Here is the final Advent sermon for 2012. If you've been getting help or a blessing from these, please let us know.
HE SHALL NOT FAIL
ISAIAH 42:1-7
FOURTH SUNDAY OF ADVENT
2012
Our Gracious God, grant that by your Word and by your
spirit we may behold your Servant, in Whom you delight, that we may marvel at
His judgments, His humility, His gentleness, His dedication to His mission and
His triumph, and await His Kingdom, for we pray in His name.
INTRODUCTION
Above all others, Isaiah
is the prophet of Advent. As I pointed
out last time (we were in Isa. 59-60), there is an unmistakable change in tone
between ch. 39 and 40. It is so obvious
that Bible critics have speculated that there were two different authors. Surely the guy that wrote the first chapters
could never have written the later chapters – at least in their skeptical
minds.
The concluding 27 chapters
are hopeful, and full of promises and snapshots of a glorious future Kingdom of
peace and prosperity, made possible by, and accompanying, the advent
of the Messiah.
Early in that second main
division we find four “Servant Songs of Isaiah”[1]
which climax in the famous Messianic
prophecy of Isa. 53. Servant Songs are a
good name for them, because they are poetry, as you can see if you are reading
from a single-column Bible. If you don’t
have one, get one before they are all gone.
It will give you a new perspective on a large portion of the Word of
God. For example, you would see from the
way it is laid out that this passage I’m talking about today is poetry.
All of God’s promises are
delivered in this Servant of Jehovah.
All man’s hopes are fulfilled in Him.
There is a progression in
this collection of poems. In the
first Servant Song, which is where we are this morning the Servant is
introduced. Read again what it says
about Him. The second Servant Song explains
His mission; the third remarks on His obedience to His
mission; and the fourth describes His suffering in order to fulfill
it.
And as you would expect, they follow
exactly the course of Jesus public ministry.
He began by meeting the needs of hurting people and preaching the good
news of the kingdom of God, just as Isaiah describes Him.
As time passed He came to be rejected
by the Jewish leaders, and so He began to concentrate on teaching His
disciples. Soon, He began to focus more
and more on His coming rejection, death and resurrection, and as you know, finally,
that also came to pass.
Some other time we will have go into
those other Servant Songs, and look at them all together, but for today, we
will have to content ourselves with just the introduction.
BEHOLD HIM
Isaiah preached the law
lawfully. We had 39 chapters of it. It’s not a good idea to talk about the good
news until you’ve made the bad news clear.
Well, Isaiah made it plenty clear.
But He also followed that up with
the comfort of the gospel (40:1) – with the preaching of Christ. Right
here where our text begins, once again, Isaiah points to Christ as directly as
it can be done – he says, “Behold Him”.
How more “Christ-centered” can you get?
That’s nearly the same thing that
John the Baptist (Jn. 1:29) said when Jesus came to Jordan to be baptized. It’s not much different from what Pilate said
when Jesus came forth,
…
wearing the crown of thorns, and the purple robe. And Pilate saith unto them, Behold
the man! (John 19:5)
And never forget that Paul insisted,
1Co. 2:2
For I determined
not to know
any thing among
you, save
Jesus Christ,
and him
crucified .
That is truly the message of the
entire Bible – behold HIM!
But what did Paul know about
preaching? Just think how much more
successful Paul would have been if he had just been more innovative and creative
with his message – a little more relevant and seeker-sensitive – if he had
asked people what they wanted and given it to them instead of delivering what
God said to give them?
He would never have been thrown in
jail or run out of town or beaten or stoned again and again. He could have been the world’s most popular
Christian.
What did Isaiah know about Church
growth? If he had preached something
people actually wanted to hear, they would never have cut him in half, alive,
with a wooden saw.
But there was just no talking to
Isaiah. Stubborn as he was, all Isaiah could
talk about was law and gospel, law and gospel, law and gospel. You may ask, “What about the Kingdom prophecies? That’s not law or gospel.” Well actually, that’s part of the gospel because
the gospel is everything that God has given us in Christ – it’s good news about
what God the Father has done and will do for sinners through His Son, Who is
also His Servant.
Remember now, If you have to do it, it’s not good
news. It’s law, it’s bad news. Even if you think you can do it, it’s bad
news because you can’t, so that means you are guilty of sin, and thinking you
can do it, or have done, just adds sin to sin.
