Good News for the Desolate and Forsaken
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The text for today is our Old Testament lesson, Isaiah 62:1–5:
1 For
Zion’s sake I will not keep silent,
and
for Jerusalem’s sake I will not be quiet,
until her righteousness
goes forth as brightness,
and
her salvation as a burning torch.
2 The nations shall see your righteousness,
and
all the kings your glory,
and you shall be called
by a new name
that
the mouth of the Lord will give.
3 You shall be a crown of beauty in the hand of
the Lord,
and
a royal diadem in the hand of your God.
4 You shall no more be termed Forsaken,
and
your land shall no more be termed Desolate,
but you shall be called
My Delight Is in Her,
and
your land Married;
for the Lord delights in you,
and
your land shall be married.
5 For as a young man marries a young woman,
so
shall your sons marry you,
and as the bridegroom
rejoices over the bride,
so shall your God rejoice over you.
Grace and peace to you from God our
Father and the Lord Jesus Christ.
Imagine a prisoner, sitting chained
in a dark dungeon for years. The hopelessness, the loneliness, the desolation,
the feeling of being totally forsaken by everyone, including God. Nothing could
be sadder, could it?
Actually, it could be sadder. It is
sadder. Because what this prisoner doesn’t realize is that she is not
alone. The darkness has kept her from seeing that there are many others all
around her. The silence—hers and that of her fellow captives—has kept her from
realizing she is not alone. Many others are held in the same chains.
And to make matters even worse, the
darkness and silence have kept them from realizing that the doors to their
prison were flung wide open long ago. They silently sat, enduring this feeling
of desolation and forsakenness because they didn’t know that their release had
already been secured, their chains loosed. They would have only needed to step
out of the darkness, and their shouts of gratitude would have alerted the
others that their release had been won.
What could bring such darkness? What
could leave such silence? Sin and the effects of sin—guilt and shame, anger and
despair. It could be any sin, but particularly today, as we are observing the
Sanctity of Human Life Sunday, I want to speak about the sin of abortion. Yes,
abortion is political and controversial. But, at its core, it is a sin, deserving
of God’s wrath and condemnation. But it is also a sin for which the penalty has
already been paid. Jesus is the Lamb who was slain for the sins of the world. By
His blood, He atones for the sins of all people. His blood cleanses us from the
stain of every sin and gives us a good conscience.
That’s why we are compelled to speak
out today. We dare not remain silent. While we are very clear to declare that
abortion is not an unforgivable sin, we also make it clear that it is sin! Abortion
destroys, in very brutal ways, 3,000 times a day in this country, a tiny human
life. Abortion destroys a life gifted and created by God. Abortion destroys a
life for whom Jesus was born and died. Therefore, a Christian cannot
legitimately defend abortion as a right or a good choice.
But as tragic as this fact is, those
babies are less than half of the victims of abortion, though understandably, they
get almost all the attention. I speak today on behalf of the millions of women
and men who have been left desolate and forsaken because of this sin. I do
this, knowing that since 75% of those who’ve had an abortion are professed
Christians, there could very well be someone listening today who has been
affected by abortion. You may feel like the people Isaiah was talking to when
they realized the gravity of their sin: “We hope for light, and behold,
darkness, and for brightness, but we walk in gloom” (59:9b).
If that describes you, if that
describes any of you because of any sin in your life, God has Good
News for you today! If you have had an abortion or pressured someone into an
abortion, I’d especially like to talk with you right now. You other sinners can
listen in because we all need to hear this, but we don’t talk about abortion
much in church so those struggling with this sin and its effects don’t always get
to hear the Gospel applied specifically to them. But I hope that you are
hearing it today! Take what you are hearing personally. God’s restoration of
the sinner is a complete restoration. No matter what that sin!
You are precious to God, like a
royal diadem—a crown of beauty, a badge of honor. You may feel like you are
sitting in darkness, but you walk in the light. You may feel forsaken, but you
are God’s delight. It may seem like you are desolate and alone, but you are
married and joined to God by His great love for you. Indeed, He rejoices over
you as a bridegroom over His beautiful bride.
Yes, this is Good News. So
stunningly good we are compelled to ask, “How can this be?” It comes as God’s
gift through His Son Jesus Christ. God restores us as “royal diadems” by
emptying Himself of His divine royalty and taking the form of a servant. God
restores us as “crowns of beauty” by coronating His Son with a crown of thorns
and nailing Him to a cross. The blood that flowed from that cross cleanses the
blood on our hands because of sin and our toleration of sin.
