OMG Jae -----your quote -----Actually unsafe
, it is our deeds that are as filthy rags. "
And all we be made as an unclean man; all our rightfulnesses be as the cloth of a woman in menstruation, or unclean blood; and all we fell down as a leaf, and our wickednesses, as wind, have taken away us." - Isaiah 64:6 (WYC).
And the verse says nothing about Jesus.
Jae ----Jesus is God ---If we are not with God we are away from God ----------you should read the chapter there Jae -----I am posting commentary so you get it -----you can read all if you wish----
Study Guide for Isaiah 64 by David Guzik
2. (
Isa 64:5-7) The obstacle to God's great works: our great sinfulness.
You meet him who rejoices and does righteousness, who remembers You in Your ways. You are indeed angry, for we have sinned; in these ways we continue; and we need to be saved.
But we are all like an unclean thing, and all our righteousnesses are like filthy rags; we all fade as a leaf, and our iniquities, like the wind, have taken us away. And there is no one who calls on Your name, who stirs himself up to take hold of You; for You have hidden Your face from us, and have consumed us because of our iniquities.
a. You meet him who rejoices and does righteousness: The praying one asks the question, "What kind of man does the LORD answer in prayer?" In
Isaiah 64:4, he noted that it was the
one who waits for the LORD. Now the praying one expands the idea, and notes that the LORD will answer the prayer (
meet) the one
who rejoices and does righteousness.
The LORD will answer the prayer of the one who remembers the LORD in his ways.
b. Knowing that, there is a problem:
For we have sinned - in these ways we continue; and we need to be saved. The praying remnant knows that God only answers the prayers of the righteous man, yet it isn't the righteous man who needs
to be saved from the disaster he has brought on himself.
And we need to be saved is translated well by the NIV here as,
How then can we be saved? The praying one then goes on to eloquently describe our state of sin.
i. First, our sin makes us
like an unclean thing; it makes us unacceptable and unworthy before God. "Under the Jewish law you know that when a person was unclean he could not go up to the house of the Lord. He could offer no sacrifice. God could accept nothing at his hands; he was an outcast and an alien so long as he remained unclean." (Spurgeon)
ii. Even
all our righteousness are like filthy rags. The good we may try to do is unacceptable and unclean before the LORD. Because we
are all like an unclean thing, even the good we do is polluted. "Brethren, if our righteousnesses are so bad, what must our
unrighteousnesses be?