Isaiah 55:1-13 · Invitation to the Thirsty
No Sooner Said Than Done!
Isaiah 55:1-13
Sermon
by John R. Brokhoff
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"For the rain and the snow come down from heaven, and return not thither but water the earth, making it bring forth and sprout, giving seed to the sower and bread to the eater, so shall my word be that goes forth from my mouth; it shall not return to me empty, but it shall accomplish that which I purpose, and prosper in the thing for which I sent it."

Words! Words! Words! Today we are bombarded on every side and saturated throughout with words coming to us through press, radio, and TV. There are 490,000 words in the English language and growing at the rate of 450 words each year. The latest supplement to the Oxford Dictionary contains 18,750 new words. More and more words and less and less respect for words - that is our situation today! There are obscene words that can ruin a book, a speech, or a movie. They act like drops of cyanide dropped in a town’s water supply. Two beautiful love stories in the movies Love Story and On Golden Pond were ruined for many by the dirty language that was totally unnecessary to get the story told. Moreover, we are getting tired of words upon words that are rhetoric and nothing else. Shortly before his death, Chief Joseph, the last free chief of the Nez Perce Indians, said, "I have heard talk and talk, but nothing is done. Good words do not last long unless they amount to something ... I am tired of talk that comes to nothing. It makes my heart sick when I remember all the good words and broken promises."

Do we feel the same about the Bible with its 810,697 words written by approximately 100 writers over a period of 1,500 years? The words are reduced to the Word, for the Bible is considered by Christians as the Word of God. In John’s Gospel, Christ is identified as the Word. Is it a book only of words, words, words? Is there a reality to those words, or are they vain and empty of meaning? In contrast to the world’s words, God’s Word, according to our text, is fruitful. As the rain and snow refresh the earth and cause nature to green with life, the Word of God unfailingly produces results with words of life and power. With God’s Word, word and deed are one. No sooner is the Word said than it is done! Listen again to the text: "For as the rain and snow come down from heaven, and return not thither but water the earth, making it bring forth and sprout, giving seed to the sower and bread to the eater, so shall my word be ..."

A Personal Word

God’s Word is personal because it comes directly out of the mouth of God himself. Isaiah says, "So shall my word be that goes forth from my mouth." When it comes directly out of one’s mouth, it is pretty hard to get more personal, right? Jesus said that out of the heart, the mouth speaks. God’s Word comes out of the heart, his very being, from inside, from a heart of love. Moreover, the mouth cannot speak a word unless there is breath that flows through the voice box. Ever try to speak while holding your breath? In the Bible breath and spirit are one, coming from the same Hebrew word. The breath of God is the Spirit of God which gives life just as God breathed into Adam and he became a living soul. Therefore, the Word of God is a living Word because God’s Spirit produces it and lives in it. The Word is personal, as personal as can be, because the very life of God is in it making it a living Word.

Because the Word is personal, the Word is as good as God. We often say, "A man is as good as his word." With God, that is most certainly true. Because God is truth, his Word is truth. By his very nature, God cannot lie. This may be hard for us to grasp and accept, because man’s words are not always true. When president, Jimmy Carter found it necessary to say to the nation, "I will never lie to you." How much more can God say to the nations, "I never lie to you!" Even under oath in a court case, it is general practice to commit perjury. Recently a Justice of the Georgia Supreme Court wrote in one of America’s most popular magazines, "If everyone told the truth, juries would be required in but a tiny fraction of cases. A new judge soon finds out that the solemn oath of a witness is only a comforting fiction, and that the threat of years of imprisonment for perjury ensures the telling of truth about as much as knocking on wood ensures good fortune." What a terrible indictment against the American public!

Even what we read in our most respectable newspapers and magazines may not be the truth. In 1981 the prestigious newspaper, The Washington Post, had to return a Pulitzer Prize when it discovered that the prize-winning story, Jimmy’s World, was a hoax. The writer, Janet Cooke, made up the story about an eight-year-old boy taking heroin which was provided by an unnamed drug pusher. It makes us ask, "Whose word can you trust to be the truth?" Are we to doubt God’s Word, too?

Because God’s Word is personal, coming directly out of God’s mouth, his Word can be trusted to be fulfilled. It is not this way with many today. We speak words of promise, and when it suits us, we break promises. In 1981, 13,000 federal air traffic controllers went on strike demanding a thirty-two hour week and a minimum salary of $30,000. Yet, every one of the 13,000 solemnly signed an oath not to strike against the federal government! The oath was casually brushed aside as a mere technical detail. They argued that a promise of the past is not binding today.

