Isaiah 2:1-5 · The Mountain of the Lord
Swords Into Plowshares
Isaiah 2:1-5
Sermon
by King Duncan
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One Sunday after church, a mother was talking to her young daughter. She told her daughter that, according to the Bible, Jesus will return to earth some day.

"When is he coming back?" the daughter asked.

"I don't know," replied the mother.

"Can't you look it up on the Internet?" the little girl asked. (1)

Well, you can find lots of interesting things on the Internet, but to read an authoritative source about the return of Christ, you will need to turn elsewhere.

Eight hundreds years before Christ, the prophet Isaiah foretold Christ's coming. He didn't use Google or Yahoo. He searched the depths of his own heart and experience for a word from the Lord. And here is what he wrote:

"In days to come the mountain of the Lord's house shall be established as the highest of the mountains, and shall be raised above the hills; all the nations shall stream to it. Many peoples shall come and say, "˜Come, let us go up to the mountain of the Lord, to the house of the God of Jacob; that he may teach us his ways and that we may walk in his paths.' For out of Zion shall go forth instruction, and the word of the Lord from Jerusalem. He shall judge between the nations, and shall arbitrate for many peoples; they shall beat their swords into plowshares, and their spears into pruning hooks; nation shall not lift up sword against nation, neither shall they learn war any more. O house of Jacob, come, let us walk in the light of the Lord!"

[Today we begin a series of five messages for Advent and Christmas based on the writings of the prophet Isaiah. We will consider five of Isaiah's most meaningful messianic prophecies, and we will seek to apply them to the world in which you and I live.] In today's passage we see two of the basic yearnings of humanity.

The first yearning is humanity's universal hunger for God. "In days to come the mountain of the Lord's house shall be established as the highest of the mountains, and shall be raised above the hills; all the nations shall stream to it. Many people shall come and say, "Come, let us go up to the mountain of the Lord, to the house of the God of Jacob; that he may teach us his ways and that we may walk in his paths.'"

Human beings are religious creatures. Philosophers have on occasion predicted the demise of religious faith in the light of the challenges from both science and secularism. But reports of God's death have invariably been greatly exaggerated. Throughout the earth people are asserting their need for religious belief. Even in the Soviet Union, officially atheistic for 80 or more years, churches are opening and people are filling them up. Human beings are essentially religious.

And why not? We live in a magnificent universe. Most reasonable people believe that a superior intelligence created this world of beauty and splendor. In fact, Sigma Xi, the international honor society for scientific and engineering research, polled its members about religion and found that 41% of Ph.D. scientists reported that they attended church on a typical Sunday. Another survey found 52% of biologists identified themselves as Christians. M. I. T. professor Alan Lightman adds, "Contrary to popular myth, scientists appear to have the same range of attitudes about religious matters as does the general public." (2)

Often when people say they do not believe in God, it is because they have had a painful situation in their lives when they felt let down by either people of faith or by God Himself. But most of us are by nature religious.

And we long to reach out to God. Much in our lives is beyond our control. We are concerned about friends or family members who are facing difficult times.

Or perhaps there is a crisis in our own lives. At such trying times we long to connect with God.

The Associated Press tells about a post office in Israel that is covered up with mail from people trying to reach out to the Divine. "Try sending a letter to God," says the author of this story, "and chances are it will end up--as many do each year--at an Israeli post office in Jerusalem, where they are read and sent on to the holy Western Wall."

Letters come from all over the world--seeking good health, debt remedies, etc. A huge number of letters arrive around Christmas and Jewish holidays. As long as anyone can remember at the post office, the letters to God have turned up at the Postal Authority's center for undeliverable mail in an industrial zone in Jerusalem.

In the tiny warehouse, eight workers sort problem envelopes in various cubbyholes but there is one marked "Letters to God." Puzzled by what to do with the letters, one worker started taking them to the Western Wall, a remnant of the ancient Second Temple compound and Judaism's holiest site, where Jews traditionally stuff tiny notes of prayer in the cracks between its hulking stones.

"From there, it's not in our hands," said a postal spokesperson. (3)

One author suggests that children's letters to Santa reflect that same desire to reach out to God. The tiny town of Rovaniemi, Finland, is the official international site for sending letters to Santa Claus. They have an aptly named Santa Claus Village nearby, and they postmark their letters with a Santa Claus postal seal. Each year, the Rovaniemi post office receives hundreds of thousands of letters from over 184 countries. Although form letters are sent out to most of the requests, the most heartrending ones are personally answered by a volunteer team of university students from the surrounding towns.

One postal clerk at Rovaniemi says, "We can see everything that is going on in the world through the letters." Children in war-torn areas ask Santa to send them peace on earth. Children whose parents are dying ask for the miracle of healing. One child may ask for a new Power Ranger doll from Santa; another child on the other side of the globe may ask for an artificial limb to replace the hand or leg that was blown off by a land mine.

But why do children and adults write to Santa for both tangible and intangible things? One clerk remarks, "People used to have the saints to call on when they felt they couldn't reach God himself. Now some of them think, "˜If God can't help me, maybe Santa can. "˜" (4) There is a universal need to connect with God. At some time in our lives, all of us will look up and say, "Please, God. Listen to my need."

There is a universal need for God. Christmas speaks to that need. When we could not reach God, God reached out to us. As someone has written, "Christmas is love tugging us back to God with a powerful clasp of a tiny hand reaching out from a bed of straw."

