The Significance of the Savior’s Birth
Open your Bibles with me to Isaiah 9. Throughout
history people are always looking for someone to bail them out, some solution
that’s a quick fix or a magic bullet. Or they’re looking for some savior who’s
going to deliver them from tyranny, an economic disaster, from unpleasant
circumstances, or from disease or whatever it might be. People look for someone
or something that can radically transform their circumstances. Sheep are always
looking for a shepherd and the masses are always looking for a messiah.
Near the time that Jesus was born, it’s interesting
that at that time people expected someone to come. They were looking for a
messiah. The Jews were looking for the Messiah specifically because they had
prophecy from the Old Testament. It wasn’t unlike the time of Moses and the
time with the Jews in Exodus. God had told Abraham that the Jews would be in
slavery in Egypt for around four hundred years. Those who paid attention to
that prophecy knew that a deliverer would be coming soon. The same kind of
scenario took place when the birth of Jesus occurred. There were those in
Israel, who because of their study of Old Testament prophecy had a Biblically
grounded expectation of the Messiah. I think it’s because of that a lot of
other people picked up on that rumor and that idea and it had a residual impact
in other cultures. Theirs wasn’t grounded in the Scripture. They were just
looking for someone or something that would improve their circumstances and
deliver them from tyranny, either political or military.
In Scripture we know that those who were enlightened
by the truth of God’s word had real hope. One of these was a man named Simeon.
In Luke 2:25-26 we’re told, “Behold there was a man in Jerusalem whose name was
Simeon. This man was just and devout, waiting for the Consolation of Israel [a
title for Messiah] and the Holy Spirit was upon him.” Luke lets us know right
away that he has been imbued by God, the Holy Spirit, who is giving him
guidance at this particular time. Verse 26 goes on, “And it had been revealed
to Him by the Holy Spirit that he would not see death before he had seen the
Lord’s Christ.” We should understand that as the Lord’s Messiah. Christ is the
Greek term for the anointed one, CHRISTOS, and it’s the Greek translation of the Hebrew word, mashiach, meaning the anointed one, the
title for God’s promised Savior.
Luke tells us that Simeon wasn’t the only one. There
was also Anna who was a prophetess. In Luke 2:36-38 we’re told, “Now there was one,
Anna, a prophetess, the daughter of Phanuel, of the tribe of Asher.” This woman
was a widow of about 84 years old who did not “depart from the Temple but
served God with fastings and prayers night and day. And coming in that instant
she gave thanks to the Lord.” This was when Mary and Joseph had brought Jesus
on his eighth day of his life for his dedication at the Temple. Anna saw them
arrive and “She gave thanks to the Lord and spoke of Him to all those who
looked for redemption in Jerusalem.” That’s remarkable that when Mary and
Joseph bring the infant Jesus to the Temple in Jerusalem they’re met by Simeon
and by Anna. There were probably not the only ones at that time who had a Biblically
grounded expectation but God in His grace favored them so that they could serve
as two witnesses to confirm the reality of His presentation at the Temple.
This was a time that was designated by God in eternity
past. In His eternal plan, before He created the Heavens and the earth, before
He created anything, He had worked out a plan for salvation. God the Son’s
incarnation was not an afterthought because Adam and Eve sinned. It wasn’t Plan
B. It was something God had intended in His omniscience in eternity past. He
structured it in a way so that when the Messiah came, it would be at the right
time. God, in His sovereignty, is overseeing the development and the progress
of human history along with the progress of Divine revelation from Genesis to
the end of the Old Testament. God would prepare the Jews, specifically, and the
human race, generally, for the arrival of the Messiah.
Paul tells us this in Galatians 4:4-5, “When the
fullness of the time had come, God sent forth His Son.” That means that when
the time was right in God’s plan, when everything worked out, both structurally
and historically. God had brought things to a point where there was a right
time for the Messiah. It was the time of the peace of Rome, called the Pax Romana which is the time when the
Roman Empire had brought stability to the area of the Levant, all around the
eastern end of the Mediterranean, all across the Mediterranean, all the way
back to the Atlantic, both across North Africa, as well as across Europe, and
so there was a peace that was established. There was safety to travel and
safety to move.
This was a time when the gospel could go forth. Under
the Pax Romana the gospel went forth
throughout all of the Roman Empire. Also, there were others like Peter and
Thomas and probably several of the other apostles who took the gospel east into
the Parthian Empire. Thomas took it as far as into India, as far as we know.
God brought things to a proper point through Divine revelation and specific
revelation as well as the general oversight of history.
