Immanuel
Isaiah 7:14
It’s a new year! It’s
only hours old. Little has gone wrong this year, if only because the year is too
fresh to have been damaged yet. We can polish up our new calendars and note all
the empty spaces that have yet to be filled. Everything is fresh, at least for
the moment. Last week, we celebrated Jesus’ birthday. This week it’s the
birthday of 2017. Where will it go for you this year? What great things will
happen to you? Where will 2017 go for the church, the United States, the world?
All the pages of that book are yet to be written.
Sometimes the New Year is
depicted as a baby, and year end as an old fellow barely able to walk. The days
and months have piled up events and tasks until the year’s end comes wheezing
to the finish line. But 2017? Now that’s a portrait waiting to be painted. What
knowledge do you bring with you for this New Year? What assets are you holding
that will help you along the path? What baggage are you toting that you should
leave behind?
The great prophet Isaiah
frames our subject today. He prophesies the coming of a great king, a messiah. Among
his titles will be Immanuel. Immanuel.
In the Hebrew it comes from two words. The first is immanu, meaning “with us.” The second is el, which means “God.” So the compound word becomes literally, With us God. The words of the prophet
are quoted in Matthew’s gospel, where Matthew tells his readers that the birth
of Jesus is to fulfill Isaiah’s prophecy, and he explains that the word means “God with us.”
That’s all well and
good, you say, but Christmas is over. What good is it for me now? I’ve got to
go back to work. I’ve got to go back to parenting children without the gifts of
Christmas to cheer them or get them to listen to me. A soldier home on leave
has to go back to the theater of battle. A nurse has to go back to an arena of disease
and sickness. A teacher has to go back to classrooms filled with challenges of
little time, insufficient resources, ungrateful parents and sometimes lonely or
frustrated children. Christmas is nice, but it’s time to get back to the real
world, and I need something new, a fresh, strong idea, to carry me through this
wilderness of selfishness and greed and trouble.
God is not unaware of
your problems. In case you haven’t noticed lately, he tags along very close to
us, waiting for us to invoke the power of his name. Immanuel—God with us. He means it.
Most of you are plenty
familiar with being tested physically. If you have farmed, you endure long days
and back breaking chores. It you have competed as an athlete, you have trained
through pain and soreness. Linemen climb power poles. Surveyors cut underbrush
with machetes. “Homemakers” go from early to late making meals, ironing,
cooking, caregiving, taxiing and the like.
Each of the jobs I just
listed and many others you can name come with a healthy dose of stress. There
is emotional wear and tear suffered by each of us. We worry about our children,
our grandchildren, whether we have enough money, enough job security, enough
life and breath in us each day to show up and get the job done. Life is a grind
and sometimes, it can get very lonely, even right here in church or surrounded
by people.
But consider this. The
Bible is full of such situations. These feelings we have are not novel, not
peculiar to us. They just belong to us for the moment as we pass across the
stage of life. For instance, imagine how the people of the Exodus felt after
being led for forty years by Moses, perhaps the greatest figure of the Old
Testament. They reach the so-called Promised Land, but it is not without cost.
There are inhabitants in the land. It will have to be taken. And at this great
juncture with destiny in the life of the people of God, their leader Moses
dies. How would you feel if you were there? If you have ever lost a leader or a
loved one, you know that feeling of not only loss but helplessness. In a moment,
what was a time for joy has become a time of crisis. And what does God do? He
speaks to Joshua and says these words: “Just
as I was with Moses, so I will be with you. I will not leave you or forsake you
[Josh. 1:5]…for the Lord your God is with you wherever you go” [1:9]. God
was with the people of Israel then and he is with us now when we experience
loss and fear.
We face all kind and
manner of enemies in life, though many do not come announced as thieves and
robbers. Often the threats we face come in more subtle forms, from cancer to
heart disease to aging to loss of income or relationships. Consider the
trusting relationship spoken by the Psalmist: Even though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will
fear no evil, for you are with me [Ps. 23: 4]. You are with me, says the
Psalmist. It’s not just death to which the Psalmist refers. He is talking about
the dark places of life, the places where we feel out of control. God is there
with us.
This theme of God’s
presence with us is echoed by the writer of Hebrews. He tells God’s people to
keep our lives free from the love of money and be content with what we have;
reminding us of God’s promise that he
will never leave us or forsake us. He follows with this reassurance: “The Lord is my helper; I will not fear; what
can man do to me?” [Heb. 13: 5, 6]
How do we know he is
there? How can we feel his presence in a world full of so many pushes and pulls
and distractions? We will have to pull back from the constant callings of other
things if we are to hear the voice of God. If we want to feel his presence, we
have to first feel. Do you feel? Really feel? Think about how little time you
devote to intentionally feeling anything other than what is coming at you right
now. Jesus said to his disciples in those last instructions he gave to them in
John 15 that if we abide, live in him, we
will bear much fruit. Our lives will be productive and full. If we don’t, we
will produce nothing. He said to them that if they did these things, their joy, our joy, would be full. What
Jesus is telling us is that if we fill up our lives with something other than
him, we are going to end up doing nothing worthwhile.
The book of Revelation
talks about a new heaven and a new earth. It talks about the dwelling place of God being with man. It talks about him wiping
away every tear from our eyes. Now these are promises for the end times, but
think about how much we can have here and now. Jesus has already sent the Holy
Spirit to be with us, to live in us, to
walk with us. The Holy Spirit is another form of Immanuel; God with us. We don’t have to wait for the second coming
of Jesus to experience God right here in real time.
All these passages and
many more point to the same theme. God is
with us. The Bible is literally full of references to God being with us. We
need not feel alone, for if we believe in God, we can rest assured that we are
not alone. Long ago, the prophet Zephaniah (a man whose name means “Yahweh
hides”) spoke about the restoration of Israel. We Gentiles some 27 centuries
later sometimes question the relevance of prophets who spoke to the exile of
the people of Israel, promising restoration to those who believe. What can such
literature possibly have to do with a post-religious Western world? What do we
have in common with people in exile from their God? Really? Do we really need
to ask? We who haven’t seen most of our neighbors during the whole Christmas
season? We who tolerate store clerks saying Happy Holidays rather than Merry
Christmas? We are living in self-imposed exile and walk around almost blinded
by the demands of our culture. No, Zephaniah, Yahweh doesn’t hide. It is we who
hide from him.
And yet, the message of
Scripture, over and over and over, is Immanuel.
God with us. It was a descriptor for Isaiah to prophesy. It should be our
mantra. Everywhere in the Bible, God is calling to us, reminding us that we are
not alone and not defenseless. I love the way Matthew bookends his gospel with
the idea. In the first chapter (v. 23), he describes a genealogy of Jesus,
beginning with the call of Abraham. Then he speaks of the birth of Jesus,
reminding us that Isaiah’s prophecy has been fulfilled by that birth; that a
virgin shall conceive and bear a son whose name shall be called Immanuel. God makes good on the first
leg of his promise: to come to us. In
the last chapter, the last verse, the last phrase, it is Jesus talking. He is
about to ascend to heaven. He has made good on the second leg of God’s promise;
to redeem us. The last phrase says it
all: “And behold,
I am with you always, even unto the end of the age.”
In this New Year, if you
are alone, it’s because you are choosing to ignore the presence of God, the
presence of Jesus at his right hand, and the presence of the Holy Spirit in
your heart. Lay down that emotional baggage and pick up the cross. With us God. All of Scripture reminds
us. With us God. Can you feel him?