Isaiah 40:1-31 · Comfort for God’s People
A Way Back In
Isaiah 40:1-31
Sermon
by Thomas D. Peterson
Loading...

A wise man once said to me that he tried never to let people get so far out on a limb that they could not get back in. He was the head-master of a preparatory school. As an administrator he did everything he could to enable the staff to make meaningful contributions to the school. He positively reinforced good performance; and, when a staff member got out on a limb, he not only initiated efforts to help the person back in, he also avoided putting undue stress on mistakes or attitudes which made it difficult to come back in.

To me he is a model for maturity, not to mention Christian love. He came close to loving another as I’m sure he would wish to be loved himself. Never let another get so far out on a limb there’s no coming back in. Looked at in another way he built into circumstances and relationships those conditions which make for healing. His process did not call for a big show of forgiveness, as heroic as it might make him appear; rather it had much to do with profound understanding and deep compassion for others.

Two human skills are required for us to help others find a way back in. One has to do with love. We treat them by recognizing and respecting the good in them which at the time they may not be able to see. We believe in their ultimate worth, and we want to enjoy it with them. Our belief is expressed in practical caring that does not turn loose even when things look hopeless. This is not the love of romance novels, but it is the love which permits others from getting so far out on a limb that they cannot get back in.

The second skill is knowledge. This knowledge is not precision with things. Rather, such knowledge comes from broad experience in human nature through which we gain a profound empathy with the strengths and weaknesses of all others. We know about the brittle ego that pushes people out on a limb and the shame that keeps them there. We have gained an understanding of the dynamics of pride and how it tends to move ever closer toward self-destruction. Add to this the wise willingness to wait for another to come to self-awareness, and we have the knowledge which helps us bring others in off a limb before it breaks under them.

To know in such a way is to love; and to love in this way is to know. As we mine the riches of human relationships we grasp that loving is a way of knowing. To know others in these ways, we love them. You and I may have to adjust our sense of love or gain a different kind of knowledge, but to accept this formula is to find the knowledge that heals and the love that saves.

Wait! you may say. That’s not me. I’m no saint. Who can possibly treat another person like that? It’s just not human nature to lay yourself out like that for anybody. After all, God takes care of those who take care of themselves.

True, in a way, but, I feel that examples of such loving and knowing are all around us. What we need is to be able to see what’s going on in the way many people treat us and the way we treat many others. Let’s look and see!

We have all seen movies of people who crawl out on a ledge, high above the streets, prepared to jump. An officer, skilled in human dynamics, is called to the scene. She pleads with the person not to jump. Most often it is something worth saving in them that she touches. Not, "Do it for your wife, your children." But "Come back in for your own sake." The rescuer sees something of worth in the other and uncovers it for them to see, no matter how small the spark of life may be at the time. In the process of this exchange the person comes back in.

When I was a youth a friend’s mother, Ms. Willie, was very close to me. When I went off to college, on my return visits, I tried to shock her. I used bad language, but she only smiled. I told her of my loss of faith, and she listened supportively. I tried all the radical views I picked up at school, and she discussed them with me in a dispassionate manner. She listened patiently, caringly - knowing what I was going through and loving me all the while - until I found my way back in.

We would have to look far to find a better illustration of helping another come back in than the Marshall Plan. Following World War II the monies earned from the sale of surplus war materiel were funneled back into the defeated nations. In little time they became self-sufficient and found their way back into the community of nations.

Parents are the best models for such loving/knowing. All over the world prodigal sons and daughters are being let go to find their own ways only later to be welcomed back home with open arms. Parents know from experience and empathy the itch their youths have to find their own self-expression. They love them enough to grant them freedom, trusting that in due time they will come to themselves which is, after all, to come back in.

At this moment countless people are watching others move out and out until it seems - CRACK - the limb will break and down they will come. To see one you care for court self-destruction is to be rejected. To be so rejected would seem to end the relationship forever. The only people who can bear this rejection are those who love the other profoundly. Someone who loves less does not suffer rejection redemptively but will resort to anger and revenge. That is why great lovers are those who can afford to bear with the despair of rejection. Those who feel it most keenly are those who are able to bear it redemptively. Others let go and the limb breaks. It is the lover who does not cut the limb off, for the lover has a deep base for knowing the loved one, a base which is compassion in the soul. Knowing is, indeed, a way of loving; and loving is the only way we have really to know another.

When a person treats another in this way we call it "unconditional love." The best models of this type of love come to us from scripture. There we learn of it when we study the steadfast love of the Lord. It is God, himself, who sets the standards for unconditional love. This is the procedure which God chose and by which he maintained his relationship with Israel, which was continually being torn apart. This is the way by which he brought his people back in again and again.