But if it’s done for you, it’s gospel. We need both of course. We need to hear the law so we realize and
remember our need for the gospel.
But
now; Why does the prophet point to Christ right here, right now, in this way?
If all he wanted to do was use up
some ink and paper he could just as well given them another blessing out. But it’s apparently time for some good
news. Why now? Well, let’s see what he just got done saying.
41:26 Who hath declared from the beginning, that
we may know? – good question.
…and beforetime, that we may say, He is righteous? – Can you think of
anybody that qualifies as righteous?
…that heareth your words. – There’s the truth of it. We all pretend we hear God’s Word and take it
seriously, but when really put to the test, we know better. That’s bad news.
41:27
The
first shall say to Zion, Behold, behold them: and I will give to
Jerusalem one that bringeth good tidings. So here’s the promise to give Jerusalem some
good news, even though there really isn’t any to report just yet.
41:28 For I
beheld, and there was no man;
even among them, and there was
no counseller, that, when I asked of them, could answer a word. 29 Behold, they are all vanity; their works are nothing: their molten images are wind and confusion.
Why was there no good news? Because there were no good men – not even
anybody that could give truly good advice.
They knew it too, so they made idols.
And then, man points to this idol thing, or that idol person and says,
“behold that” or “behold him”.
“He is righteous.” Or, “Here’s some good advice for us.” That’ll do the trick!
“He is righteous.” Or, “Here’s some good advice for us.” That’ll do the trick!
But God looks on the same thing and
says, “I looked, but all I saw was a whole lotta nothing (v. 28). Wind
and confusion and nothing more.
Well then, we’re in a fine mess
aren’t we? What in the world can we
do. We’re worthless, our idols are
worthless. Everything we think is good
advice – when it comes to fixing the real problem – which is our soul-damning
hell-deserving sin, we’re out of luck, out of cards to play, out of tricks, out
of hope.
But there is Hope, because there is
a God Who loves and intervenes. There is
good news. There is something worth
looking to. There is something of real value; something
solid and steady. And that of course, is “His Servant”, whom He upholds. And here is where He is introduced.
What
are some of the things that stand out immediately when we behold Him?
1.
He is (as the Father says) My Servant
That
is to say, He is divinely chosen, divinely called, divinely equipped, divinely sustained,
and divinely commissioned.
We’re
not going to try this morning to unravel the mysteries of the divine counsels
before time and space and matter were formed by the Word of God. But we do know, because God has revealed it,
that the Father, the Son and the Spirit all agreed that the Son would come to
do the will of the Father – to fulfill the law perfectly (active obedience) and
to suffer the full extent of its penalty (death, passive obedience).
He
is, as the Father says, “Mine elect”, and in Him the Father is delighted.
2. He is A Servant
I
can of mine own self do nothing: as I hear, I judge: and my judgment is just;
because I seek not mine own will, but the will of the Father which hath sent
me. (John 5:30)
For even Christ pleased not
himself; but, as it is written, The reproaches of them that reproached thee
fell on me. (Romans 15:3)
Let this mind be in you, which
was also in Christ Jesus: Who, being in the form of God, thought it not robbery
to be equal with God: But made himself of no reputation, and took upon him the
form of a servant, and was made in the likeness of men: (Philippians 2:5-7)
3. He is upheld of the Father
HE IS UPHELD FROM SIN
Adam fell. We all fell with Him. He sinned under the best of conditions, and
we would have done the same. Every
“hero” in the Old Testament fell. Some
of the greatest of them fell the hardest.
But the Servant of The Lord – never.
For
we have not an high priest which cannot be touched with the feeling of our
infirmities; but was in all points tempted like as we are, yet without
sin. (Hebrews 4:15)
Who
did no sin, neither was guile found in his mouth: Who, when he was reviled,
reviled not again; when he suffered, he threatened not; but committed himself
to him that judgeth righteously: Who his own self bare our sins in his own body
on the tree, that we, being dead to sins, should live unto righteousness: by
whose stripes ye were healed. (1 Peter 2:22-24)
And
when Peter wrote that, he was making a loose quotation from Isaiah himself, who
wrote 53:9-11 (see)
HE IS UPHELD IN HIS MISSION
We all need somebody to hold us up
from time to time. That goes for the God
Man as well. You might at first think
that He would have less need to be upheld, but then you might want to recall
just what it was that He had to bear.
