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Woe is me!
When King Uzziah entered the temple in 2 Chronicles 26, he did so out of pride (v. 16). He didn’t care that he was not consecrated to burn incense as the priests were—in his mind, he was righteous enough to approach God on his own terms. God punished Uzziah for his arrogance and self-righteousness by inflicting him with leprosy. He spent the rest of his life living in a leper’s house away from the power and fame that he had enjoyed due to God’s blessing.
In contrast, when Isaiah saw the Lord in all His glory, he cried out, “Woe is me! For I am lost” (Isaiah 6:5). He saw his own sin in the intense and terrible light of God’s holiness. He claimed no righteousness of his own and made no attempt to justify himself; rather, he pronounced woe on himself as a sinner who should be destroyed in the presence of the Lord of hosts. God honored this attitude by sending an angel to touch a coal to Isaiah’s lips, declaring atonement for his sin.
We cannot come to God on our own terms and with our own righteousness. To do so invites his wrath, and justly so. Who are we to stand before the holy Lord in our sinful state? We can only rely on the atoning work of Jesus Christ—never our own righteousness.
Not the labor of my hands
Can fulfill Thy law’s demands;
Could my zeal no respite know,
Could my tears forever flow,
All for sin could not atone;
Thou must save, and Thou alone.
–Augustus Toplady
In the year that King Uzziah died
Isaiah introduced his famous vision of the Lord in the temple by saying, “In the year that King Uzziah died I saw the Lord sitting upon a throne, high and lifted up” (Isaiah 6:1). King Uzziah had been a righteous king whose pride got the better of him—he went in to the temple to offer incense before the Lord, which was the priests’ role. In response, God struck him with leprosy for the rest of his life.
Here, Isaiah encountered the God who had judged and humbled King Uzziah. Unlike Uzziah, whose body had slowly wasted away over the final years of his rule, the Lord was “high and lifted up,” His glory overwhelming Isaiah and even the seraphim whose voices shook the temple. Isaiah rightly identified the Lord as the one true Sovereign, “the King, the LORD of hosts!” (v. 5).
When it seems like the presence of God in my life has decayed due to my own neglect of spiritual things, I need to remember that God Himself is my eternal King. His kingdom will never end—neither in this world nor in my soul. May He teach me to see Him as holy and eternal, the God whose glory fills the whole earth!