This Good News comes as a gift from
God through Jesus. The only reason we can be called “My Delight” is because God
made His Son in whom He delighted the Forsaken One. God placed all of our
unspeakable and idolatrous sins upon Jesus. God forsook Him. God turned His
face away from Jesus so He could shine His face upon us and delight in us.
We can only be called “Married” because
God made Jesus “Desolate.” What Jesus suffered on that cross was more than
torturous physical pain. Jesus suffered the very desolation of eternal hell we
all deserved. What love that God would condemn His Son so He could rejoice over
us! Now, nothing separates us from that love. Nothing stands between us and God.
We are married!
The Bridegroom, Jesus Christ, gave
Himself up for us, that He might sanctify us, having cleansed us by the washing
of the water with the Word, so that He might present us to Himself in splendor,
without spot or wrinkle or any such thing, that we might be holy and without
blemish. We, the Bride of Christ, are no longer abandoned, but reconciled,
cared for, and protected.
Nevertheless, we live in a fallen
world. The darkness, the desolation, and the forsakenness make it so easy to
forget the victory already won on our behalf. Though he is defeated, our enemy,
Satan, seeks to take as many of God’s people with him as he can. He seeks to
separate us from Christ and His love. As followers of Christ, we are in the
middle of a spiritual battle.
Two things need to be remembered as
we consider this spiritual warfare. First, we know that Satan is a liar, the
father of lies, the arch-deceiver. We therefore are likely to be outwitted by
him if we rely on our own knowledge, experience, and power. Second, we know
that Satan masquerades as “an angel of light.” He seldom, if ever, shows his
true face. He deceives us into looking to ourselves for answers to life’s
challenges and achievements.
The strategy of Satan is clever and
yet simple. He concentrates on attacking the two strongholds that are occupied
by Christ here on earth. The first stronghold is the Church, the beautiful,
delightful Zion and Jerusalem of our text. Christ, the Lamb of God, is present
in the Church. So wherever the Church assembles on earth, its prayers and
praises undo the work of Satan. The Church, therefore, is the main enemy of the
evil one. But he cannot destroy it, for it has been given a safe place by God,
a place where it remains out of the devil’s reach.
The second stronghold of Christ is
the conscience of each Christian. Each person with a good conscience is a
stronghold of Christ in enemy territory, a place where Christ is present and
active. And Jesus uses us as a base for His counterattack on Satan. We are His
elite troops, lamps through which His light shines out into the night and routs
the power of darkness. Voices that will not remain silent, but who warn of
danger and point to safety and freedom in Christ. Since Satan cannot destroy
the Church, he sets out to destroy its disciples. So, perhaps it shouldn’t be
so surprising that God’s people are drawn into the same sins, at about the same
rate, as the rest of the world.
But what is surprising is how God
uses even Satan’s attacks to fulfill His plans for us. The devil, says Luther,
is God’s fool. He unwittingly ends up doing God’s work. Satan’s strategy
usually backfires on him by driving people to
Christ rather than away from Him, to deliver us from the darkness and bondage
of sin.
Permit me to give this illustration
to demonstrate how this works. Before I went to the seminary, my family and I
lived on the edge of Freeman, South Dakota. We had an older home, but half of a
city block for our backyard. Plenty of room for the kids to play and for me to
have a garden. On the edge of the garden, I had a compost pile, where I put all
the lawn clippings, dead plants, and fallen leaves. We soon found a major
problem with a compost pile: snakes and mice loved it. The warmth of the
composting materials attracted the cold-blooded creatures, and the food scraps
attracted the mice. Though the snakes tended to limit Aimee’s excursions to the
garden, the mice troubled me. If they would have just kept to the compost, I
could have lived with them; but they had the uncanny ability to find the
tomatoes the night before I was ready to pick them.
There are two ways to get rid of
mice from a backyard. You can poison them. But that is, at best, a temporary
solution, because as long as we continued to put the food scraps onto the
compost pile, other mice would move in and replace those poisoned. What’s
worse, the poison can kill other creatures. The better alternative is to eliminate
the food source. No garbage, no mice!
