And many people shall go and say, Come ye, and let us go
up to the mountain of the LORD, to the house of the God of Jacob; and he will
teach us of his ways, and we will walk in his paths: for out of Zion shall go
forth the law, and the word of the LORD from Jerusalem. (Isa. 2:3)
Isaiah shows that those who take upon them the office of
teaching and exhorting should not sit down and command others, but should join
and walk along with them as companions; as we see that some men are very severe
instructors, and eager to urge others forward, who yet do not move a step. But
here believers, instead of addressing to their brethren the command, Go up,
rather lead the way by their own example. This is the true method, therefore,
of profitable teaching, when, by actually performing what we demand, we make it
evident that we speak with sincerity and earnestness.
And he will teach us in his ways. He shows, first,
that God cannot be worshipped aright until we have been enlightened by
doctrine; and, secondly, that God is the only teacher of the Church, on whose
lips we ought to hang. Hence it follows that nothing is less acceptable to God
than certain foolish and erring services which men call devotion and likewise,
that though he employs the agency of men in teaching, still he reserves this as
his own right, that they must utter nothing but his word.
Had this rule been followed by those who called themselves
teachers of the Church religion would not have been so shamefully corrupted by
a wide and confused diversity of superstitions. Nor is it possible that we
shall not be carried away into various errors, where we are tossed about by the
opinions of men. Justly therefore, does Isaiah, when he claims for God alone
the power and authority to teach the Church, shut the mouths of all mortals; so
that the office of teaching is committed to pastors for no other purpose than
that God alone may be heard there. Let those who wish to be reckoned ministers
of Christ allow themselves to be regulated by this statement, that they may
take nothing away from his authority. (Commentaries)
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