In Isaiah 8 we have one of the clearest prophecies of
the coming of the Messiah. This prophecy is clearly related to the hope that
the human race has for someone who is going to fix the problem. Even though
there are many who suppress that hope and distort everything in
unrighteousness, there are many who are looking for something. Some of them
have so distorted things that they’re always looking for the wrong thing, sort
of like the old country western song about “looking for love in all the wrong
places”. That’s where about 90% of the human race is most of the time. They
couldn’t identify the right thing if they wanted to. God in His providence and
revelation gave us these important prophecies so that when the Messiah came, He
would be accurately identified.
The time of Isaiah is not unlike the times right now.
It was a time when there was a threat of military disaster. We live in the time
when we have the threat coming out of the same area in the Middle East. The
area of Iraq and Iran, the area of ancient Assyria and Persia where there’s the
threat of military violence. This was very much a reality at the time of
Isaiah.
In Isaiah 8 we read, “The Lord also spoke to me again
saying, ‘In as much as these people refuse [Israel had turned their back on
God] the waters of Shiloah…' ” Those of you who’ve been to Jerusalem know
looking down toward the Old City of David, you see the ancient site of these
Gihon springs that were transported through Hezekiah’s tunnel down to the pool
of Siloam. This was where Jesus would have come as well and it’s mentioned in
the gospel of John a couple of times. That’s the reference here. It’s a
reference to Jerusalem. It’s located in Jerusalem so this is used as a figure
of speech called a synecdoche which means that a part stands for the whole.
That’s a figure of speech where something located in Jerusalem stands for all
of Jerusalem.
Isaiah continues, “Inasmuch as these people refused
the water of Shiloah that flow softly, and rejoice in Rezin [king of Syria] and
Remaliah’s son [that refers to Pekah, the King of the Northern kingdom in
Isaiah 7]. It says there, “It came to pass in the days of Ahaz, the son of
Jotham [king in the South] that Rezin, king of Syria, and Pekah, the son of
Remaliah, the king of Israel, went up to Jerusalem to make war against them.”
They represent this threat.
You’ve got two major military threats going on at this
time as far as Judea was concerned. One was this alliance between the Northern
Kingdom of Israel and Syria. The other was the threat of Assyria, which is on the
horizon. This is what’s referenced in Isaiah 8:7, “Now therefore, behold, the
Lord brings up over them [this military threat that will destroy Syria and the
Northern Kingdom of Israel] the waters of the River [Euphrates], strong and
mighty—the king of Assyria and all his glory.”
Back in Isaiah 7 there’s also a reference to Assyria
in Isaiah 7:18, “It shall come to pass in that day that the Lord will whistle
for the fly that is in the farthest part of the rivers of Egypt, and for the
bee that is in the land of Assyria.” This is using poetic language to refer to
those two military powers. So in Isaiah 8:7 there’s this threat. The people are
threatened. There’s insecurity. They don’t know what will happen.
We have much the same kind of situation today. We have
the threat of economic disaster in this country and in western civilization.
People are mortgaged to great expense. The personal debt is higher than it’s
ever been. The debt of the nations is much higher than it’s ever been.
Everything is floated. Everything is mortgaged and yet people act as if this is
no problem whatsoever. There are threats from cyber-attacks as we’ve seen in
the last few weeks with this hacking of Sony. We haven’t seen all that’s
related to that yet. That involves a threat against the film industry, which
sadly Sony has succumbed to by not releasing this particular film. There’s a
lot of discussion about what you can listen to but the point is that is just a
minor thing compared to what it indicates.
There are real threats against the infrastructure of
the United States, threats against the electric grid, threats against many
things that the government does that are related to computers. I’ve heard
numbers in the last couple of years that there are as many as twenty to
twenty-five thousand attempts a day to hack into the computers at the Pentagon.
We’re constantly under attack. If some of these attacks succeed, it could lead
to the collapse of western civilization, as we know it. That’s a scary thought.
As believers we ought to know that we have hope and
confidence in God. That’s the point that’s going on in these passages in Isaiah
7–9. They’re saying that when everything looks unstable and everything
looks chaotic and there’s no security and no hope in the details of life, in
government, in society, then we can look to the only source of hope and that is
God. There’s this situation there that’s not unlike our own where there’s this
threat of destruction and what would happen is described in Isaiah
8:8–10. The Assyrian army is pictured like a river. He will go over the
channels and the banks. It’s going to be like a floodtide. It’s going to keep
rising and rising. It’s going to take out Syria and the North and Samaria.
