Isaiah 60:1-22 · The Glory of Zion
The Guiding Light for a New Year
Isaiah 60:1-22
Sermon
by King Duncan
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Welcome on this first Sunday of a New Year. I trust that one of your resolutions for this year is to be in worship every week. Good for you. That's one resolution you've kept for at least one week.

I heard about one poor fellow who decided to make only resolutions this year he could keep. He resolved to gain weight, to stop exercising, to read less and watch more TV, to procrastinate more, to quit giving money and time to charity, to not date any member of the cast of Baywatch, and to never make New Year's resolutions again.

Maybe he's onto something. Why torture ourselves when we never keep those resolutions more than a week anyway?

What we need, of course, is not another resolution, but a revolution. We need a turning point in our lives. Like the wise men of old we need to catch a glimpse of a guiding light, and we need to follow that light to a new life in Christ.

There is a scene in the movie Apollo 13 where astronaut Jim Lovell is asked if he was ever afraid. He said that he had been afraid many times but one time sticks out in his memory.

He was returning from a combat mission and couldn't find his aircraft carrier. It was dark, and because they were under combat conditions, the carrier didn't have its lights on. His radio navigation equipment was of no use because they were under total radio silence to avoid enemy detection.

In a last attempt to determine his location, he turned on his map light to see if he could calculate his position. Suddenly an electrical short caused all of the lights to go out.

It was then that he saw it. In the darkness. There was a luminescent glow. It was the glow of sea plankton that is generated by the wake of a ship as it passes through. All he had to do was follow this glowing sea plankton, like a "highway" to the ship.

He said, "You don't know what will transpire to lead you home. If the map light had not shorted out, I would never have seen the glowing wake." (1)

Listen now to the words of Isaiah: "Arise, shine; for thy light is come, and the glory of the Lord is risen upon thee. For, behold, the darkness shall cover the earth, and gross darkness the people: but the Lord shall arise upon thee, and his glory shall be seen upon thee."

"Arise, shine!" says the prophet. What a great thought to begin a new year. Don't shrink back from the coming year. Don't hide in the shadows. Walk boldly. Arise, Shine!

NOTICE HOW THESE WORDS CALL TO US ON A PERSONAL LEVEL. How we think about this new year speaks far more loudly than any resolutions we might make. Do we dread the coming year? Are we fearful, apprehensive?

Dr. Viktor Frankl gained fame for his books chronicling his experiences in the Nazi concentration camps during World War II. The humiliation, beatings, tortures, lack of sanitary conditions, and lack of food were all meant to break the prisoners' spirits. And many people did go mad, or give up and die in those surroundings. But Dr. Frankl noticed that those people who had some goal, no matter how small, were able to survive the brutality of their environment. Even the tiniest shred of hope kept people alive.

One man in the camps told Dr. Frankl that he had a dream in which a voice told him that their camp would be liberated on March 30, 1945. This man had total confidence in his dream, and he lived with great hope and anticipation. But as the days passed and no help came, the man began to lose his hope. On March 29, 1945, this man suddenly became ill. On March 31, 1945 the day after his dream told him they would be liberated the man died. (2) We can only speculate that what killed him was loss of hope.

How we approach this new year will determine what kind of year it will be. Do we approach it boldly, confidently, expectantly? Or do we approach it with fear and apprehension? It's like the husband who said to his wife one day, "I've noticed that you always carry my photo in your handbag to the office. Why?"

His wife said, "When there is a problem, no matter how impossible, I look at your picture and the problem disappears."

The husband puffed himself up and said, "You see how miraculous and powerful I am for you?"

And his wife answered, "Yes, I see your picture and say to myself, "˜What other problem can there be greater than this one?'"

Attitude is everything. What kind of attitude are you taking into this new year? These words from Isaiah speak to us, first of all, on a personal level.

THE REASON THEY SPEAK TO US ON A PERSONAL LEVEL IS THAT THEY ALSO SPEAK TO US ON A SPIRITUAL LEVEL. The reason we can walk boldly into the new year is that something important has happened in our lives. "Arise, shine," says Isaiah, "for thy light is come, and the glory of the Lord is risen upon thee. For, behold, the darkness shall cover the earth, and gross darkness the people: but the Lord shall arise upon thee, and his glory shall be seen upon thee."

The reason we can arise and shine is because Christ has entered our lives and cast out all darkness. This is the day of Epiphany. Many churches celebrate this as the day when the wise men followed the star that came to rest over the house where the young child lay. It reminds us of the light Christ brought into the world. Christ has given us power over sin and death. Christ tells us who we are: children of God. He gives us meaning, purpose and direction.

There was a disturbing story in The Associated Press a couple of years back about a man named Graham Stuart Staines. Staines had been a Christian missionary in India for many years. He ran a clinic for lepers and often preached at a nearby church in Baripada, India. But on January 23, 1999, Graham Staines and his family paid an awful price for their faith. Over 40 Hindu activists surrounded the Staines' Jeep and set it on fire, killing Graham and his two young sons, Philip and Timothy. This was only one tragic incident in a series of increasing anti-Christian violence by Hindu radicals.

