Grace, mercy and peace
from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ,
Grace,
mercy and peace to those of anxious heart, proclaims Isaiah the prophet. He is
commanded to say to those whose hearts are anxious “Be strong, fear not!” That’s
good news… for some; for some because only some are given a reason for
confident hope. Are you given reason for
hope? These words are spoken to those who await His coming, to all awaiting the
Lord’s salvation. The command “be strong, fear not!” is for those who need hear
these words, and whose strength and security come not from themselves, but from
God’s promises.
“Behold, your God will come…” He will
come for you, for all who are distressed, for all who await the Lord’s coming.
And we need that hope, since we often have cause for anxiety, worry, fear and
turmoil. For a dramatic and contextual example, Isaiah’s day saw trouble
indeed. The Northern Kingdom of Israel fell to Sargon II in 722 BC. Assyrian
armies left a trail of impaled and flayed victims. Captives were forced to lie
down, and then were run over with obsidian studded threshing sledges. Israel suffered
death and exile, and captives of other nations were brought in, creating a
hopeless confusion of languages, customs and gods. Assyria
was on the move again. Judah
was next. In 701 BC Sennacherib, Assyria ’s
general, took 42 of Judah ’s
fortified cities. Now he boasts before the gates of Jerusalem . Judah faced the same catastrophe as
Israel .
That’s the context of our text. Yet every generation has cause for anxiety. Even now we worry about our nation, our
state, our city, our church, ourselves. Likewise, many anxious hearts looked to
God after Pearl Harbor . How many believing
school children prayed during nuclear bomb drills, when school sirens sent them
huddling under desks? What fears with prayer were yours when your car broke
down in the wrong part of town, when unexpected bills arrived, when your
children were ill or family members chose the wrong way? We ask with Judah , can the Lord cure our fears?
And we wonder how we can pray with the Psalmist from today’s introit, “I have
trusted in the Lord without wavering?”
Isaiah is given a Word from God, a
sure prophesy, an eternal word, an enduring word. Is that word for us, is it
for all fears? We know in what year Isaiah speaks. Yet he speaks not only to
that generation. Who is addressed? He
speaks to all who hear these two words, “Your
God.” These words are for the people of God, first heard in Judah but not
just for Judah .
How do we know that? The content of the prophesy goes far beyond Assyria ’s armies and Judah ’s present trouble. These
words stretch from that day to the end of time. When you go home read the
context and you will see. For now note these words are given to a people chosen
by God, chosen for a purpose. From them the Messiah will come for all flesh,
that all might believe in that Name. The promise is for all to whom this phrase
applies: “your God,” your God in the
only way any of us can call God our God, our Father, our Saviour… by grace
through faith.
Not all Israel by the flesh is true Israel , but
only those of faith. After all, the nation of Israel was destroyed by unbelief
although a remnant was preserved. The Lord warned that kingdom for hundreds of
years, like Noah warned the world, like Moses warned Pharaoh, pleading for
repentance and faith. Thank God Hezekiah of Judah believes this word that is
for all who believe the scope of the prophesy. A promise is given the
repentant. A promise is given to all who rely on grace from the first day of
time until time’s end.
It does ask a law word: “Who is your
God?” Is it your appetites and desires, your reasoning and fears, your will or
the will of an idol, a wish, or a myth? It also asks a grace word: Who is your
God? Is it the true God, who spoke by the apostles and prophets and who became
man to epiphany his divinity in the flesh? Who is your God? Is it Jesus Christ
who died, rose, and ascended and who reigns with the Father and Spirit, one
God? Then what have we to fear? This God revealed Himself in time and place,
fulfilling His promises, leaving a record of faithfulness in each generation. This
God, your God, comes with vengeance, with the recompense of God. He will come
and save you.
How does He come? He comes with
vengeance…to set all things right, to stop evil and prevent evil doers. The
WWII battle cry was Hitler must be stopped. He was responsible for butchering
millions and causing the death of millions more. Do we need less from the
Living God than to end all evil? Those
who experience great trouble understand why vengeance is important, so that
justice prevail. For vengeance is at
first call a call to repentance before it becomes punishment for the
unrepentant. This vengeance Isaiah promises is not man’s anger, but God’s work
to end evil, to end what is caused by sin, including all the works of the
devil. That is another reason the church asks God to take vengeance, lest we
take it into our own hands and bloody them. God’s church should only know
Christ’s blood. In times past when the church picked up the sword of vengeance
how soon did she corrupt the faith? As for the church’s trials, the Lord knows
what His saints can endure, and what we as sinners must endure lest we too
become proud, and become objects of wrath. The Lord sends trials, testing and
troubles to turn us toward Him. He
provokes us to ask, “How long, Oh Lord?” And He promises to end evil’s course,
forever.