He’ll pass through Judah and overflow and pass over Judah. He will reach up to
the neck but he’s not going to completely cover and completely destroy Israel.
That’s a picture of the fact that when the Assyrians
came through under Sennacherib, they took out nearly every major city in Judea
except for Jerusalem. Everything else was destroyed. This happened over a
period of years. That invasion and the siege of Jerusalem doesn’t take place
until about 702 B.C. If you think about the fact that the Northern Kingdom was
taken out in 722 B.C., that’s 20 years when basically your country is being
overrun by enemy forces. There’s no stability, everything that you put your
life’s work into is gone and destroyed.
Many of their friends, associates, family, extended
family, and those who lived in the South had to put up with many refugees from
the North. When they saw this happen, they moved south into Judah. It was a
time of tremendous calamity in their life as God was bringing this judgment on
them. We’re told in Isaiah 8:9, “Be shattered, O you peoples, and be broken in
pieces! Give ear, all you from far countries. Gird yourselves, but be broken in
pieces. Gird yourselves, but be broken in pieces.”
In Isaiah 8:10, “Take counsel together but it will
come to nothing; speak the word but it will not stand, for God is with us.”
What Isaiah is saying here is that the Assyrian army can do all they can but it
won’t change things. They won’t be ultimately victorious. Why? Because “God is
with us.” What’s the Hebrew word for God is with us? This should not be
difficult. Immanuel. It goes back to
the name that the mother will give the child in Isaiah 7:14, “God is with us.”
The situation here in Israel is not only one where
they face an external enemy but they have an internal problem as well because
they are in spiritual chaos. There’s not a lot of difference between what was
happening then and what is happening now. We get into the background to the
prophecy in Isaiah 9:6 in Isaiah 8:19. This gives us the spiritual indictment
of the Southern Kingdom of Judah.
This isn’t the indictment of the Northern Kingdom.
This says the Southern Kingdom has rejected God, abandoned the God of Abraham,
Isaac, and Jacob and have basically said that God doesn’t really exist. They
have turned to other gods. We know that the only other gods that there are, are
fallen angels and demons and that the demons, according to Deuteronomy and 1
Corinthians 7 are the power behind the false religions and the power behind the
idols. The indictment comes in Isaiah 8:19 where Isaiah says, “When they say to
you, ‘Seek those who are mediums and wizards, who whisper and mutter, should
not a people seek their God?’ ” What he’s doing is indicting them.
They are using the occult and have turned to demonism
and idolatry and spiritism and necromancy to find hope. Here they’re faced with
a disaster and rather than going to the God of the Bible and rather than going
to the Torah and going to the Scripture, they are turning to idols and demons
to find hope and meaning. The term for medium here is the Hebrew word obe which is translated in the Greek
with the word ENGOSTROMUTHOS, which refers to the action of someone who was speaking to the dead.
The wizard is the term for a spiritist. It’s practically a synonym.
What they would do is call upon the person who had
died to come and speak to them. There wasn’t a physical manifestation. They
would just hear a voice, a disembodied voice coming up from the ground. So
there would be either some form of ventriloquism or in some cases there would
be an actual demon who would be speaking and giving them some sort of
information. The question that Isaiah asks follows that, “Should not a people
seek their God? Should they seek the dead on behalf of the living?”
Then the solution is given in Isaiah 8:20, “To the law
and to the testimony? If they do not speak according to this word, it is
because there is no light in them.” That’s the indictment. They’re in darkness
because they’ve rejected the light of God’s Word. The result is described in
Isaiah 8:21-22, “They will pass through it hard-pressed and hungry; and it
shall happen when they are hungry, that they will be enraged and curse their
king and their God.”
As a result of their negative volition toward God and
as a result they’re looking for love in all the wrong places and seeking
happiness and prosperity and wealth from doing all the wrong things and chasing
after false philosophies and false gods, what happens is that internally they
are in collapse. There’s no hope. They don’t get any answers and the result is
despair and despondency because of God’s promise related to the third and
fourth cycles of discipline. Their economy has collapsed because of the
external military threat. This means they are hungry. What they do rather than
turning to God in submission, they are angered and embittered toward God and
they curse their king and they curse God. This reminds me of the response of
the kings of the earth and the generals of the earth in the sixth cycle of the
seal judgments in Revelation 6. God rains physical judgment like an asteroid or
a meteor shower upon the earth, the kings of the earth hide in the caves and
they shake their fists at God. They are in clear, conscious, open rejection of
God.