At the funeral for Staines and his sons, which was attended by more than 1,000 people, Staines' widow, Gladys, and his daughter, Esther, spoke of forgiveness and peace. Rather than being overcome by grief, they bravely stood over his coffin and sang a hymn of hope: "Because He lives, I can face tomorrow. Because He lives, all fear is gone. Because I know He holds the future, and life is worth the living just because He lives." Even in the face of this heinous crime, they knew they could go on because Christ lives.

You and I will probably not face such a horrifying episode in the coming year, but we will face our own trying situations. If we will let our faith overwhelm our fears, we, too, shall be victorious. We, too, shall sing, "Because He lives, I can face tomorrow. Because He lives, all fear is gone. Because I know He holds the future, and life is worth the living just because He lives."

"Arise, shine," says Isaiah, "for thy light is come . . ." His words speak to us on a personal level because they speak to us on a spiritual level. We are able to shine in the world because of One who has come into our world.

THESE WORDS ALSO SPEAK TO US ON A SOCIAL LEVEL. We are to arise and shine so that the world may know its Savior has come. The Gospels testify that Jesus is the light that has come into the world, but Christ taught that we, too, are to be the light of the world. The light we receive from him is to be reflected into the dark crevices of the world's great need.

Many years ago, a young woman named Maggie began attending the Willow Creek Community Church in suburban Chicago. She was a hurting young woman who had been abused and deceived by inauthentic Christians when she was a child. She had long ago stopped trusting that God existed or that Jesus loved her. But she wanted to believe. Not long after she first started attending Willow Creek, this young woman wrote a letter to Pastor Lee Strobel and included a poem she had written. Here are a few excerpts of that poem:

"Do you know
do you understand
that you represent
Jesus to me?

If you care,
I think maybe He cares"”
and then there's this flame of hope
that burns inside of me and for a while
I am afraid to breathe
because it might go out.
Do you know
do you understand
that your words are His words?
Your face, His face
to someone like me?
Please, be who you say you are.
Please, God, don't let this be another trick.
Please let this be real.
Please. Do you know
do you understand
that you represent 
Jesus to me?"

Not long after sending Lee Strobel this poem, Maggie gave her life to Christ. (3)

Here is why we are to arise and shine. The world is waiting for our witness. The world needs to see in us the truth of what we believe. Words are cheap. Too many people are trying to sell us that which they do not possess themselves. "Do you know," asks Maggie in her poem, "do you understand that you represent Jesus to me?" That is the cry of a world which is in "gross darkness," as the Scriptures put it.

So this is our call for the new year. Arise, Shine. And when we do shine not only as individuals but as the family of Christ then the world will be a brighter, more inviting place.

In 1992 California educator Dr. Norvel Young took his family to the Olympics in Spain. It was exciting for them to see the best athletes from the nations of the world compete in gymnastics, diving, water polo, and track and field. Most of all, Dr. Young was thrilled to see the love and goodwill exhibited between outstanding representatives of the many nations. It's a small world after all, says Dr. Young, and the Olympics are an example of goodwill and hard work.

As they entered the stadium for the closing ceremonies, Dr. Young and his family were given a packet of items, including a flashlight. After a thrilling program, including the best of Spain in every area, such as music by Placido Domingo, all the lights were extinguished. A hush moved over the vast audience; then a shout of "Ah!" The entire stadium was lighted as thousands of spectators turned on their individual flashlights. From darkness to light not because one person flipped a switch on some giant stadium floodlights, but because each member of the audience did their part by turning on their tiny, individual lights. It was a poignant and powerful moment one Dr. Young says he will never forget.

He compares it to Neil Diamond concerts he has attended, when Diamond begins to sing in his gravelly voice, "Turn on your heart lights." And one by one, people in the audience turn on different kinds of small lights whatever they have with them flashlights, candles, lighters. By the end of the song, the darkness in the auditorium has been dispelled, and light is glowing warmly everywhere. (4)

And that is our purpose in the new year. As Jesus said to us, "No one lights a candle and puts in under a bushel, but on a lampstand . . ." (Matthew 5:15) We are to move boldly into this new year, because the light of Christ floods our hearts, giving us hope and wholeness. And then we are to shine our light so that others may know that the light of Christ still shines into our world. The darkness has not overcome it.


1.  From: A SLICE OF BREAD ~ "Leading You Home" by Glen Mettler. Source: Weekend Encounter, by Dick Innes, Copyright 2000, www.actsweb.org/subscribe.htm via http://www.witandwisdom.org Shared by: Glen Mettler <gmettler@integrityonline12.com>

2. Viktor E. Frankl, MAN'S SEARCH FOR MEANING (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1984), 81. Cited in John Trent, Ph.D. LIFE MAPPING (Colorado Springs, CO.: Focus on the Family, 1994), pp.17-18.

3. Lee Strobel, GOD'S OUTRAGEOUS CLAIMS (Grand Rapids, MI.: Zondervan Publishing House, 1997), pp.70-72.

4. LIVING LIGHTS SHINING STARS: TEN SECRETS TO BECOMING THE LIGHT OF THE WORLD with Mary HoIIinsworth (Howard Publishing Company 1997).

Dynamic Preaching, Collected Sermons, by King Duncan