A Signal for the Peoples
Isaiah 11: 1-10
Here we are at the second
Sunday of Advent. The Second Advent candle was lit today honoring the theme of
Joy. The children’s choir sang Joy to the World, a familiar Christmas hymn, to
remind us of the news that was shared so long ago…news that we herald in this
season in both remembrance and reminder. We remember the birth of the Christ
child and we are reminded of the reason for his birth. The birth of Jesus was a
watershed event. It was the beginning of a change that would affect the entire
world for the rest of its history.
What is a watershed
event? It’s something momentous that happens. It usually marks a major change
of course or it is something on which other important events depend. For
instance, today we remember the seventy third anniversary of the sneak attack
upon our Naval Base at Pearl Harbor by the Japanese in 1941. 2388 sailors,
soldiers, marines and civilians died in that attack. That was a watershed
event. We declared war on the Japanese later that day. The next five years, the
entire country entered into a war effort that would see millions of our
country’s men and women go off to the Pacific and Europe to engage in a
conflict for our freedom and our very way of life. Over sixty million people
died in World War II. It changed the world.
We have watershed events
in our own lives. They may not change the world but they are of singular
importance to us when we have those experiences. Watershed events might be a
death in the family, a graduation, a marriage, the birth of a child, a divorce.
They might be our conversion to Christianity…our acceptance of Jesus Christ as
our Savior and Lord. Watershed events change the course of our lives.
The Bible is full of
watershed events, from the creation story to the flood to the stories of the
Patriarchs, beginning with Adam. But without question, the signal watershed
event of the Old Testament and of the nation of Israel, is the Exodus, the
story of God’s deliverance of the people of Israel from the slavery of Egypt. I
have heard it said that there are periods in history when the world is in great
need, and with uncanny accuracy, unusually great leaders rise up to lead in
those times. Such is the case with the nation of Israel in captivity. In their
time of great need, God sent them Moses as their leader. Of course, we know
that Moses was guided by God. It was Moses’ obedience to God, his willingness
to be guided by God, that made his leadership so great.
And so, after plagues and
famine and partings of waters, the people of Israel moved forward as one body
toward the Promised Land. Their job, which by the way they continually failed
to do, was to act as what Michael Goheen calls a contrast people. They were to stand in contrast to the nations all
around them. They were to worship the one true God. They were to live in
example, example of what God wants and expects from his chosen.
Many generations passed.
The Promised Land was lost. First, the Assyrians, then the Babylonians, broke
down, exiled and re-assimilated the nation of Israel until it was without
political power and had lost much of its identity. During the Exile, the
prophet Isaiah, along with the prophet Micah, spoke for God over a thirty year
period. Isaiah was a prophet in Judah, the Southern Kingdom, which was still
ruled by King Hezekiah. He spoke of a theme of restoration and salvation. But Isaiah
prophesied beyond the reign of the kings of Judah. He foresaw a time when a
final heir to the throne of David would appear. He looked toward a time of
salvation and that salvation extended beyond any national borders. His
prophecies were remarkably accurate.
Did Isaiah know how his
prophecies would play out? There is no way for us to know that. Some speculate
that he foresaw all that would come to pass. Others conjecture that Isaiah was
pointing forward only to a day when Judah would be saved and Israel would be
restored to political prominence. Regardless of how one interprets it, the fact
of the matter is that Isaiah’s Messianic prophecies were ripe with details of
what came to pass in the first century. Today’s passage is exemplary of that.
Isaiah prophesies that a “shoot from the stump of Jesse” will
come forth. Jesse, of course, is the father of King David, and a shoot from
that stump would seem to imply that the Davidic line of kingship will die out,
but that the Messiah will come from that bloodline, which indeed Jesus does.
Upon this person shall rest the Spirit of the Lord, a Spirit of wisdom, of understanding, of
counsel and light, of knowledge and the fear of the Lord. This new leader will
come to judge and he will judge not with his eyes and ears, not with the
traditional evidence that people employ, but rather with righteousness and faithfulness.
Isaiah goes on to
prophesy of a world which we have never known. In fact, it is a world which no
one since Adam and Eve has known. While we may live in the middle of God’s
creation, we nevertheless live in it as a flawed, corroded version of the real
thing. Mankind has corrupted that which was flawless. God’s creation was and is
so marvelous that even centuries of brutalizing it still find it breathtaking
in many ways. But the world that Isaiah describes is entirely different. There
is no strife. Relief and trust have returned to the creation…so much so that the
animal kingdom plays and resides not only side by side, but even so that a
little child can frolic in the midst of lions and leopards and venomous snakes
without fear. There is total trust between man and animal, man and man. It is
the creation restored. And Isaiah says that in that day, none of creation’s
creatures will hurt or destroy. Isaiah can see a day when the natural working
order of the world is restored and all of creation lives in harmony. He talks
of it taking place on God’s holy mountain, which some take to mean Mt Sinai,
but others would expand to all of God’s creation. God is too big to be confined
to one mountain and indeed, with God residing in it, all of creation becomes
God’s holy mountain.
How can that day come?
How can harmony be restored? Isaiah prophesies: First, Isaiah tells us that “the earth will be full of the knowledge of
the Lord.” Imagine a world in which everyone and everything is full in the
knowledge of God and who he is and of his sovereignty. Isaiah says the earth
will know, not just the people but the whole earth. All of creation will once
again be bathed in the knowledge of God. Second, Isaiah says that “In that day the root of Jesse, who shall
stand as a signal for the peoples—of him shall the nations inquire, and his
resting place shall be glorious.” In
that day, the coming of Messiah, the coming of the Son of God--in that day—Jesus, the root of
Jesse, the promised Savior, will stand as
a signal for the peoples. It is a beautiful image painted by the prophet,
and it includes not only the remnant of the nation of Israel, but “the
peoples”—all the nations of the earth.
“ In that day,” says Isaiah. Does he refer to the birth of the
Christ child? Does he refer to the Passion? I think first of all that Isaiah
speaks from his own knowledge, but I think he also speaks from that which he
has been guided to say by the Lord. He may not even know the full ramifications
of his prophecy. I think that probably without knowing it, Isaiah has pointed
to the Day of the Lord, the day when Christ returns at the end of the age, when
all creation is restored for all time and everyone is judged. But in that day could also mean the coming
of Jesus in Bethlehem, for either way you look at it, a watershed event is
about to happen.
Jesus is coming. He is
coming as a babe wrapped in a manger. He is coming as the Lamb of God. He is
coming as the Suffering Servant. He is coming as Messiah, the anointed one,
that “shoot” from the stump of Jesse,
but he is coming. And he will come again one more time as John calls for in the
close of the Biblical canon, saying “Amen.
Come, Lord Jesus!” No matter how you
choose to look at it, Jesus is coming, and six hundred years before his birth,
Isaiah heralded his arrival.
This season, we celebrate
not only the coming of Christ, but the fact that his coming was a watershed
event in the history of the world. While long ago, God caused Moses to move his
people in one body from one point to another, the coming of Jesus is not a
going forth, but a coming together under the leadership of the Lord himself. We
celebrate that he does indeed stand as a
signal for the peoples. His is the voice of hope, of joy, of peace, of
love. He is coming among us!
Joy to the World! He is
coming!
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