All Christians know that the prophets foretold the
future, and gave many prophecies which are being fulfilled in our time; but it
may be news to many that the Bible even speaks of our own United States of
America. Not under that name, 'of course; but the Bible describes a certain land
in such terms as definitely identify it as the United States. However, part of
this has been concealed from all---but the deepest students of the Bible by the
unfortunate mistranslation of certain words in the commonly-used King James
Version.
The Prophet Isaiah, one, of the most deeply inspired prophets in
the Bible, foretells the future of a number of different nations. With one
exception, these kingdoms which were then important nations, were competing with
one another for mastery - over western Asia and the Mediterranean shores. In his
thirteenth chapter, Isaiah names Babylon, and foretells its coming
destruction- -even naming the Medes as the chief nation by whom Babylon would be
overthrown (although Isaiah wrote this 176 years before the fall of Babylon);
he also foretells that, after its destruction, the Arabs would never
camp overnight at the site of the mined city--which is still true, even today.
In his fourteenth chapter Isaiah concludes his prophecies against
Babylon, and names another people doomed to be broken as a punishment for their
evil ways--the Assyrians.
In the fifteenth and sixteenth chapters, Isaiah
prophesies the destruction of another nation, that of Moab. In his seventeenth
chapter, Isaiah foretells the fall of Damascus. (Let us skip over the eighteenth
chapter for the moment; but we will come back to it.) In the nineteenth and
twentieth chapters, he foretells the destruction of another mighty
nation--the great empire of Egypt; and in the twenty-third chapter, he
foretells the doom of the powerful commercial seaport of Tyre.
All of these nations were pagan enemies of God's people, and
God's patience with their wickedness was near its end; so these prophecies are
all prophecies of destruction. Isaiah lists these nations all by
name--for they then had names, and were the important nations of their day. But
in the midst of this, in the short eighteenth chapter, Isaiah speaks of another
nation which he does not name, but merely Ascribes it. Unfortunately the
translators have sadly garbled this short chapter until its meaning is lost.
Correctly translated from the Hebrew, its references to this un-named nation
(found in verses one, two, three, and seven) read thus: Ho! to the land
of buzzing wings, which lies beyond the rivers of Ethiopia; "That sends its
ambassadors by sea, in water-drinking vessels upon the waters. Go, you swift
messengers, to a nation tall and. smooth-shaven, to a people terrible from their
beginning onward; a nation measured out by lines under foot, whose land the
rivers divide.
At that time shall a present be brought to the Lord of
Hosts: A people tall and smooth-shaven, a nation measured out by lines under
foot, whose land the rivers quarter, to the place of the name of the Lord of
Hosts, Mount Zion.'
Now, let us examine this very unusual description, and see which
nation it will fit. It is not named--and as we shall see, this is for the very
good reason that, at the time when Isaiah wrote, it had no name, for it did not
yet exist.
The first strange thing we note is that it is "the land of
buzzing wings." Nearly all of you who listen to me can, at this moment,
hear the drone of airplanes in the sky. No other nation in the world has its
skies so filled with "buzzing wings," day and night, as our own United
States.
Next, where is it located? Isaiah says it is "beyond the
rivers of Ethiopia." The rivers of Ethiopia are the tributaries which unite
into the great River Nile and flow northward into the Mediterranean Sea due west
of Jerusalem. Look straight west from Jerusalem, where the Prophet wrote these
words, and your line of vision will cut across the mouths of the River Nile,
across the north African shore, through Libya, Tunisia, Algeria and
Morocco--none of which can possibly answer any part of the description of this
nation. So we keep going on, due west, across the Atlantic Ocean, and we arrive
at the shores of the United States on the coastline of Georgia and South
Carolina.
Isaiah says that this nation "sends its ambassadors by sea,
in water-drinking vessels upon the waters." The American ambassadors can go
only to Mexico and Canada by land; more than almost any other nation, we must
send our ambassadors by sea--until just the last few years, when we became able
to send them on the "buzzing-wings." By sea, they have gone, for most
of our history, in "waterdrinking vessels"--that is, steamships, which
must "drink" great quantities of water for their boilers.
It is a nation "tall and smooth-shaven. " You have
noticed how few foreigners are of our height. In both World Wars, the United
States Army was the tallest army on record; and among them were few moustaches,
practically no beards. Today, except for the "beatniks," where can you
find a beard among us?
It is a "people terrible from their beginning
onward"--and so we have been. We were born by defeating the greatest power
in Europe, the British Empire--not only once, but twice; we whipped the North
African pirate kings to whom even proud Britain was paying tribute; we ended
Spain's long dream of world-wide empire; we won two World Wars which must have
gone the other way if we had stayed out.
A nation measured out by lines under foot," says
Isaiah. The United States Metes and Bounds Act, enacted by Congress about a
century and a half ago, established the world's first system of surveying the
whole nation into sections and townships, laid out by the compass--which, even
today, most nations do not have -- truly "a nation measured out by lines on
the ground, under foot.
It is a nation "whose land the rivers divide, or
quarter." The Mississippi River cuts our land in half, from north to south;
the Ohio River and its tributaries divide the eastern half in two; and the
Columbia, the North Plate, and related streams, cut the western half in two.
Where else do you find the like?
Isaiah says, "All you inhabitants of the world and you
dwellers on the earth, when a banner is raised on the mountains, look in fear;
and attend when the bugle is blown." Truly, we are "a nation terrible
from their beginning onward"; and when our battle-flags fly and the bugles
call our armies to war, the whole world has learned that it had better pay very
respectful attention.
There is no other nation in the world which will fit this entire
description; but our nation does. But there is still one more point: verse seven
says: At that time. shall a present be brought to the Lord of
Hosts: a nation tall and smooth-shaven, a people terrible from their beginning
onward, a nation measured out by lines under foot, whose land the rivers
quarter, to the place of the name of the Lord of Hosts, Mount Zion. " This
is no pagan nation, like those of Asia and Africa; it is no atheist nation, like
those of the Communist empire; it is a Christian nation, bringing its people,
its strength, its hopes and ideals as a present to our God.
It has been proved to you that we are even today living in Bible
times. But it is also true that you are living in a Bible land, one favorably
mentioned in the Bible. The Bible is written about us, and written to us: IT IS
OUR BOOK AND WE ARE ITS PEOPLE.