Isaiah
43:1-7
You,
like I, may have thought or said along the way, “God of the New Testament is a
God of love, but God in the Old Testament is all about wrath….” We do find more
“wrath” in the Old Testament, but today’s reading reminds us of the unchanging
nature of God—God loves us. In this passage, we find God calling us “precious
and honored” and we hear God saying, “I love you” (v.4).
Isaiah
speaks God’s word to the scattered and shattered people of Israel—some who have
wandered far away from the Promised Land and from God, some who have been taken
away forcibly, and some who have stayed right at home but who have turned their
backs on God. No matter, God says, I’m bringing you all back to me; I’m
redeeming you from every corner of the world because you are “my sons and my
daughters…whom I created for my glory, whom I formed and made” (v.6-7).
While
God speaks these words over the people of Israel 2500 years ago, God speaks
these words over us today. At times, we, too, have wandered far from God and
the life God wants for us. Some of us have been taken away by ideas and
promises that have come to nothing. And some of us still sit each Sunday in the
sanctuary, but our hearts and minds have turned their backs on God. God longs
to redeem our lives, to bring us back, because we, too, are God’s sons and daughters…created
for God’s glory, formed and made by God.
In
this passage, we find two beautiful, hope-filled promises: “When you pass
through the waters, I will be with you; and when you pass through the rivers, they
will not sweep over you. When you walk through the fire, you will not be
burned; the flames will not set you ablaze” (v2). At times, we feel as if we’re
drowning in all that surrounds us, we feel that the circumstances of life are
washing over us. God says we will not drown in all of that. Sometimes we feel
as though the fires are popping up all around us. At work we talk about
“putting out fires,” not literal fires, but the things we feel threaten us,
threaten to burn things down. God says that we will not go up in flames.
The
second promise is not a new promise but an old promise, a promise that we need
to be reminded of again and again: “Do not be afraid, for I am with you” (v5).
Fear begins as a choice in our lives and quickly becomes a habit. Fear grows
out of our sense of powerlessness, out of our realization that we cannot change
things or make things happen. God reminds us that this does not matter when God
is with us! Where we are weak, God is strong. Where we don’t know, God
knows.
In
this Advent season we have been reminded of the hope God longs for us to have.
We remember the peace that God brings—God’s shalom. We recall that God longs to
fill us with joy—something far more substantial than the happiness predicated
on happenings. And today, we are reminded of the loving God who has longed to
redeem us from the very beginning. God reveals this love in sending Jesus to
the world to live for us and to die for us. Jesus is Immanuel—God with us. What
better news could we have as we come to the manger in Bethlehem once more this
Christmas season?
May
the hope, peace, joy, and love of Christmas be yours…now and all through the
New Year!
Sunday, December 21, 2025
Advent: Stories of Love
Watch/Listen: HERE
