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Isaiah 41:1-4

“Be silent before me, you islands! Let the nations renew their strength! Let them come forward and speak; let us meet together at the place of judgment. “Who has stirred up one from the east, calling him in righteousness to his service? He hands nations over to him and subdues kings before him. He turns them to dust with his sword, to windblown chaff with his bow. He pursues them and moves on unscathed, by a path his feet have not traveled before. Who has done this and carried it through, calling forth the generations from the beginning? I, the Lord—with the first of them and with the last—I am he.”

Justice is somewhat of a wax nose in our culture. Everybody is for it, but we can’t seem to agree on what it is. Pro-life people rightly see the protection of the fatherless and the widow—in our day the unborn and their mothers—as an issue of basic justice. And yet abortion advocates will also argue that a woman’s right to choose an abortion is a matter of “reproductive rights”, or justice.

Justice, however, is not a wax nose, but rather has solid form and definite contours—as firm and definite as the character of the Lord Himself. In effect, justice is when the world conforms to the way that God intends it. It may not agree with our conception of justice, but that is not the first time that people have said ‘The way of the Lord is not just’ (Ezekiel 18:25, 33:17).

The Isaiah text here is good news for a world burdened by abortion, for, in bringing forth justice, the promised Messiah will not break the bruised reed, nor quench the faintly burning wick. He is patient with the weak, and shows compassion to the downtrodden. Hear the words of 17th Century English pastor Richard Sibbes:

The bruised reed is a man who for the most part is in some misery, just as those were who came to Christ for help, and by misery he is brought to see sin as its cause, for, whatever pretences sin makes, they come to an end when we are bruised and broken. He is sensible of his sin and misery, even to his bruising; and, seeing no help in himself, he is carried with restless desire to have supplies from another, with some hope, which raises him a little out of himself toward Christ, though he dare not claim to have gained any present interest of mercy. This spark of hope being opposed by doubts and fears rising from his corruption makes him like smoking flax; so that both these together, a bruised reed and smoking flax, make up the state of a poor distressed man. This is such a person as our Savior Christ terms “poor in spirit” (Matt. 5:3), who sees his wants, and also sees himself indebted to divine justice. He has no means of supply from himself or the creature, and thereupon he mourns, and, upon some hope of mercy from the promise, and examples of those that have obtained mercy, he is stirred to hunger and thirst after it.

The bringing forth of justice is not something separate from tenderness and patience with the hurting and heavy-laden. The church does not proclaim justice by only denouncing sin, for the lifting up of the downtrodden is part of what it means for the Lord to bring forth justice. For, again, justice is simply when things conform to the Lord’s intentions. And it is the Lord’s intention that the weary be comforted, and the broken be healed. The Lord’s word concerning abortion is certainly a word of judgment, but it is also a word of hope for the weary. As it will be when the Messiah establishes justice in all the earth.