Isaiah 43:1-13 · Israel’s Only Savior
Salvation Oracle
Isaiah 43:1-13
Sermon
by Elizabeth Achtemeier
Loading...

The subject for this Sunday, as set forth in the accompanying New Testament texts, is baptism, the baptism of Jesus in Luke, and the baptism of the Samaritan disciples in Acts. Let us therefore use our Second Isaiah text also in relation to baptism, namely our baptisms. To be sure, the prophet originally directed these words to the Israelite exiles in Babylonian between 550 and 538 B.C., but they are also an excellent description of our relation to God in our baptisms into the church.

 The words and especially the verbs to note in this text, which is technically called a "salvation oracle," are those that describe what God has done, is doing, or will do. God has "created," "formed," "redeemed," "called you by name" (v. 1). He is "with you" (vv. 2, 5). He is "your Savior" (v. 3). He considers you "precious" and "esteemed," and he "loves" you (v. 4). He will "gather you" from the four corners of the earth (vv. 5-6). He "created," "formed," and "made" everyone who is called by his name, for his glory (v. 7).

 The focus of the text is entirely on God's action, but because his action is done in relation to us, because he is the God who is "with" us, everything said about God's deeds is important for us church members.

 When we come to our baptisms, or when we present a child to be baptized, the first fact we are to remember is that God has "created" us. But that has been the most intimate sort of creation. God has "formed us," say verses 1 and 7, like a potter working with a lump of clay, shaping our bodies and organs and muscles in the wombs of our mothers. As Job says, "Thou didst clothe me with skin and flesh, and knit me together with bones and sinews" (Job 10:11). God intentionally created each one of us because he had a purpose for each one of us.

 More than that, God also created the church. The Christian Church did not exist before God prefigured it in his covenant people Israel and then called it into being in Jesus Christ (cf. Matthew 16:18-19). We are a God-created and God-shaped people, who had no existence before God formed us as his church (cf. Ephesians 2:12-22). Only because of God's act, do we have this beloved community into which we are baptized, and apart from God in Jesus Christ there is no church.

 That which binds us all together in this household of faith, however, is the fact that we have all been "redeemed" together. That is what we have in common -- not blood, not soil, not economics or status. Rather, we share together the one fact that God has redeemed us all. He redeemed Israel out of Egypt, that is, he bought her back out of slavery, which is what redemption means (cf. Leviticus 25:47-49). And so too he redeemed each one of us out of slavery to sin and death, and he redeemed the person who is to be baptized. Long before our baptisms, long before any one of us had done anything to deserve it (cf. Romans 5:8), God redeemed us from sin and death by the cross and resurrection of Jesus Christ.

 In our baptisms, therefore, the God who bought us back calls us by our names and claims us as his own. At every baptism the Christian name of the person is pronounced, and that person becomes God's child. No longer does the baptized person belong to the world. No, he or she belongs to God, and the promise is that nothing can snatch the baptized person out of the loving hand of God who has claimed her or him.

 To be sure, evil may come and tribulations may abound in a baptized person's life. As our text says in verse 2, we may "walk through the fire" of trial and suffering, we may be almost overwhelmed by the "waters" of a chaotic and violent world. But God's word of consolation is sure: "I am with you." Therefore, we need have no fear (vv. 1, 5), for in Paul's words, "Neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor principalities, nor things present, nor things to come, nor powers, nor height, nor depth, nor anything in all creation, will be able to separate us" (Romans 8:38-39) from God who has claimed us as his own. Always "underneath are the everlasting arms" (Deuteronomy 33:27), and he holds us secure to all eternity.

 God is the baptized persons' "Savior" in all circumstances. We are "precious" to God and "esteemed" by him. Indeed, he "loves" us. Other people may think we are unimportant or unworthy of notice. We may hold the most humble and insignificant position in our job or society, in some little forgotten corner of our land. But we are not unimportant to God. He sees us. He knows our needs. He numbers the very hairs of our heads, and knows even when we sit down and when we rise (Psalm 139:2). He hears our prayers, and indeed, his Son prays for us (cf. Romans 8:34).

 Think of it! The Almighty Creator of heaven and earth, who ignited the sun and raised up the Rocky Mountains, who commands the stars and can direct the ways of nations, that Lord of all nature and human history watches each moment over us, his children, in love. He neither slumbers nor sleeps, but keeps us always in his mind and care, and daily he guides our steps in mercy, leading us lovingly toward his everlasting kingdom.

 God in Christ has, in fact, as our text says, gathered his people from east and west, from north and from south. His baptized folk now form, as the hymn says, "one great fellowship of love throughout the whole wide earth." We enter by our baptisms into a universal church, made up of people of every race and clime. And the one to be baptized becomes a member not only of a local congregation, but of the one church of Jesus Christ that is found throughout the world.

 God has "formed and made" us his people not simply for our sakes alone, however. As wondrous as his gifts are to all of his baptized folk, with our baptisms has come a task given each one of us. God has created us, says our text, for his "glory" (v. 7). In baptism, God has poured out the Spirit of Christ upon us, and now he desires that we use that power to glorify his name in all the earth. That is, we are to make the Lord God esteemed and honored, worshiped and loved by all people everywhere. We are given the task of so proclaiming Christ that every knee bows and every tongue confesses that he is their Lord also.

 How do we carry out that awesome task? By telling what God has done in our lives, as Old and New Testament tell it, and by living our lives in the manner that shows that the good news of the gospel is true. We glorify God by showing and telling other people about the actions and words of the Lord. That is what Second Isaiah does in our text for the morning. And that is the task to which we, God's baptized people, are called.

CSS Publishing, Preaching and Reading from the Old Testament: With an Eye to the New, by Elizabeth Achtemeier