Then in Isaiah 8:22, “Then they will look to the
earth, and see trouble and darkness, gloom of anguish; and they will be driven
into darkness.” This is the indictment of Israel. It’s an Old Testament concept
reflected in what’s going on in Romans 1:21-23. “Although they knew God they do
not glorify Him as God nor were they thankful but became futile in their thoughts
and their foolish hearts were darkened.” So we have the same thing here. They
are driven into darkness. Negative volition leads to darkness in the soul.
When you’re dealing with people no matter how talented
or how intelligent they may be, when they reject God, the Bible says that they
are fools. It doesn’t matter how smart they are. When you look at the elites
who are trying to run this country, trying to run Congress, run the economy,
run the military, run the political leadership and they have rejected Divine
Truth and rejected the establishment principles of Scripture you see the
outcome. They are operating on darkness out of their own soul and they are
imposing that upon the nation.
The sad thing is that most of the people in this
nation are willing to let this happen because they have rejected truth. What we
have to do is focus on the truth. We need to realize that even when things are
dark, God has not abandoned us. God is still on His throne. God is still the
One who is directing our lives and in charge of our lives. Maybe our hopes and
our dreams need to be recalibrated according to the standard of God’s Word.
What happens so much is that we set our hopes and
dreams on things we want to do in our lives and they’re not set by the Word of
God and so when all of a sudden, it seems like the bottom drops out and things
are not working out the way we hoped they would, we may become negatively
influenced by the culture around us. Then we can either cave in to despair if
we’re giving into the enemy or we can say, “Wait a minute. As the culture goes
south, we need to figure out how to focus and be a witness to God’s grace, and
we need to show people that the only time there’s happiness and joy and
stability in life when everything around us seems to be collapsing is when
we’re focused on the only one true source of happiness.”
That’s the message that runs through these chapters.
Everything is collapsing around the citizens of the Southern Kingdom of Judah.
And yet, even as God is telling them this judgment is coming, He gives them
this tremendous message of hope. That’s what Christmas is all about. That is
why the Savior was born, to provide hope in a darkened world. So this message
in this section really has a two-prong focus. One is toward believers because
they need to come to a focal point on God’s provision of salvation, that unless
we are aligned with God’s plan for our lives which involves walking with Him
and not having all the details of life which the culture around us says we need
to have happiness. Instead we need to be focused on what God has for us and
walking with Him and growing to spiritual maturity. If we’re not walking with
Him and growing to spiritual maturity, then whatever else we’re doing has no
value for eternity.
This focus is first toward encouraging believers that
God is still in control and they are to stay the course and endure and
persevere. Then it is directed toward unbelievers. They need to understand that
the reason these things happen is because of Divine judgment on human beings
who are rebellious against Him. The only solution and the only basis for real
hope and real happiness and real meaning in life comes from the Word of God.
What we see in our world is that western civilization
has rejected God. Generally, the elites, the intellectuals, and the academics
since the mid-19th century have increasingly rejected God. Now they
are set against anyone who worships God. They are antagonistic to anyone who is
a Christian, anyone who believes in absolutes, and anyone who believes in
historic, Biblical Christianity. In their rejection of God they have embraced
empiricism and rationalism alone as the only sources of happiness.
That has failed them. This is the failure of
modernism. Modernism is a belief that came out of the Enlightenment in the
1600s and 1700s. It said that man on the basis of his intellect
would be able to find the solution to the problems of life. It believed that
man, apart from God, on the basis of his reason, his experience, and his study
of the universe could find hope and meaning and happiness. That collapsed. That
gave rise to skepticism by the late 19th century and then gave birth
to post-modernism today.
Post-modernism is one of the most depressing,
discouraging philosophies around simply because it is the expression of Romans
1:21-23, “They’ve exchanged the glory of the incorruptible God into an image
made like corruptible man.” They’re worshipping nature. They’re worshipping the
environment. They're worshipping mother earth and planet earth and all of the
global warming and all of the environmentalism is just another manifestation of
ancient pagan religion. They’ve just exchanged one form of idolatry for another
form of idolatry.
This was the problem in the Southern Kingdom of
Israel. We know this from our study of the passage. The king at the time was
Ahaz. The indictment of Ahaz is given in 2 Kings 16:3-4, “But he walked in the
way of the kings of Israel…” He’s a king in the Southern Kingdom of Judah but
rather than following his father, his grandfather, and his great-grandfather
who were positive believers, he went negative toward God and rejected the
revelation of the Torah and followed paganism. He followed idolatry and
fertility religions, the worship of prosperity and wealth that was
characteristic of the Northern Kingdom such as the Baals and the Ashteroth. All
of these are fertility religions and sexual depravity went along with that
trying to encourage the gods to be productive and be fertile.
