Tuesday, December 8, 2015

SUPER. NATURAL

                                                             Isaiah 35:1-10                                                               
One year from now we will know who will be the next President of the United States.  Some will be excited and hopeful while others fearful.  Seven years ago our current president promised Hope and Change.  Some are happy about the change and others not.  My purpose is not to raise a political issue, but to illustrate that placing hope in anyone or anything, other than God, is False Hope.

Advent is four weeks focused on the Hope of the One who came and promises to come again. The Advent Candles remind us of the hope of the Prophets.  Isaiah 35 is a message of hope, an oasis between the wasteland of chapters 1-34 and 36-39, which are messages of judgment, on all nations including Israel and Judah and a history of war and sickness, for rejecting God.

God Never Allowed His People to Go Without Hope or Comfort.
The same is true for us.  God Will Never Leave Us Without Hope.
When our hands are feeble, and our knees give way.
When our hearts are filled with fear-Disease, Death, Age. 
God says: Be strong, do not fear, I will Come, AM With You!

                                                                     As time drew near for the Israelites to return to their homeland after being held as captives for 48 years in Babylon, it was important for them to remember the lessons of their ancestors.  The coming Exodus would be greater than the first when they were liberated from Egypt.  Inspired by the Holy Spirit, in chapter 34, Isaiah exhausts the picture of a stricken earth, shrouded in smoke from the smoldering ruins, haunted by wild beasts, empty of all human life, the stench of the slain, clinging to the very soil drenched with rotten death. In Contrast, Chapter 35, One passes from a sense of despair to hope, thanksgiving, beauty and joy, “oracle of divine redemption.”   The homecoming would be glorious, traveling on the Kings Highway.  God’s Coming makes the desert blossom.  The King’s Highway would take the pilgrims from the desert of suffering to Jerusalem.  The way was found only by following God.   The theme of this Advent is Super. Natural. In this week’s Devotional:  Sign, note that God doesn’t simply point the way.  God is the Way and always beside us.   The One we anticipate during Advent said: I AM the Way, I AM With You!

 QUESTION:  What pressures are causing your hands and knees to tremble?  How might the message of verse 4 bring strength to you?  When you were ready to “give up,” how did God come to you?   

PRAYER:  Gracious God, I put myself before you with a waiting heart and expectant desire.  Open my eyes that I may see your promise fulfilled; open my ears that I may hear your word whispered to my deepest being.  Strengthen my hands and trembling knees while I await your coming anew. 
 
 
 

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