There is a universal need for God and there is a universal need for peace. Isaiah writes, "He shall judge between the nations, and shall arbitrate for many peoples; they shall beat their swords into plowshares, and their spears into pruning hooks; nation shall not lift up sword against nation, neither shall they learn war any more."

In 1992, a group of academics and historians compiled this startling information: Since 3600 B.C., the world has known only 292 years of peace! During this period there have been 14,351 wars large and small, in which 3.64 billion people have been killed. The value of the property destroyed is equal to a golden belt around the world 97.2 miles wide and 33 feet thick. Since 650 B.C., there have also been 1,656 arms races, only 16 of which have not ended in war. The remainder ended in the economic collapse of the countries involved. (5)

If you need evidence of humanity's sinful nature, that should do it. Just look at our world today with its terrorism and war. Where will it end? Isaiah tells us. It will end when God's Messiah is crowned King of Kings and Lord of Lords: "they shall beat their swords into plowshares, and their spears into pruning hooks; nation shall not lift up sword against nation, neither shall they learn war any more."

Here is where the revelation of Scripture conflicts with the wisdom of the world. In the world, the way to deal with your enemies is to pulverize them. When we kill all the terrorists, according to this line of thinking, then there will be no more terrorism. Of course, there is the danger that, in the meantime, we will produce more terrorists than we destroy. According to scripture there is another way.

Notice how this passage is worded, "He shall judge between the nations, and shall arbitrate for many peoples; they shall beat their swords into plowshares, and their spears into pruning hooks . . ." God, the Righteous One will judge between the nations and shall arbitrate for many peoples . . . Here is what Isaiah is saying to us: Before there can be lasting peace on earth there must be authentic justice.

Here's an interesting fact: Research has discovered that no two nations with McDonald's restaurants have ever gone to war. The so-called Golden Arches Theory of Conflict Prevention, conceived by Thomas Friedman in The New York Times, holds that countries can only support a McDonald's when they have reached a sufficient level of economic prosperity and political stability to make war unattractive to its people. (6)

The world is moving away from war one Big Mac at a time. Do you catch the significance of that little fact? One way to reduce conflict in the world is to attack the conditions in the world that make for war--injustice, poverty, and abuse. Even if it doesn't make the world safe for democracy, that is what followers of Jesus are supposed to be doing anyway.

There was a fascinating story in Guidepost magazine sometime back. It is about a man who is determined to turn swords into plowshares--literally.

The setting is West Africa. The casings from bullets fired during the Liberian civil war in the 1990s are being made into crosses by local artisans. It was George Togba's idea to make these crosses. He is a native of Liberia.

At the peak of the country's 17-year civil war, George and his family were among 600 people who sought refuge in St. Peter's Lutheran Church in Monrovia. The military raided the sanctuary, and George saw most of the refuge-seekers killed in front of him, including his mother. They were all unarmed. "I escaped the massacre and joined the war effort," George said. "But I didn't really want to be a soldier."

Nonetheless, George made it through the war, and when peace was finally restored to Liberia in 1996, he had to find a way to support his family. "I had a dream," he says, "where I was changing the shell casings into symbols of peace." He gathered up several of the used shells that littered the war-torn countryside and started to work. "I leave the lower part of the round intact," says George, "so that you can see what it was intended to do--destroy life--but above that is the symbol of life," he explained, pointing to the cross.

About 30 other artisans and former soldiers have joined George. This creative and meaningful effort provides income for many families in Liberia. The project was sponsored by the Lutheran World Federation. The crosses serve as a reminder to all that "nation shall not lift up sword against nation, neither shall they learn war anymore." (7)

Friends, that's our job--to transfer symbols of hate into symbols of love, symbols of death into symbols of life, symbols of hopelessness into symbols of God. How do we do that? One small act of love and concern at a time.

Every Hanukkah, the Markovitz family of Pennsylvania lit a menorah and placed it in the window of their house. It stood out in contrast to all the Christmas decorations in the windows of their neighbors. One year, vandals broke out the front window of the Markovitz home, the window that held the menorah. The whole Markovitz family was shaken by the senseless hatred of this act. After the window had been repaired, they left to spend the day with their family. That evening, the Markovitzes returned home to find almost every house in the neighborhood had a lit menorah in its front window. As Vicky, the Markovitz's daughter said, it was their neighbors' way of saying, "If you break their windows, you will have to break ours." (8)

That's where it begins--it begins with us as we seek to be God's people in the world--loving our neighbors as Christ has loved us. The Advent season speaks to our need for God and the world's need for peace, and it shows us a better way--the way of love.


1. Joyful Noiseletter, Jan. 2004, p. 2, "The Lord's Laughter, Jeff Totten.

2. Breakpoint commentary, Chuck Colson

3. Kingsport (TN) Times-News, 10-2-2003, p. 4a. Contributed by Dr. John Bardsley.

4. "Dear Santa" by Barbara Sjoholm, Smithsonian, December 2003, p. 128.

5. Today in the Word, June 19, 1992.

6. Toronto Globe and Mail, December 18, 1996, http://www. globeandmail. com/.

7. "Peace by Pieces," by Freddy Duntz, Guideposts, August 2001, p. 12-13.

8. "A New Light" John Fitzgerald, Boston Herald . "Reasons to Believe." Reader's Digest, Dec. 2003, pp. 120-122.

Dynamic Preaching, Collected Sermons, by King Duncan