Does this apply to the petty thief who
steals your purse at church, to the hit and run against your parked car, to
small things? Does it apply to evils without a human cause, like memory loss,
your body failing, feeling useless? How broad is God’s scope? Isaiah’s words
stretch back to the beginning of time by virtue of the promise made about the
end of time. Isaiah’s prophesy is cosmic, universal, ultimate, final, complete,
and perfect. Our Lord shall give sight to the blind and hearing to the deaf and
more. Nature’s futility shall be reversed. Where there were deserts soon will
be streams and pools. What the curse caused for the sake of repentance, what
the vengeance of God worked against sin and sinner, will be finished and is
already done. Christ fulfilled the law – he trusted without wavering, and he
did that for you. For you He died on a cross, cursed bearing your sins, bearing
the vengeance of God against all sin and for every sinner. It is finished. That final word is the hope Adam and Eve
awaited; their deliverer. It is also for you, for all who wait to see the
promises of our God. He has even carried
the price of your anxious fears. That word hears each believer’s prayer for
justice and mercy, for preservation against enemies and for purity of heart.
The Word hears each prayer for a paycheck, a medical diagnosis, a problem at
work, your family at home and your spiritual struggles. That word applies to
the small and to the great, as it did when Hezekiah was shut up like a bird in
a cage before Assyria ’s armies, and appealed
to God. He was answered. Because that Great Day is coming and shall come, the
Word applies today, for That Day will answer all our prayers. We will rejoice.
Therefore, remember the prophets of
old, and what the Lord gave through their hands for vengeance, for healing, for
faith made courageous. Remember the apostles, their labor in the Word, as when
Peter declared the gospel and 3,000 were baptized in one day. Remember the
salvation of our Lord, when outside Judea in
the Gentile land of the Decapolis , he made the
deaf hear, the mute speak. Remember the vengeance he wrecked on the devil, on
sin, and on death when He rose
victorious from the grave. In our God’s incarnation, His sufferings, His bloody
sweat, His crucifixion, death and burial the vengeance against all evil was
accomplished. The devil was cast down, our sinful race forgiven and bidden to
receive by faith eternal life. To fulfill Isaiah’s prophesy our Lord declared
us justified, and by baptism made us saints, giving us new life, adopting us
into the family of God, of your God. He
completed our salvation, although we await our Lord’s return. He is with you,
while we await the visible manifestation of all He accomplished.
Isaiah’s words shall come true, and in
Christ they have come true. So it is no surprise we see hints of the coming
universal, the cosmic, ultimate, and final good. After Adam and Eve fell, they
received a promise by grace, believed, and were saved. Noah preached repentance over 100 years, the flood came,
but he and his household were saved. Moses
heard the wailing of Egypt
for their first born, but Israel
was spared by the Passover Lamb’s blood. David slew the giant Goliath with a
stone from his sling, least in Israel
but full of confidence in His God. Hezekiah saw Sennacherib’s massive army
destroyed in a single night, 185,000 struck down by the angel of the Lord.
God’s people were saved. Jesus Christ
bore our stripes and carried our burdens, so that the vengeance of the Lord
fell on Him, that we might be saved, and so we are. He rose from the dead. So
the church daily repents, and is daily assured that our sins are forgiven,
giving us the freedom to serve, give,
care and love.
That’s
been the history of the church, from the first century until now. In each
generation trials follow faith; yet Christ keeps the church. He preserves faith
even when the lamp looks dim. He preserves His people. Although we may be
anxious, He bids us “be strong, fear not!”
We have reason for courage. The Lord is faithful to the end, faithful to
you. Your God will come and save you. The vengeance due you was absorbed on the
cross. We who believe await what shall surely come to repentant sinners, even
now sharing in the restoration. For we who are baptized and believe are also
bid to taste the marriage supper of the Lamb, at once complete and yet delayed
(Mk 7). As the Apostle John saw… Then I saw a new heaven and a new earth… And
I saw the holy city, new Jerusalem, coming down out of heaven from God,
prepared as a bride adorned for her husband. And I heard a loud voice from
before the throne saying, “Behold, the dwelling place of God is with man. He
will dwell with them, and they will be his people, and God himself will be with
them as their God. He will wipe away every ear from their eyes… and he who was
seated on the throne said, “Behold, I am making all things new.” (Rev
21:1-5a)
The salvation shall be marvelous. He
comes to save you. The restoration that was completed on the cross will be
“epiphanied.” Our Lord shall not delay. Let us pray, Maranatha, Lord, come quickly.
The peace of God which
passes all understanding keep your heart and mind in Christ Jesus our Lord.
(Amen)
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