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NOTES for Isa 1:15-16

15 And when ye spread forth your hands, I will hide mine eyes from you: yea, when ye make many prayers, I will not hear: your hands are full of blood.
16 Wash you, make you clean; put away the evil of your doings from before mine eyes; cease to do evil;
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What does God expect from us? How can we please Him so that His wrath will not turn against us? These questions, and in exactly this incorrect formulation, always occupy us. Isaiah's prophecy, which we read today, answers this with denunciations of important and, most unpleasantly, very familiar things. The Lord speaks through the prophet about ingratitude, unfaithfulness, and cruelty. In the first part of the prophecy read today, the Lord links the calamities that overtake us with the fact that we do not know our Master. "Why should you be struck again, you who continue in your stubbornness?" the prophet cries out. Indeed, what other disasters must we live through in order to see that their cause is that we have abandoned the Holy One of Israel? What other wars and revolutions, repressions and impoverishments do we need in order to see the whole godlessness of our life, to stop doing evil and learn to do good?

Recently, it would appear, we have seen this, and what we call the "religious revival" of our country began to happen. And about this the Lord says: "When you come to appear before My face, who requires this of you, that you trample My courts?" Terrible words. Does the Lord really not want us to come into His House? But still more terrible is what He says next: "...when you multiply your prayers, I do not hear; your hands are full of blood." It turns out that we may be "reviving" everything here in great quantity, yet not be heard and not find mercy for one simple reason: our hands are full of blood.

It turns out that instead of splendid worship and abundant offerings, God needs something completely different from us: "...seek justice; rescue the oppressed; defend the orphan; plead for the widow." God tells us today that only in this way, fulfilling His law of mercy toward our neighbors, will we be able to "eat the good of the land." Otherwise, whatever we do, "If you refuse and rebel, the sword will devour you."

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