As God He was Omnipotent, but as
man, He had limitations and could wear down.
At such times, He could rely on the Father. The Father had “put His spirit upon Him” at
His baptism.
Moses had Aaron and Hur to hold his
hands up. Paul had his various companions at different times to assist
him. But Jesus had nobody to lean on
that understood what it was that He was carrying. He had some friends, and His disciples. But only the Father and the Spirit
understood.
The woman with the alabaster box of
ointment – that broke it, poured it on his feet, and washed it off with her
tears and her own hair - she seemed best to understand the load he carried. She was just the sort of bruised reed and
smoking flax mentioned in v. 3.
And that’s how it is with really
broken people. We’re all broken by sin,
but some of us know it deeply. We’re not
looking for a little help in achieving the greatness of our potential. We’re bruised beyond healing and we know
it. We aren’t luminaries right now – we
aren’t stars. We’re burned-out wicks
that barely give off anything more than a whisp of smoke.
But God loves broken people, because
they have a much better idea of the load that others are under. Privileged people never do. That’s why it was her, and not Simon, the
wealthy and influential owner of the great house that washed Jesus feet that
evening.
And her attention was some comfort
to Him. But it was nothing compared to
the load. He didn’t create her to help
Him carry His load. He came to relieve
her of her load, to take the load born by that bruised reed upon Himself, and
carry it to the cross as her substitute.
If she had even a glimmer of the load He bore, it would have quenched
her.
And on the night of His betrayal,
Jesus was abandoned by all of His disciples and left alone and He stayed that
way till He came out of the tomb. But Father upheld Him and sent angels to the
garden of gethsemane to minister to Him as He prayed in agony.
All through the betrayal and the
arrest, the Father upheld Him. During the
trials before the Sanhedrin, Pilate and Herod, the scouring and the mocking,
the Father upheld Him. As He wearily
bore the up the side of the mountain, as nails were driven, during the nailing
and the thirsting and the hanging and bleeding and dying one drop at a time, the
Father remained with Him, carrying Him, sustaining Him
And that is why He did not cry out,
or lift up His voice to be heard in the street.
That’s why He did not fail or become discouraged. The Father upheld him and the Spirit was with
Him.
HE IS UPHELD, UP TO A POINT, AND THEN FORSAKEN
But there came a point in time,
there on the cross, at which Jesus assumed upon Himself the sin of the world –
when it was all laid on Him, and He felt the total load of it. And we can’t begin to imagine the weight of
it – how crushing it must have been.
What we can understand though is the
guilt we feel concerning those things about which we are most ashamed. Those things that have so bruised us and
snuffed out our little flames and made us realize what nothings we really are
(back to ch. 41, right?).
Those things that we try to forget,
but when we are alone they come back to us and mock us and torment us. He
bore all that. And not just all of yours.
But all of mine too. And all of everyone else in this place, and
not just this place but all over the world, and not just today, but yesterdays,
and tomorrows, from the beginning of humanity to the last sinner will have come
and gone.
He bore it, and the Father could not
sustain Him then. At that time, the
Father turned away, and the Spirit went out, and it was there and then that
Jesus cried, “My God, Why hast Thou forsaken me?”
But by then, He had made it to the
cross. By then, it was too late to turn
back. By then, He was too weak to pull himself
together enough to use His will to come down from the cross and leave the work
unfinished. Deity could have done it,
but humanity had been stretched beyond all limits.
But by then, He had “set judgment in
the Earth”.
Think of it this way - the Father
upheld Him right up to just the right time, which was also just the worst time
to be left alone. And yet for us, it was
the very best time – for the Father to drop Him like a bad habit and leave Him in
heartbroken agonized solitude to carry all alone and completely forsaken, your
sins and mine.
And now, that work being
accomplished, “the isles shall wait for his law.” And that will be at His next coming.
CONCLUSION
“Behold my servant”, the Father urges us.
Behold Him for just a little
while, and you won’t want to hear relevant
life tips for making yourself more successful, or be lectured on the
“spiritual truths” in the latest blockbuster movies when you come to
Church. You won’t want to hear about how
to cope with the rat race or make more money.
You’ll want to hear more about this
Suffering Servant that gave up Himself completely for your salvation.