That’s how Christ deals with Satan
and the evil powers that threaten to infest us. He gets rid of evil by getting
rid of the garbage we produce and stow away in our souls. He cleans out what is
unclean in us so that it cannot be used against us. Sin makes us spiritually
unclean. Like composting garbage, it taints our souls and stains our conscience
so that we feel uneasy and out of place in God’s presence.
That goes both for the evil that we
do and the evil that is done to us. The evil that we do makes us feel guilty
and afraid of God; we fear His disapproval and dread His rejection of us. The
evil that is done to us, fills us with anger and hatred against those who have
abused us. We withdraw into ourselves because we feel too tainted to be of any
worth to God and the people around us.
In both cases, we feel so ashamed
that we conceal the problem. In the first case, we cover up our guilt and
shame; in the second case, we cover up anger and hatred. We therefore repress
the sin and its effect on us, like hiding our rotting garbage in the basements
of our homes. Yet the evil still remains; it festers away and contaminates our
souls, like a secret infection in our bodies. That hidden garbage opens up a
window of opportunity for Satan, who is an expert in impurity.
Because we belong to Christ, Satan
has no real spiritual power over us. The only hold Satan has on us is his
skillful use of our hidden garbage. He persuades us to keep it hidden in the
dark recesses of our minds so deeply that we barely know either its cause or
effect on us. Then, when the time is ripe, our evil secrets are brought out,
like a trump card, and wielded against us. So, Satan not only gets us to cover
up the dirt in our lives, he also digs it up and throws it in our face.
Christ deals with the impurity of
our sin in two ways. On the one hand, He covers our guilt and shame with His
own righteousness and holiness so that we can stand before God and our fellow
saints with a good conscience. At first, He concentrates on rebuilding our
faith in God’s goodness and our love for our brothers and sisters in the family
of God. He does not encourage us to discover the evil in our hearts, but He
gets us to rely on the Father’s grace and mercy.
Then, when we are ready for it, He
allows Satan to dig up some sin or offense so that we let Christ deal with it
and fix it up. The devil loses another foothold in our souls; His darkness is exposed
and expelled by the light.
Christ also uses the Law to diagnose
our spiritual condition. The Ten Commandments have been given to us as an
instrument for the examination of our consciences. Like a mirror, they help us
to see ourselves as God sees us. They identify the sins that need to be
confessed and the offenses that need to be healed. And they lead us to
contrition and repentance, to make us ready to hear the Good News of full
salvation that has already been won for us in Jesus Christ.
St. John writes: “If we say we have
no sin, we deceive ourselves and the truth is not in us; but if we confess our
sins, God is faithful and just and will forgive us our sins and cleanse us from
all unrighteousness.” Did you hear that? All
unrighteousness! This is Good News! No matter what the sin, it is completely
covered. There is nothing left for us to do. We receive this gift through faith
and humbly rejoice. But we do not rejoice to ourselves. When you have really Good News like this, you
can’t keep silent. Isaiah couldn’t. “For Zion’s sake I will not keep silent,
and for Jerusalem’s sake I will not be quiet until her righteousness goes forth
as brightness, and her salvation as a burning torch” (v 1). The blessings God
prepared for His people are too important and too wonderful to keep hidden.
The Epiphany season is about making
known this Good News. It’s about shining the brightness of this Good News into
a sin-darkened world and into sin-darkened lives, to the forsaken and the
desolate. And we have Good News! We have the Good News of a Savior who loves us
and forgives us, who knows about suffering and how to bring good from suffering.
For people who have their hearts burdened with the darkness of guilt and
regret, we have Good News of a Savior who has borne our sin and taken our place
on a cross because of that sin. We have the Good News of a Savior who not only
restores but restores completely.
We have the Good News of a Savior
who continues to seek out the forsaken and desolate and unites us to Himself
through His Word and Sacrament. Who makes you His own in Holy Baptism, adorning
you with His own righteousness and Name. In His Holy Supper, He pours out the
good wine, which is the new testament in His blood, given and shed for you for
the forgiveness of your sins and the strengthening of your faith. In each of
these means of grace, He continues to bring you this Good News: You are
forgiven for all your sins.
In the name of the Father and of the
Son and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.
Unless otherwise indicated, all Scripture quotations are from the
Holy Bible, English Standard Version, copyright © 2001 by Crossway Bibles, a
publishing ministry of Good News Publishers. Used by permission. All rights
reserved.
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