This would never be true with God’s Word of promise. It is said that the Bible contains about 30,000 promises. Regardless of when the promises were made, or to whom they were made, or how things have changed since they were made, God’s promises can be trusted and are fulfilled. God is as good as his word of promise. God cannot and does not go back on his Word. It is like the time Jacob fooled his father by claiming he was Esau, who deserved his father’s blessing as the older son. When Esau claimed his father’s blessing, Jacob was asked to take back the blessing he had given to Jacob and give it to Esau. But Jacob could not take back his words. What he had said stood for all time. It was a shame and an injustice, but what was spoken was spoken. Likewise, God does not and cannot change his promises to us.

To be true to God, we, too, must keep our promises and be as good as our words. Pro-golfer Lee Trevino was asked to play in a New Orleans tournament. It would pay him $163,000. He turned it down because he had promised to play in a fund-raising event in Tucson for the American Heart Association. To keep his promise, it cost him what to some of us is a fortune. Would you or I be that faithful to our word of promise? God would - it cost him his Son on a cross to keep his promise of salvation!

Are you asking, "Does God speak to us today? If so, when and how?" Since the Bible is the Word of God, God speaks to us in and through the Bible every time we read the Bible and hear the Word proclaimed in speech or in writing. The Bible is God speaking to us in our day. Though God spoke thousands of years ago and the revelation was recorded by inspired writers, God still speaks to us through the same words. For him to speak to us in and through the Bible requires us to have his Spirit. Apart from the Spirit, the Bible is a dead-letter book which speaks to no one. It is only an antique belonging in a museum. When the Spirit is in us, the Bible comes alive and our ears are attuned to divine communication. Then the Bible becomes the living Word.

We, therefore, need not look nor expect God to speak to us except through and in his Word. To hear a voice beyond the Scriptures is dangerous. For instance, John Brown claimed that God told him to kill people as a solution to the slavery question. Oral Roberts claimed that God told him to solicit funds to build a hospital which both city and state claimed was not needed, and God would give him the cure for cancer. Throughout the history of the church, the orthodox position was that God spoke exclusively in his Word, and the supposed voice of God beyond the Scriptures was open to question unless it conformed to the written Word of God. That voice you claim to hear may be the Devil’s! To be sure it is God’s voice, check it out by the Scriptures. All that God has to say to us and all that we need to hear from God is in the written Word, the Bible.

A Purposeful Word

Through Isaiah God tells us, further, that his Word is purposeful: "It shall accomplish that which I purpose." Have you ever asked, "Why did God give us his Word?" Maybe you never thought about it. Surely God had a reason for giving us his Word. The reason must have been related to us, for God could have kept the Word to himself. "That which I purpose" - what is the purpose?

One purpose we learn in the Scriptures is revelation. God’s Word is for us to know him. No human can know God, his will, or his nature except that God reveals himself. We do not discover what God is like. We do not even seek God, for he is not lost. We do not discover what God is like. We do not even seek God, for he is not lost. Through the ages by words, acts, and the person of his only Son, God has disclosed himself. For this reason, Christ is called the Word. A word or words are the means of self-disclosure and communication. Is it not true that after a conversation, we get to know the other person? What we say and how we say it reveal the kind of persons we are.

People, without the Word of revelation, get into all kinds of trouble. Because of ignorance of God, like the Athenians of Paul’s day, they worship an unknown god. As a result, people worship idols or they hold to polytheism, or worship the forces of nature, or get enslaved by superstition, witch doctors, magic, and demons. Thus, the church sends missionaries to nonChristian lands to give people the truth as revealed in the Word.

The Word not only discloses the nature of God but also reveals to us what God expects of humanity. What does God expect of us? Is it sacrificing thousands of animals on an altar or even the giving of a child as a sacrifice? Does God expect us to deprive ourselves of all material comforts and pleasures? Must we go to the mountains to live as hermits or shut ourselves up in a monastery? The prophet Micah tells us, "What does the Lord require of you but to do justice and to love kindness and to walk humbly with your God?" The preacher in Ecclesiastes sums up his book by saying, "Fear God and keep his commandments; for this is the whole duty of man."

An even greater purpose of the Word than revelation is redemption. In his Gospel, John explains, "These are written that you may believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God, and that believing, you may have life in his name." In other words, by grace are we saved through faith. To be saved is to be redeemed from sin and death. To be redeemed calls for faith which results from knowing the Word of God.

The purpose of redemption implies that humanity is in a state of lostness. Since our first parents in Eden, we have disobeyed, rebelled, and forsaken God. We have lived as we pleased, and in thought, word, and deed, have grievously offended God. From the beginning, God has sought to win his people back into his good graces. Over 1,000 times the Bible calls upon humanity to return to God. By returning to God, we are saved. But what will get us to return? It is when we learn of the indescribable love demonstrated on the cross on which God gave himseif as a sacrifice that we realize God’s goodness and kindness to us. His love melts our hearts. His sacrifice removed the gulf between us and God. By faith in Christ, we are accounted as sinless and are acceptable to God. As a result, we have our lives flooded with freedom and life which will never end. And the wonderful thing is that the Word tells us that when one repents and returns, there is rejoicing in heaven and even the angels sing, for God’s purpose of his Word has been fulfilled.