That’s just reflected today in the prosperity gospel,
which you often hear on Christian television. There are some good pastors that
are teaching the truth on TV and every now and then you run across them but
many of them are teaching a prosperity gospel. In the old days of the
charismatic movement the big issue was over healing and tongues but that debate
is almost passé in the charismatic movement. Now it’s dominated by prosperity religion,
which is just a modern distortion of the ancient fertility worship of the
Canaanites.
2 Kings 16:3 goes on to indict Ahaz, “Indeed, he made
his son pass through the fire according to the abomination of the nations whom
the Lord had cast out from the children of Israel.” Abominations of nations
refers to the worship of the Canaanites and it was child sacrifice which went back
all the way to the Canaanites. Now we’re not as crass as to take our infants
and to overtly sacrifice them on the arms of an idol, but the reality is that
many people in western civilization have done that exact equivalence by
rejecting the divine institution of marriage and family and replacing it with
the worship of materialism and material goods, the worship of success, and the
worship of sex. They have sacrificed their children on that altar.
Many have given up having children. When you look at
the decline of the birthrate among Europeans in Western Europe and of European
background Americans, we are losing ground rapidly. Various studies have
indicated that by 2030 through 2050 many of the countries in Europe will become
Muslim because of the high birthrate among Muslims. The indigenous Europeans
will be overrun by this influx of Arabs and Moslems and the same kind of thing
can take place here in the United States.
The only thing that’s keeping our birthrate up is
because of the influx of Hispanics coming into the U.S. Many of them are having
four, five, or even six children. Most Caucasian Americans are having fewer
than two children. You’ve got to have 2.3 children in order to maintain, not to
grow. I think we’re down to 2.1 in Caucasian households, which means we’re just
losing ground. We have truly sacrificed our children because we don’t want to
have children. They get in the way. We would rather focus on our success and
our education and making more money or achieving more than being focused on raising
a family and passing on Biblical values to the next generation. We imitate
their sin but in a less crass manner.
So they sacrificed their children. In verse 4 we read,
“And they sacrificed and burned incense in the high places, on the hills, and
under every green tree.” This means Ahaz was just as much involved in idolatry
as the pagans and brought this idolatry into the Southern Kingdom. He brought
the evil of Ahab and Jezebel and Athaliah and made that the norm. This is why
God is bringing this judgment upon them.
The question that Isaiah asks in Isaiah 8:9 is “Should
not a people seek their God?” This is what the solution is, to turn back to God
and to focus on Him. Isaiah has rebuked Ahaz and has called upon him to turn
but Ahaz refused to listen and he continues to go his own way. He is even
involved in the worship of demons. In James 3:15 we’re told that the “wisdom of
the world is earthly, sensual, and demonic.” The common sense of the world that
says to get an education, be successful, wait until you’re in your late 30s
before you have children or only have one or two because that’s all you can
afford, is demonic. The wisdom of the world that says that the role of men and
women is interchangeable and women should be just as successful in business as
men is counter to the Biblical and divine institutions number two and three.
When young people sacrifice having children and preparing and training the next
generation, they are destroying your nation from the inside out. Once you wipe
out marriage and family, you have destroyed the future of your country.
That is exactly what was going on in Israel. They were
destroying their future by immolating them in the arms of Moloch. The result
was that they weren’t any happier. We see this exhibited in terms of the
materialism and the success and the dreams that money can buy happiness every
year at Christmas. People go into incredible debt at Christmas thinking that if
they buy the right presents for people and they give the right things to people
that this is going to solve the problems in their families. They think this
will solve the problems with their friends. They think they’re going to be
liked and it will restore harmony in their relationships.
Christmas, for many people, is one of the most
miserable times of the year because they’re chasing happiness. They go home and
they have to spend time with family members they can’t get along with and they
hold grudges against. The problem is they’ve denied the real solution and the
real focal point, the real glue of the family, which is that spiritual focus
upon the Word. If that’s not there, success doesn’t matter. Material gains
don’t matter. Education doesn’t matter. Prosperity doesn’t matter. I would
rather live in a hovel with a rich relationship with God than live in the
greatest mansion on Park Avenue with no relationship with God. You may have the
trappings of happiness but you’re absolutely miserable.
