Isaiah 2:1-5 We live in a world
that is anything but peaceful. Our
soldiers continue to die in the Middle East.
Japan and China are rattling sabers in the South China Seas. Almost every nation on earth has military
personnel involved in some kind of armed conflict somewhere in the world.
So it was in
Isaiah’s day. Assyrians and Babylonians
fought for domination in the Middle East-- and the people of God were caught in
the middle.
It was in the
midst of this warring madness that the prophet Isaiah proclaimed that a time
of peace would come when “The Lord shall
judge between the nations and settle disputes for many peoples.” A time of peace when peoples and
nations “will beat their swords into
plowshares and the spears into pruning hooks.” A time of peace when warfare would
come to an end and “nation shall not
lift sword against nation neither shall they learn war anymore.”
This promise of
peace must have seemed too good to be true to the people of Isaiah’s day–I know
it seems that way for us. We live in a
world that is so steeped in violence that it is hard to imagine what true and
lasting peace will look like. But the
Lord promised that day of peace would come through his Messiah—that he would be
the Prince of Peace. At his birth the
angels proclaimed peace on earth and good will towards men.
But much of our world
is still at war. So was Isaiah
wrong? Had he misheard the Lord? Were the angels mistaken in their
proclamation at Bethlehem ? Has God failed to make good on his promises
of peace through the Messiah? No! God is
faithful and always keeps his Word!
Still, we have to
admit that there is a seeming disconnect between the Lord’s promise of peace--
and its fulfillment as we experience it at this moment in time.
And so then, how
do we resolve this tension between what God promised through his Messiah and
what we experience in our lives right now?
At least part of
the answer is that the prophets of God were looking far into the future. When they spoke of the person and work of the
Messiah, they saw what would take place at his first coming and
what would occur at his second coming.
And so they
portray Jesus as suffering and weak–but also as mighty and strong. They saw him as the Virgin Born child and the
ancient of days. They told of his death
on the cross and his judgment of the world as the living King. All of it, through the inspiration of the
Holy Spirit, was as present to them as the events of their own day–all of it
equally true–some of it accomplished at our Lord’s first coming--some of it to
be accomplished when he comes again.
As we look at the
words of the prophet Isaiah over these next three weeks, we will get a complete
picture of the work of the Messiah–what he did in his first Advent as the Babe
of Bethlehem and Man of the cross and what he will do in his
second Advent as the returning King who comes to judge the living and the
dead.
We will hear what
his work means for us and for us as we live in this “in-between-time” as we
celebrate Jesus’ birth and wait for his return.
Isaiah said:
“It shall come to
pass in the latter days that the mountain of the house of the LORD shall be
established as the highest of the mountains, and shall be lifted up above the
hills; and all nations shall flow to it.”
The last days of
which Isaiah prophesied began with the coming of the Son of Man into the human
flesh of a newborn baby. The writer to
the Hebrews says that “in many and
various ways God spoke to his people of old but now IN THESE LAST DAYS he has
spoken to us by his Son.” These are
the last days of which Isaiah
prophesies–these are the last days in
which God promised that the people of the world stream into the Lord’s house. But what is the “house” of which Isaiah prophesied?
It is not a
rebuilt temple in Jerusalem
or a renewed Levitical priesthood as the false prophets of our day proclaim. Instead, the Bible tells us that the house of
God is the Body of Christ–the holy Christian church. Paul says that:
We are no longer
strangers and aliens, but we are fellow citizens with the saints and members
of the household of God, a holy temple in the Lord…a dwelling place for God...
Wherever two or
three Christians gather together in the name and remembrance of Jesus Christ,
there is, in that place, is the house of the Lord—the dwelling place of the Holy
Spirit—where the Good News of God’s peace in Jesus death and resurrection is
proclaimed and believed.
A renewed and
right relationship with God through faith in Jesus Christ is the promise of peace that has made us a part of the house of God
and it is our proclamation to this warring world. Peace
with God is what the Messiah of God came to give in his first
Advent.
When it comes to
peace, the world focuses its hope on peace accords and cease fire agreements-- but
fails to recognize that there is no foundation for peace apart from Jesus.
They fail to
realize that all warfare and bloodshed is a reflection of the warfare between
God and man over sin. And because
they do not know and believe that the warfare between God and man has been
brought to an end through the atoning death and resurrection of Jesus Christ,
they have no way to be reconciled and at peace with one another.
But wherever that
Good News of peace with God through faith in Jesus has been proclaimed and
believed, people have flocked to the house of God and abandoned their warring
ways. Isaiah promised that it would be
this way. He said:
“Many peoples will
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 the law, and the word of the LORD from Jerusalem .”
We see how true
Isaiah’s prophecy was as we view the church today filled with people from every
tribe, language, nation, and culture who know what it is to be at peace with
God through Jesus–a peace that can even transcend violence and warfare and
death.
But we also see in
the world around us the consequences of those who do not know the Messiah as
the Prince of Peace–who turn away from the peace he gives and prefer to follow
the prince of this world in lives of hatred and violence. We see it in racial discord and in broken
homes and destroyed families. We see it
in a culture that calls violence “entertainment” and we see it in wars around
the world.
This culture of
death exists in direct opposition to the will of God who wants his world and
his people to be at peace. And so these
days of violence and hatred and warfare will be brought to an end
once and for all at the return of the Prince of Peace.
On that day of our
Lord’s return in glory, those who were unwilling to be reconciled to God--those
who were unwilling to let the peace treaty signed with the blood of Jesus at
Calvary be their peace-- those who promoted violence and death-- will face the
Son of Man’s righteous judgment. Isaiah
promises that the Lord will:
“Judge between the
nations and shall settle disputes for many peoples; and 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 anymore.”
At the second advent
of Jesus, the culture of death in which we live will come to an end. The way of war will be no more. Instruments of death will be turned into
implements of life.
And those who are
unwilling to have peace with God- will be punished by God- so that we who are
reconciled to him through faith in Jesus can live in peace with one another.
Those who have
come to the mountain of the Lord’s temple to be saved become different people–we
lose our warring ways—and God teaches us his ways so that we can learn to walk
in his paths.
Just like our
Savior, the Prince of Peace, we live as peacemakers in a world that is broken
by violence and hatred. Jesus assures us
that ‘blessed are the peacemakers”
and Paul says that “If it is possible,
as far as it depends on you, live at peace with everyone.”
And so then, what
does this mean for our day-to-day lives as we await our Lord’s return? That’s what Isaiah is talking about when he
says: “Come, O house of Jacob, let us walk in the light of the Lord”. What does it mean for us who live in God’s
peace?
1. It means that
we value and protect all human life–especially that which is weakest and lest
valued by the world. 2.. Living as
followers of the Prince of Peace means that we let the Lord settle our disputes
with one another through his Word-- and where the Word is silent we yield in
love to those around us. 3.. And living in
the Lord’s peace, means that we work and struggle and sacrifice to bring about peace
and justice for all people.
Advent is a
waiting time—but it is not an idle time.
We wait for the fullness of the salvation that God has promised at the
return of his Son and that includes the final peace he comes to give. But we do not have to wait to live out the
realities of that day, and that promised peace, in our own lives. In fact, we must not wait. We can begin tonight to walk in the light of
the Lord and bring the peace of Christ to bear on all our relationships. Amen.
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