“They shall lift up their voice, they shall sing for the majesty of the LORD, they shall cry aloud from the sea. Wherefore glorify ye the LORD in the fires, [even] the name of the LORD God of Israel in the isles of the sea.” (Isa 24:14-15 AV)
The fires of which Isaiah speaks are the fires of God’s wrath and judgement upon a disobedient people. It would be rather difficult to lift of the voice and sing for the majesty of the LORD as they are enduring the hardship of severe correction. But it must be done! There are other fires that the child of God faces. There is the fire of temptation. There is the fire of persecution. There are the fires of trials of faith. What about the fires of sin and the consequences of sin? Life is full of fires. There are bigger ones. There are smaller ones. Being able to sing of the majesty of the LORD when life is unbearable is important. It is often one key of enduring the fires of life.
Sometimes, the most memorable examples of a soloist singing a hymn or song of praise to the LORD are not someone with an incredible voice. Sometimes the most memorable singer is not classically trained. Sometimes the most incredible example of an instrumental might have missed a few notes. Almost all the time these dear saints have, or are going through, some hot fires. In fact, recollecting all of those special numbers I have heard down through the years, the only ones I remember are those offered by saints who were enduring some severe circumstances of life. There was a couple who sang beautifully who were going through some deep financial troubles. They came from backgrounds that limited how they could serve the LORD, and some self-righteous saints made them feel underappreciated. Yet, our pastor asked them to sing quite a bit. The pain of rejection from those to whom they sang came through in their praise to the LORD. Then there was the young lady who had a physical handicap. She was extremely godly, but often overlooked. Then one Sunday, she sang during the offering, and the whole church of thousands of people couldn’t help but weep at the beauty of her offering of praise. There was a handicapped evangelist who was a cripple on both legs. He would sit at the piano and sing in a deep baritone voice some of our well-known gospel songs. It changed the lives of many.
I have to admit, offering a voice of majesty and praise is difficult when things are unbearable. Our eyes get focused inward instead of upward. It is hard to praise the LORD when the pain is so deep that it is all that is on our minds. It is hard to remember to praise the LORD when tomorrow looks bleaker than today. It is not that we don’t want to. It is not that we resent the LORD for the trials we face. Fire is a hard thing to ignore. Anyone who has been around a campfire knows this. Anyone who has suffered serious burns knows that the pain inflicted by the fire is lasting and impossible to avoid. God would not command us to do something for His ego’s sake. He doesn’t have one. He commands us to offer songs of majesty and praise while in the midst of fires so that our eyes are off our situation and on the one who can get us through the fires. By turning our eyes upward and outward instead of inward, we can refocus on someone greater than our fires. Like the three in the fire with the son of God, they endured because their attention was on the Son of God and not the flames that surrounded them.