This is what Isaiah was getting at, that the false
religion, the worship of anything in the creation and the pursuit of anything
in creation as the source of happiness cannot satisfy. A lot of people give lip
service to this. You see this in the evangelical community to a tremendous
degree. They give lip service to truth. They show up at church on Sunday. They
talk about God. They say the right things, but that’s just like President
Obama. They’re Obama-ite Christians. They say all the right things but they
don’t mean it. There’s no internal change. There’s no internal transformation.
They’re not truly being transformed from the inside out because they’re not
really positive.
The beginning of positive volition is coming to Bible
class. Real positive volition culminates in a transformed life where the Word
of God is the only thing that really matters in your life. Everything else in
your life is going to be structured according to how much time you can spend in
the Word of God so that it can get into your soul. Even if you could never go
to Bible class again you have a rich relationship with God based on the Word of
God. This is because you’ve hidden it in your heart and not because you’ve
written it in your notebook. Now this is the problem.
The only solution to all of the heartaches and
problems in life is the Word of God. This is what we see in Isaiah 8:20 where
Isaiah says it’s to the “Law and the testimony.” Where do you put your
attention? You don’t seek it from the wisdom of the world. The wisdom of the
world at that time said you go through astrology and necromancy. You go through
all of these other avenues in order to get wisdom. In our world we’re not quite
that overt with our New Age mysticism although it’s very much present in our
world but we look to help through rationalism, through science, through the
common sense of the day instead of going to the Word of God.
Isaiah is saying that the solution isn’t what the
world says. It’s to the Law and to the testimony, which is the Word of God. He
makes a dogmatic statement that if anyone does not speak according to this
word, it doesn’t matter how “common sense” it might be or how acceptable that
wisdom is. That’s just hogwash. What makes something biblical isn’t that it
kind of conforms to the Bible. It’s that it comes from the Bible. I’ve heard
this all my life when people says, “Well, that’s Biblical.” No, it’s kind of
like the Bible. It may be similar but biblical doesn’t mean it can conform to the
Bible. What biblical means is that it derives from the Bible. When you have
people as biblically illiterate as most evangelicals and most Bible-church
Christians are, who haven’t read the whole Bible through in the last year, much
less in their whole lifetime, they don’t know what is Biblical because they
don’t read the Bible. If you don’t know the Bible, how can you say something is
biblical? It may be similar to, but it’s not if it doesn’t come from the Bible.
That’s what Isaiah is saying, that if they don’t speak
according to this Word, it’s because there’s no light in them. Satan’s lies are
99% true. A lot of human viewpoint is 99% true. It’s that other 1% that
destroys it. A lot of Christians just fall into this trap because they are
Biblically illiterate. They may know a lot of doctrine but they’re Biblically
illiterate. Now doctrine is important but doctrine means the teaching of what?
The Bible. You can’t be ignorant of the Bible and know doctrine. What the Bible
teaches is that you have to know the Bible to know doctrine. You can’t have one
without the other. Period. There are a lot of Christians who run around
thinking they know all this doctrine but they don’t know the Bible. Then there
are a lot of people walking around who know the Bible but they don’t know
doctrine. You’ve got to have both. You have to know the Bible and you have to
know doctrine.
When Jesus was being tempted by Satan in the
wilderness He didn’t quote a theology text; He didn’t quote a rabbinical text; He
didn’t quote from the Mishna; He quoted word-for-word precision from the Bible.
The doctrine is the teaching of what? The Scripture. You’ve got to know the
Scripture. That’s what Isaiah is saying here. “To the Law and to the
testimonies.” He didn’t say to the rabbis. He didn’t say to the theologians. No
matter how accurate they may be it’s to the Law and to the testimony.
Because they had rejected the Word of God, the people
of Isaiah’s day were depressed. They were discouraged. They are hungry. They
are empty. There’s a great passage in Psalm 106:15 where the psalmist is
referring to the wilderness generation. He says that God answered their prayers
but He sent “leanness into their souls”. God provided answers to their prayer
and he gave them quail but the result was their souls weren’t filled. The
solution isn’t what’s on the outside. It’s what’s on the inside. They were
asking for the wrong thing.
This is what’s happening to Isaiah’s generation. “They
shall pass through and hard pressed and hungry and it shall happen when they
are hungry they will be enraged and curse their king and God and look upward.”
So they blame the government and then they blame God. It’s not their fault for their negative volition.
It’s not their fault because they
rejected truth. It’s God’s fault and it’s the king’s fault.
