Seek the Lord While He May Be Found
Isaiah 55:6–8 (ESV)
[6] "Seek
the Lord while he may be found; call upon him while he is near; [7] let the
wicked forsake his way, and the unrighteous man his thoughts; let him return to
the Lord, that he may have compassion on him, and to our God, for he will
abundantly pardon. [8] For my thoughts are not your thoughts, neither are your
ways my ways, declares the Lord."
Reflection
"While
He May Be Found" —
The Urgency of Now
Verse 6 carries
a sobering warning wrapped in an invitation. The phrase "while he may
be found" implies there is a time when He will not be — a day
when the door of mercy closes and the offer of grace is withdrawn. Scripture
points us to that final reality: the day of judgment, when opportunity gives
way to reckoning, and repentance is no longer possible.
But that day is
not today. Today, God is near. Today, He may be found. And so the command is
simple and urgent: Seek Him now. Call upon Him now. Do not wait for a
more convenient season. Do not assume tomorrow is guaranteed. The very fact
that God invites us to seek Him is itself an act of extraordinary grace — He is
not hiding; He is waiting to be found.
"Let
the Wicked Forsake His Way" — Repentance Is More Than Feeling
Verse 7 reveals
that true repentance has two dimensions. First, "let the wicked forsake
his way" — this
is the sin of behavior, the outward patterns and choices that lead us
away from God. It is not enough to feel sorry; there must be a turning, a
change in direction, a deliberate laying down of what we know dishonors Him.
Second, "and
the unrighteous man his thoughts" — this is the sin of mind, the inner world of
motives, fantasies, justifications, and hidden rebellion that no one else sees.
God does not merely address the surface. He goes to the root. He calls us not
only to stop sinning outwardly but to surrender the very thinking that fuels
it.
And then comes
the beautiful promise: "let him return to the Lord, that he may have
compassion on him, and to our God, for he will abundantly pardon."
Notice the order — return, then compassion, then abundant
pardon. God does not say, "Clean yourself up first, then come
back." He says, "Come back. I will have compassion. I will pardon — not
barely, not reluctantly, but abundantly." The word in Hebrew
carries the sense of multiplying, of flooding, of going far beyond what is
expected. God's forgiveness does not just cover sin; it overwhelms it.
"My
Thoughts Are Not Your Thoughts" — Grace Beyond Our Logic
Verse 8 is
often quoted to explain God's mystery in matters of sovereignty and suffering — and
rightly so. But in context, it serves a deeply personal purpose. It answers the
unspoken objection that rises in every guilty heart: "Can God really
forgive me? After what I've done? After how far I've gone? After how long I've
stayed away?"
The answer is: You
are thinking like a human. You are measuring God's willingness to forgive
by human standards — by
what you deserve, by whether your track record earns a second chance, by
whether you have "done enough" to make up for the past. But God's
thoughts are not your thoughts. His economy of grace does not operate on the
currency of merit.
Consider the
words of Paul in Romans 5:8 — "God shows his love for us in that while we were
still sinners, Christ died for us." Not while we were seeking. Not
while we were improving. Not while we were worthy. While we were still
sinners. The cross was not a reward for good behavior. It was a rescue for
those who had none to offer.
Think of the
father in the parable of the prodigal son (Luke 15). The son had squandered
everything. He had chosen the far country over his father's house. He rehearsed
a speech of unworthiness on his way home. But the father never let him finish.
Before the son could even reach the door, the father saw him from a distance,
was filled with compassion, ran to him, threw his arms around him, and kissed
him. No lecture. No probation period. No conditions. Just restoration,
celebration, and a ring on his finger.
That is the
heart of God toward you right now.
So What Are
You Waiting For?
Perhaps you
have been carrying guilt for months —
or years. Perhaps you have told yourself that you need to get your life
together before you can come back to God. Perhaps you have believed the lie
that you have gone too far, sinned too much, or stayed away too long.
Hear the words
of Isaiah 55 again. God is not standing at the door with crossed arms and a
list of your failures. He is the Father running down the road. He is the God
who says, "I will have compassion. I will abundantly pardon."
His thoughts toward you are not the thoughts you have toward yourself.
The invitation
is open now. But it will not be open forever. Seek the Lord while He may
be found. Call upon Him while He is near.
Do not wait
another day.
Application
Take a moment
right now. Be still before God. Wherever you are — at a desk, in a car, lying in bed — He is
near, and He is listening. Bring your sin, your shame, your excuses, your fear.
He already knows. He is not surprised. He is waiting with outstretched arms.
A Short
Prayer
Lord, I come
to You just as I am —
not because I have earned the right, but because You have invited me. I confess
that I have wandered in my ways and wandered in my thoughts. I have measured
Your mercy by my own guilt and assumed that I am beyond Your reach. But Your
thoughts are not my thoughts, and Your ways are not my ways.
I forsake my
sin today — the
things I have done and the things I have allowed to take root in my heart. I
turn back to You. Not perfectly, not with anything to offer, but with open
hands and a willing heart.
Thank You
for Your compassion that does not run out. Thank You for pardon that is not
measured but abundant. Thank You for the cross — that while I was still a sinner,
Christ died for me.
I receive
Your grace today. I choose to seek You now, while You may be found. Lead me
from this moment forward. In Jesus' name, Amen.
"The
Lord is near to all who call on him, to all who call on him in truth."
— Psalm
145:18
"He who dwells in the shelter of the Most High will abide in the shadow of the Almighty. I will say to the Lord, 'My refuge and my fortress, my God, in whom I trust.'" — Psalm 91:1–2
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