idea of all that God has done and continues to do for us?
2.
Do
we recognise ourselves in the words of St Paul?
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