“Then they will look to the earth and they will see
trouble and darkness all around them, gloom of anguish and they will be driven
in to darkness.” The Bible says a lot about darkness. Darkness is only expelled
by the light of God’s Word. Isaiah 19:1 gives the solution. It’s hope. The
world is not miserable or hopeless. The world is always going to be dark
because the world is based on Satan’s cosmic system. The world is never going
to provide us with the solutions we think it will. Those solutions only come
from the Word of God.
Isaiah says, “Nevertheless the gloom will not come
upon her who is distressed and when at first it lightly esteemed, the land of
Zebulon and the land of Naphtali.” This is a prophecy that is going to be
quoted as fulfilled in Matthew 4:16, “The gloom will not be upon her who is
distressed when at first it lightly esteemed the land of Zebulon and the land
of Naphtali who had more heavily oppressed her by way of the sea beyond the
Jordan in Galilee of the Gentiles. The people who walked in darkness had seen a
great light [Divine revelation]. Those who dwelt in the land of the shadow of
death, upon them, a light has shined.”
It may seem miserable but there is hope. Real hope
only comes ultimately when we base it upon the light of God’s Word. This
foreshadows the coming of the Servant, Messiah. A few chapters later in Isaiah
in 49:6, we have this great prophecy related to the Messiah. God says, “It is
too small a thing that you should be My servant to raise up the tribe of Jacob,
to restore the preserved ones of Israel.” God the Father, talking to God the
Servant of Yahweh is saying that that’s too small a thing just to save Israel.
He goes on to say, “I will also give you as a light to the Gentiles that you
shall be my salvation to the ends of the earth.” This is God’s grace in the
midst of darkness. God gives light not only through Divine revelation but also
through His Son, the Savior of the world.
This is where we get the idea that light comes from
revelation. We see this in passages like Psalm 27:1. “The Lord is my light and
my salvation. Whom shall I fear? The Lord is the strength of my life. Of whom
shall I be afraid?” That’s a great verse to memorize. Write it down.
Memorize it. Then remember this verse in times of despair. “Whom shall I fear?
The Lord is the strength of my life.” Psalm 36:9, “For with You is the fountain
of life. In your life we see light.” Notice the connection with life and light.
Then we come to Psalm 119:105, “Your Word is a lamp to my feet and a light to
my path.” It is God’s Word that reveals the direction in life, how to make
decisions and how to live well. Psalm 119:130, “The entrance of Your words give
life.” It’s not just hearing them. It’s not just having your auditory nerves
stimulated. It’s not just writing it down. It’s making it a part of your soul,
getting it so deep in your soul you remember it. It’s like tomorrow afternoon
you will have read through Scripture and you remember what you’ve learned. It
didn’t just go in your eye and out your ear. Or in your ear and out your mouth
and that was it. You remember it. It becomes part of your thinking. It is
totally metabolized as to who you are.
The entrance of God’s Word gives light and it gives
wisdom to the simple. We just went through these passages. I want to remind
you. Isaiah 49. The Servant is given as a light to the Gentiles. Psalm 27:
There’s this connection between light and salvation. Psalm 36:9, a connection
between life and light. Psalm 119:105: light and guidance. The entrance of
God’s Word gives light.
Then what do we have in John 1, “In the beginning was
the Word and the Word was made flesh and dwelt among us.” Why did Jesus come?
Jesus came to give light. How did He give light? By dying on the cross for our
sins. We read in John 1:4, “In Him was life and the life was the light of men.”
John didn’t just come up with this connection between life and light when the
Holy Spirit inspired Him to write this. He got it from the Psalms. He knew
there’s this connection between life and light. When the Messiah comes, He’s
going to bring life and it’s that life that’s going to bring light to mankind.
In John 1:5 he says, “And the light shines in the
darkness and the darkness did not comprehend it.” Why doesn’t the darkness
comprehend it? Later on in John he says, “Men rejected the light because they
love the darkness.” Then Jesus says in John 8:21, “I am the light of the world.
He who follows Me shall not walk in darkness but shall have the light of life.”
Jesus is that light of the world. That’s what that hope is which is described
in Isaiah 9:1-2. The light is going to come to the Gentiles. Matthew quotes
this as a prophecy related to the life of the Messiah.
Now we go on in Isaiah 9:3, “You multiply the nation
and increased its joy.” Only God can do that. God is the only real source of
joy. The only way we can have joy in the midst of crisis and calamity such as
losing your house, losing your health, losing the things you think matter to
you, the only way you can have happiness is if your focus is on the Lord. The
believers at the time of the Assyrian invasion could survive because they
believe in hope. In A.D. 70 there were many believers who lived in Israel. Many
of them were martyred but many of them survived because they had hope in their
souls. They may have lost everything in their lives but they had hope in their
souls because of the Word of God.