Let us take a look at the circumstances surrounding our test. The Israelites were in exile. For decades they had rejected the covenant relationship to God by personal willfulness and disobedience of the Law. Against the Word of God from the prophets they entered into alliances against the conquering Babylonians. Finally, in exasperation, the Babylonians came upon Jerusalem, razed it to the ground and carried the able-bodied men and women into exile. In Babylon the Israelites were strangers in a strange land, exiles. With no land of their own, no temple in which to worship God - they had crawled so far out on a limb of willfulness that the consequences of their behavior began to take over and push them even farther along. It looked then as if the limb would break and Israel would fall away into the nothingness of history as countless other nations had done. God had given them the freedom to do as they willed, and in their self-willfulness they ignored the covenant, putting themselves so far out on a limb that their very existence was threatened. Like a prodigal they had put themselves into slavery.

Into the bleakness of their despairing situation comes this glorious breakthrough of God’s unconditional love, blossoming forth with God’s offer of a way back in. God announces out of his steadfast love that he will continue to honor his covenant with Israel, not for anything they have done, heaven forbid, but because of his continuing favor toward his people.

How majestically God’s grace springs forth. "Comfort, comfort my people ... speak tenderly to Jerusalem ... her iniquity is pardoned." Then follows a poetic image that is repeated again and again in scripture. God describes how he will express his love by building a road back to Jerusalem for the exiles. He will cut down the mountains and fill up the hollows. On this level highway his covenant will be fulfilled as Israel walks back to the Holy City. The Glory of God shall be revealed for all to see in Israel’s glorious march back in, an expression of God’s unconditional love.

After fifty years of exile certainly the limb had broken off from under Judaism. At last they had gone too far out even for God’s steadfastness; but, God, who was at work telling his story, turned history around and brought them back in. In face of their sin and rebellion, he kept faith with his sovereign covenant. It is of note here that the Greek world "pleroo" is translated "fulfilled." In Greek it literally means to fill up a hollow or cram a net as with fish, to pack full. By filling up the hollows, God literally fulfilled his covenant by showing favor to his people and giving historical evidence of his unconditional love. God knew his people to the depth of their being and loved them in spite of the rebellion in their souls. He loved them unconditionally.

Certainly this is good news for Israel. God has provided for his people a way back in. He not only saved them from extinction, but he gave them a way of becoming a world religion through the institution of the synagogue. These events are great chapters in the story of our Judeo-Christian heritage. They bear witness to us of the advent of God’s good news for us very early in our story.

The same conditions apply when we come to the Gospel of Jesus Christ, the Good News that God’s unconditional love was at work in the world. Jesus was always helping people come back in. He respected their freedom, thus touching them at the deepest meaning of their lives. "Do you want to be healed?" he asked a man ill for years. Once assured, Jesus brought him back in. To Zacchaeus, the lonely tax collector, he gave a way back in. When a woman was being tried by the authorities for adultery Jesus challenged the one who was without sin to cast the first stone. Then he asked a famous question "Woman, where are they? Has no one condemned you?" (John 8:10). The woman was given a way back in. All the disciples, with the exception of Judas who sawed off his own limb, were given a way back in as a result of Jesus’ expression of his love to them on the cross and the experience of the Holy Spirit in the Upper Room.

Jesus said of himself that he came not to destroy but to fulfill. He packed full of meaning the roads on which people travel to God. He crammed the nets of his love full. In his reconciling love he leveled the distance between God and man. He did fulfill the Law, for he knew the hearts of people and loved them into the redemption of their better selves.

Look around. Love stories abound because people have learned to love in the way of Christ. People have loved me enough to put up with my self-will and self-destructive behavior in order to provide me a way back in. Have you not known people who loved you unconditionally, again and again, and provided you a way back in? This is Good News, worked into the fabric of life and not just an emotion of acceptance and new-felt power. Preaching such a Gospel is a mighty act of God’s constant provision for us; and hearing it is the same. The Gospel continues to be good news for people who otherwise would disappear from the face of meaningful life and become buried in their own obstinacy.

In Advent we come close to the mystery of God’s visitation in Jesus Christ, the walking and talking Good News. No longer given in the words of prophets nor in concepts of theologians, the News comes in human form for all to hear and see, to understand and perceive. The unconditional love of God was born in a manger and came among us as one of our own. God kept faith with his covenant and fulfilled it in the fullness of time when he came among us, incarnate as our Lord Jesus.

So it is that God gave to us the highest form of his conditional love. In Jesus he was legs and arms to go after those of us who have gone so far out on a limb we do not know how to get back. Jesus gathers us in his arms, carries us in his bosom, and gently leads those who long to come back in.

... the path of the righteous is like the light of dawn, which shines brighter and brighter until full day. (Proverbs 4:18)

CSS Publishing Co., Inc., Gospel Shines Through, The, by Thomas D. Peterson