Sermon Tone Analysis

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God Calls...
Over the last 10 weeks, we have covered a lot of ground, moving through the Old Testament… remember way back in September?
We started at the beginning - with Genesis… and we were reminded of the Original Goodness of creation.
And then we traced how this good God who made a good creation has continued on in that goodness, even when things got more complicated, even when humans chose badly.
God has remained a God who blesses, bringing good out of a broken world, and out of humanity’s broken faithfulness… we saw this as we encountered the father & son duo of Abraham & Isaac, ascending the hill without the sacrifice.
When Rebekah did what she thought must be done in regards to her sons Jacob & Esau, even then God managed to bring blessing out of it.
And then with Moses at the burning bush and in the provision of the manna & quail to the Israelites, we saw God’s blessing take the form presence and provision.
Then for the last few weeks, we have shifted to look at the God who calls, seeing that call on prophets & kings… the prophet Samuel and then King David, King Solomon and then the prophet Elijah.
For the final two weeks of our fall series, we see how God called through the prophets - for justice, as we saw last week with Amos.
And now this week, we will see God’s call for the people to remember that the reign of a righteous king will bring hope and joy.
Today is the last Sunday in the church calendar.
Next Sunday, we begin a new cycle as we enter into Advent once again.
As we prepare for the Incarnation, as we ready ourselves as best we can to celebrate the birth that changes everything.
But this week, we pause before we enter the cycle of Advent, before we begin a new church year, to remember the end of the story… to remind ourselves of the bigger context of the whole story, before we get caught up in the events in Nazareth & Bethlehem all those centuries ago.
Isaiah 9 is likely a familiar text, some of it might have you humming bits of Handel’s Messiah, or you might think of this as one of the traditional Advent texts, which it is.
But today we will read it from the vantage point of a different place in the calendar.
Today, we will first read it - or seek to listen to it - with the context of its original hearers.
Last week, we heard the prophet Amos address the northern kingdom and we mentioned that it was a time of relative peace and prosperity.
This week, we hear Isaiah address the southern kingdom of Judah.
Assyria has already conquered two of the northern tribes, and Judah rightly wonders if they’re next.
Isaiah will speak of the hope of a new king.
A hope rooted in the present so securely, that it is written in what English translations can only render as past tense.
Hebrew works a little differently than English, but here the past tenses of this text as confidence in the reality they describe.
There is more going on than just what Judah can see.
There is a king coming…and that will change things.
Everything, really.
But I’m getting ahead of myself.
Neil, will you come and read for us?
Scripture Reading: Isaiah 9:2-7
The people walking in darkness
have seen a great light.
Those dwelling in the land of death’s shadow --
light has beamed on them.
You have made great the nation
and heightened its joy.
They rejoiced before You
as joy in the harvest,
as people exalt
when they share out the spoils.
--
For its burdensome yoke
the rod on its shoulders,
the club of its oppressor --
You smashed, as on the day of Midian.
For every boot pounding loudly
and every cloak soaked in blood
is consigned to burning, consumed by fire.
For a child has been born to us,
a son has been given to us,
and leadership is on his shoulders.
And his name is called wondrous councillor,
divine warrior, eternal father, prince of peace,
making leadership abound and peace without end
on the throne of David and over his kingdom
to make it firm-founded and stay it up
in justice and righteousness, forever more.
The zeal of the Lord of Armies shall do this.
There is more going on than just what Judah can see.
Have you ever walked in darkness… lived your life without knowledge of some of your own reality, only to discover along the way that there was more going on than you realized?
If you are in the dark, if you literally or figuratively cannot see something, that doesn’t make it any less there.
It is your awareness that is lacking.
Not the thing itself.
This can happen in both negative and positive ways, we might be fearful in the dark, but when the light comes on, we realize we were safe all along.
Or, we might discover that we have unknowingly been under threat all this time.
When a candle is lit or the flashlight is turned on, NOTHING IS CHANGED.
Whatever was there in the dark is still there now.
But the light brings awareness, clarity.
Now I can see the enemy.
Now I can also see that God has been present.
That God was there, even in the dark.
Judah has been walking in darkness.
God’s people - the northern & southern kingdoms - have had their hopes dashed a number of times.
Their hope in how a monarchy will be better than the judges.
Their hope that they will be able to ward off the threats from Assyria and elsewhere.
There is an international military criss threatening… and of course that threat feels worse in the dark.
The enemy is there, but in the dark, it’s also harder to defend yourself, harder to assess what’s going on...
But the text tells us that the people walking in darkness, the people living their lives without the ability to see the threats for what they are, have seen a great light.
Dawn has come.
Now, as I mentioned earlier, the verb tense here in the english is trying to express the Hebrew idiom of expressing something that may or may not have happened yet, but that is so certain to happen that it can be imagined as complete.
Alec Motyer writes:
The darkness and distress are real but they are neither the only reality nor the fundamental reality.
In any given situation we can either sink into despair or rise to faith and hope.
Isaiah insists that hope is part of the constitution of the here and now.
Hope is not just a future-oriented thing.
It looks at present realities with an alternate reading.
This dark?
There’s more to it.
There is more going on than just what Judah can see.
Even though the threat of Assyria is real, God is still at work.
God’s promise is still being kept and even being fulfilled.
Darkness is becoming light.
The dawn is so sure to come, that Isaiah can speak about it as a completed action.
God will act.
God has acted.
God is acting.
So, the first image we see in this text is that of darkness become light.
And , quite naturally, JOY follows.
Two spheres of joy - harvest and plunder.
Harvest joy - this is when we come through all the unknowns and challenges of a growing season only to know that the harvest is safely in and stored.
We will have food for the winter.
The threats and storms have passed and all is “safely gathered in” as the hymnwriter puts it.
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