This is what happens. Isaiah 9:3 says, “You, God have
multiplied the nation and increased its joy. They rejoice before you according
to the joy of harvest as men rejoice when they divide the spoils.” It goes on
and focuses on the victory that God is going to give and this is ultimately
related to the birth of the child, the birth of the Messiah. So why does the
Savior need to be born? Because He is the ultimate source of hope.
Isaiah says, “For unto us a child is born. Unto us a
Son is given.” Those two lines are set in a synonymous parallelism. The child
is parallel to the son. The fact that He is born indicates His humanity; that
He has to be born into the world. He has to come into the world. He’s not a god
that doesn’t come into the world or just appear. He has to be born as a human
being. “Unto us a Son is given.” This “Son” relates to His deity, His Sonship.
He is the Son of God. He is the son of man.
He is the second person of the Trinity and He’s going
to have a government. This is one of those passages in the Old Testament that
specifies a promised kingdom for Israel. “His name will be called Wonderful
Counselor, Mighty God, Everlasting Father, and Prince of Peace.” These are four
great wonderful titles of the Lord Jesus Christ. Now there is some debate over
the meaning of one of these. Some people think the first title “Wonderful
Counselor” should be two words, wonderful and counselor but I think they are
tied together. It’s referring to the fact that He is a counselor, a source of
wisdom and He is wonderful. The word translated wonderful in Hebrew is the word
pelleh. Now we could talk about a lot
of people being wonderful. You may tell someone you love that they are
wonderful. A lot of times what comes after that isn’t so pleasant. You may tell
your child they’re wonderful when they’ve done something great. The word
wonderful in English is a word we can apply to all kinds of things, inanimate
objects, human beings, and God. The Hebrew word translated wonderful here is
only applied to God. It emphasizes Deity. He is a wonderful counselor.
The second thing we see is Mighty God. This is pretty
simple. It’s ale ghibbore, mighty
warrior or a warrior god. It is often a term related to a victorious soldier. Ale is related to God. This child that
is born is clearly called God. You can’t escape that. He is described as
wonderful in terms only used of God. Then He is called God in the second title.
The third title is translated Everlasting Father. It’s ab in Hebrew and the second part of it relates to eternity. It is
descriptive so it’s saying He is eternal. It’s a descriptive way of describing
His eternality again reasserting that He is God. Last, it says He is the Prince
of Peace. This passage emphasizes both His humanity and His deity.
Hebrews 2:17 in the New Testament says, “In all things
He had to be made like His brethren.” That means to be a high priest He had to
be fully human. “That He might be a merciful and faithful high priest in things
pertaining to God to make propitiation for the sins of the people.” He had to
be human.
In Philippians 2:7-8 it says “He [Jesus Christ] made
Himself of no reputation, taking the form of a bond servant, and coming in the
likeness of men.” That means He is a full human being. He was found in
appearance as a man. He is a human being. He humbled Himself and became
obedient to the point of death, even the death of the cross.” He is the Savior
who entered into the human race and dies on the cross for our sins.
In Zechariah 9:10 we’re told, “I will cut off the
chariot from Ephraim and the horse from Jerusalem. The battle bow shall be cut
off. He shall speak peace to the nations.” See, He’s the Prince of Peace. When
He comes He establishes peace because He defeats and destroys the military in
combat. He destroys them and then He enforces peace upon the earth. That’s the
only time when we’ll have genuine world peace. It’s when Jesus returns and
establishes His kingdom. “And His dominion shall be from sea to sea and from
the river to the ends of the earth.”
So why does the Savior need to be born? He needs to be
born because only through His death on the cross is there real hope, is there
ever going to be real peace. There can never be happiness in our lives. There
can never be meaning in our life. We can never really understand the purpose of
our existence apart from Jesus Christ. And unless we are focused on Him
everything else is just cosmetic. It’s just often a camouflage for internal
misery and unhappiness.
Much of the world is that way. They will put on a
façade. They will put on a mask of happiness that everything is wonderful. They
will be caught up in the emotion but it just acts like an anesthetic to the
real pain of their soul because they have rejected God. They don’t want to
admit that. They suppress the truth in unrighteousness. The only way they can
have happiness and joy is by trusting in Jesus Christ as Savior. He came into
the world in order to die for our sins so we can have eternal life.