Good Morning All,
Isaiah
40:1; “Comfort, comfort my people, says your God.”
Comfort is something that we all seek and
need occasionally. We use this word in
many different ways. We want to wear our
jeans in comfort. We want to wear our
shoes in comfort. We like to work in an
atmosphere of comfort. When we are sad,
we want comfort. When we are afraid, we
want comfort. We even have comfort
food.
When we look at the Old Testament,
especially Isaiah, we read a lot about comfort.
Our verse for today is among one of the better-known verses. “Comfort, comfort my people”; but what does
this mean? Is God giving us a good pair
of jeans and some meatloaf? There are
some out there who would think that way.
But this phrase has far more power than that.
When Isaiah talks about comfort, he is
talking about being restored. So, when
Isaiah speaks of comfort for the people, he is telling them that Israel will be
restored. After the Babylonian captivity
is done; Israel, specifically Jerusalem, will be restored. The beautiful city will be restored, and the
Temple will be as well. This is what the
captives long for. They want to return
to Jerusalem to the restored city. All
they remember is that as they are marched off into captivity is that the city
was burning and in utter ruin. They
dreamed of the day when it was restored to its original shine and luster.
So how does this affect us? We certainly are not waiting for Jerusalem to
be restored. What does this mean to us
and why should we even find joy in this statement? What it means to us means that God’s promise
of restoration applies to us as well.
Not to the land and Jerusalem but to God’s holy family. We see this story not as land but as faith.
We were taken off into the captivity of
sin. Think of when Adam and Eve left the
Garden of Eden, how sad that must have been.
They were leaving behind a place of perfection and total joy and they
were leaving because of what they had did (sinned) and because of what they did
not do (have faith). They must have been
crushed and burdened with the weight of knowing what they had and that they so
carelessly threw it away. So, through
them, we gained a life full of pain, sorrow, sadness. These are the burdens of sin in our
life. We are saddled with pain, fear,
sorrow, loneliness; all that stuff that makes life so unpleasant.
There was and is nothing we can do to
change this; so, God did. By having
Jesus take our place and receive the punishment that we deserve; we are
restored. We are restored double for our
sin. We receive more restoration than we
have sinned. The restoration is
accomplished. We live with the promise
of the final restoration at Judgment day.
We wait eagerly for that day.
But until then, we can live knowing that
God is comforting us; he is restoring us to his family. Even as we keep falling away, he keeps
restoring us in double fashion. Even as
the pain and suffering of this world tries to beat us down; God restores us to
his family. We can take comfort in our
restoration for it is when we see that we are truly God’s children that we can
take refuge and comfort in Him.
Dearest
Father, you have restored us to your family.
We live with the knowledge and comfort of your restorative love. Give us the certainty of this hope and the
certainty of our salvation. In Jesus’
precious name we pray, amen.
God’s
Peace,
Pastor
Bret
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