"A bruised reed he will not
break, and a dimly burning wick He will not extinguish." (Isaiah 42:3)
The Hebrew children would often go
down by the riverside to play where the reeds grew. The reeds were
useful for making
flutes. The children would cut them down,
hollow them out and make the
flutes to play their little songs.
The riverbank would be full of these
reeds, and many of them were less than perfect. If they came across one that
was cracked or bruised, they would break it in half and toss it away. After
all, they needed reeds of quality in order to make a flute that would play
well. Cracked or bruised reeds were worthless.
Bruised reeds are symbols of people.
The word "bruised" is used to refer to suffering, discouraged and less than perfect people.
We are all bruised reeds. We all experienced disappointment in ourselves, as
being hurt and almost broken.
Why won't the Messiah break the bruised reeds? The children would break
them and toss them away because there were thousands more along the river. One
broken one wasn't important and they weren't good for anything anyway.
Why wouldn't Christ do the same
thing with "bruised reed" people?
"A bruised reed he will not
break, and a dimly burning wick He will not extinguish." (42:3)
He will also not extinguish a dimly
burning and smoking wick.
The Hebrews had to light
their homes with oil lamps. These lamps looked a lot like gravy dispensers, with an open top. The bowls were filled with oil and contained
a wick, made of flax or linen. As long as the wick would stay moist with the
oil, it would burn and
give light. But when the oil burned out, the wick would smoulder and give off smoke. The thing to do was to extinguish the damaged wick and toss it away. There was plenty of flax where the
first wick came from.
But the
Messiah would not extinguish such a dimly burning
wick. Again, these wicks can be compared to people. They represent people who
are exhausted, or even "burnt-out", in their
Christian lives.
We all burn but dimly and our light is smoky.
God says that we will recognise the true Messiah in
that he would not break the bruised reed or
extinguish the dimly burning wick.
When you think about these imageries in terms of God’s people, you realize what is said.
We are
not perfect. We often feel down-trodden failures and at best, not the
flutes that are able to make the heavenly music of Christ heard or let his
eternal light shine in a dark and desperate world.
We often
feel that we do not have our lives together and do not live up to expectation as witnesses of Christ.
Some,
who may think they are providing perfectly bright light and harmonious music,
may be quick to dispense with imperfect people, but Jesus does not.
To the
contrary, we know that Jesus is the true Messiah – the anointed One of God -
because it is his character to play the glorious music of his Kingdom through
bruised reeds, and make his gracious light shine even through smoky,
smouldering wicks!
This is
how we know that he truly is the Redeemer of the bruised and the burnt out and
the lost.
And that
he wants to works through us!
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