The King’s Order

I don’t know if it has passed Gunsmoke yet for the longest running TV show, but Law and Order has been on forever. And I’ve always had a bit of a bone to pick with that name. In that show the first half is supposed to be “law” which is taken up with the police while the second half is the “order” which is the lawyers in the courtroom.  Lawyers may think their operations are the working of order, but already that is at order’s breakdown.  True order springs from the place where the law is just and the people desire to live in peace.  In a perfectly ordered society the law becomes an afterthought because it is written on hearts and hearts are attuned to follow, and the law is no longer necessary as even a curb.  Isaiah’s picture of the Messianic society in our Old Testament lesson is a picture of perfect order.

The nations’ and peoples’ statement is “let us go up to the mountain of the LORD…that he may teach us his ways and that we may walk in his paths (Isaiah 2:3).” It is on the mountaintop that the law is given, but what the nations’ desire is the ways of God.  The desire to walk in his paths. The law at best defines the boundaries of those things.  The law states what is off the path or what is outside of the way of God. But the desire is the fullness of divine order.  To live in harmony with the will of God.

The start of that order can be the law.  “Out of Zion shall go the law (Isaiah 2:3).” But the law is not the end.  For by the law we only know where we have trespassed.  The law multiplies the sin.  As Paul would say, those under that law are being tutored.  They are under the pedagogue. But Isaiah says parallel to the law “the word of the LORD (goes our) from Jerusalem (Isaiah 2:3).” It is that Word – the order of God that we seek. Because it is only within that order that we find true peace.

As long as we are testing the boundaries of the law – sinning – we find ourselves at war.  We find ourselves at war with the King and his law.  We find ourselves at war with our neighbor as we attempt to advantage ourselves at their expense. We find ourselves at war with ourselves. For in our hearts we know the law, and the Spirit in us longs for the Order of God, but we continue the war in our members. It is only when we submit ourselves to the King that we shall find peace.  “He shall judge between the nations, and shall decide disputes for many peoples (Isaiah 2:4).”  As the song says “I fought the law and the law won.” God is sovereign.  His law is the only true law.  And it ultimately decides between nations and peoples.  The only question is if we are brought before it as outlaws or as those who desire true justice.

Those whose hearts are submitted to Christ there will find peace.  “They shall beat their swords into ploughshares, and their spears into pruning hooks (Isaiah 2:4).”  We can put down our war against God and our neighbor and ourselves. We can do that in repentance and seeking God’s order for our lives. Isaiah’s ultimate vision is that “nations shall not lift up sword against nation, neither shall they learn war anymore (Isaiah 2:4).”  The peace of the Kingdom of Heaven is what stands as the promise. God’s order will be established. Every knee shall bow and every tongue confess. And that is not some Star Trek Borg like forced compliance – “Resistance is futile.” No, that is the desire of nations. Peoples and Nations tired of war, tired of the disorder, tired of testing laws and finding them wanting at exactly the point they are needed.  Tired of sin and its degradation. “Come, let us go up to the mountain of the Lord (Isaiah 2:3).”  We are tired of war.  May the LORD grant us his peace, his order.  And then the King shall come.  

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