A Prosperous Word

The best thing about God’s Word is that it prospers. It is not an idle or dead word. It has life and power as our text declares, "And prosper in the thing for which I sent it." The Word has the very power of God in it to do what it says. This power is the power of the Holy Spirit, for Jesus, upon his departure from earth, told the Apostles, "You shall receive power when the Holy Spirit has come upon you." In, with, and under the Word is the Spirit of God, and God is almighty. Nothing is too hard for God. With him, all things are possible. The Word has the power to be and to do what it says. Before the days of electronic surveillance at airports, a pastor entered with a Bible in a box. The checking officer asked him, "What’s in the box?" The preacher replied, "Dynamite!" On the front cover of the New Testament, a printer had abbreviated it with the initials TNT!

Maybe, because our words are weak and powerless, we fail to realize that God’s Word has the power to do what the words say. No sooner does God say it than it is accomplished. Do you recall how the universe was created? Not by nuclear explosion or stars crashing into each other or some gigantic earth moving machines. Can you believe it? The universe was created by a Word. In the Genesis account of creation, we repeatedly hear the words, "And God said." God said, "Let there be light, and there was light." It was also true with Jesus, the incarnate Word. He accomplished miracles simply by words. He raised a young dead man by saying, "Young man, I say to you, arise!" When caught in a storm on the Sea of Galilee, Jesus stilled it by simply saying, "Peace, be still!" A number of people, saturated with guilt, experienced relief when Jesus said, "Your sins are forgiven." When a Roman centurion’s slave was in great physical distress, Jesus offered to come and heal him. But believing in the power of Jesus’ word the centurion said, "Lord, I am not worthy to have you come under my roof; but only say the word, and my servant will be healed." Luther understood the power of God’s Word, for in his hymn, A Mighty Fortress, he says, "One little word shall fell him." None other than the mighty Satan will fall. Just think what one word of God can do! This should mean to us that the Word we hold in our hands in the form of the Bible and the Word we hear proclaimed in pulpit and classroom is the agent of God’s power, a power even greater than a nuclear blast, for a nuclear bomb can only destroy, whereas God’s Word builds and blesses.

What then is this power? What can the Word do for and in us? It has the power to bring us to faith in Christ as our Savior. The Word has in it the Holy Spirit who creates faith in Christ. Countless people over the centuries were brought to faith by reading or hearing the Word. Augustine was one of them. For many years, he delved into pagan philosophies and rejected the Gospel. One day when he was alone in his garden, he heard a voice saying, "Take and read. Take and read." He saw an open Bible nearby, and he opened it and read, "Put on the Lord Jesus Christ ..." In those words, faith came to his heart, and eventually he became, next to St. Paul, the church’s greatest theologian. If you want to have faith or to increase your faith, read the Word.

The Word has power also to change a person’s life. It can transform you. It can make you a new person, the kind of person God means for you to be. Among the Christians in India there is a young man by the name of Chandu Ray. Within twelve years of becoming a Christian, he translated the Bible into two different Indian languages. One time at a luncheon, a friend commented on the change in his life. He explained, "I had to do it, because through this Word of Scripture, I have become another man." You, too, by the power of the Word can become another person.

What about changing society? Do you think the Word has power to change the structures of society so that justice would prevail? Even here the Word has power to change. Granted, not many agree with this. They think it is too simple an answer. They contend that only through law or a revolution can society be made a just one. The truth is that the Word of truth, love, and justice can change society by changing the hearts of people. Our task is to faithfully and boldly proclaim the Word as a farmer sows the seed, and God in due time will produce a harvest of righteousness. In his day, Luther had a world and a church to reform, but he never took credit for changes. He would say, "The Word did it." One time Luther said that all he did was to teach and preach the Word. Then while he drank beer with his colleagues, the Word did its work of defeating falsehood and establishing the Reformation. Accordingly, the church has the Word that can reform the world. It proves how essential the church is to a safe and decent world. Our main task is to proclaim the Word as fearlessly as possible. It is not the job of the church to attempt to change society by politicking for certain laws, enforcing moral codes, or espousing "good" causes. It is enough to declare the Word, and God through the Word will change the nation.

If the Word can do all that the text says it can and will do, why are we in the present mess? We will find the answer in today’s Gospel lesson which tells Jesus’ parable of the sower. The sower spreads the seed of the Word upon the soil of the people. Not all seed produces results. Only one-fourth gives a harvest. The other three-fourths do not receive the seed. It is not the fault of the seed but the soil. If we allow the Word to possess our hearts, God will produce the harvest of godliness.

CSS Publishing Co., Inc., Old Truths For New Times, by John R. Brokhoff