Exploring My Strange Bible - The Meaning of Hope (Remastered)
Episode Date: December 2, 2025Hope is an important virtue that God’s people have actively cultivated for thousands of years. And the messianic hope we see throughout the Hebrew Bible is a kind of hope that followers of Jesus sti...ll need today. So what does this hope look like for us now as we wait for Jesus to return and fulfill all of the Bible’s promises? In this message from the Advent season, Tim explores a number of passages from the book of Isaiah, focusing on how what we hope for shapes what we live for.OFFICIAL EPISODE TRANSCRIPTView this episode’s official transcript.REFERENCED RESOURCESCheck out Tim’s extensive collection of recommended books here.SHOW MUSIC“Nob Hill Instrumental” by DrexlerSHOW CREDITSProduction of today's episode is by Lindsey Ponder, producer, and Cooper Peltz, managing producer. Aaron Olsen edited and remastered today's episode. JB Witty does our show notes. Powered and distributed by Simplecast. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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Hey, everybody. I'm Tim Mackey, and this is my podcast, exploring my strange Bible.
I am a card-carrying Bible history and language nerd who thinks that Jesus of Nazareth is utterly amazing
and worth following with everything that you have. On this podcast, I'm putting together the last
20 years worth of lectures and sermons where I've been exploring the strange and wonderful story
of the Bible and how it invites us into the mission of Jesus and the journey of faith.
And I hope this can all be helpful for you too. I also help start this thing called the Bible
Project. We make animated videos and podcasts and classes about all kinds of topics in Bible
and theology. You can find all those resources at Bibleproject.com. With all that said,
let's dive into the episode for this week.
All right, well, in this episode, we are going to explore a number of passages from the book of Isaiah in the Old Testament.
This was part of an Advent series, but it was kind of a standalone message.
The week before Christmas, kind of the culmination of Advent.
And it's a reflection on the meaning of hope in the Old Testament scriptures and the meaning of biblical hope.
and what a profound and important thing.
Hope is as a virtue, almost to cultivate.
It's something that God's people have to actively build and cultivate as they go throughout their lives.
And the hope for the Messiah in the Old Testament was a kind of hope that actually followers of Jesus
still need to be anticipating, even though that he's come and done the first main stage of his deal.
There's still a lot more yet to be fulfilled in the promise.
of his return. And so that's what we focus on, is how what you hope for shapes what you live for.
So there you go. Book of Isaiah, buckle up, and let's learn together.
So this is the eggnog that I grew up drinking. I've been grown up here in Portland, and this is, you know, part of the holiday season.
We're fans of eggnog in the room. Fans?
Fans?
Fans.
Anybody not a fan?
So one of the best names that I heard eggnog called this season, Simon,
spiked custard mucus, was it?
Yeah, there I go.
Spiked custard mucus.
I'll leave this isn't spiked, so anyhow, there you go.
So I'm going to just pour myself a sick helping here.
Frothy egg, nutmeg, sugar.
Just leave it right there.
Look at that, you guys.
That's a glass of eggnog.
Do you guys mind?
Do you guys mind here?
I picked a food illustration tonight
because I forgot to bring lunch today.
So, anyway, so there you go.
I've filled this cup half with eggnog.
So you would say this cup is what?
Half.
Okay, right, so most of you said full.
There was a minority among you who said,
empty. So
half full
and half empty. Now I'm kind of
being silly here. Really this was
just being excused to get to drink some egg nod
during this. But at the same time
this is kind of a well-known, it's like a little thought
experiment for determining personality
types, right? So a person who looks at this glass right
here and sees that it is half full, these are typically
called optimists, optimists, right?
Not optimist, that's transformer, Optimist Prime, right?
So optimists, they look at a situation and they look at the same set of facts and, you know, they see kind of the bright side of things, how things are likely to improve or to get better, to work out for the benefit of all or something.
They just tend, you know, that's how they see events going. That's how they interpret their circumstances.
People who identify the glass as half empty are typically called pessimists. So again, this is very broad generalities.
But in a pessimists, they look at the same set of circumstances,
and they see that things are going to be much more complex
than anyone realize things are likely not to work out.
Things are going to probably go worse than anybody expects,
especially for the pessimist, right?
Especially like for themselves.
So that's kind of the main, you know, way of distinguishing these two personality types.
Now, take it for one of this.
Probably some people are mixes of both,
But I think it's interesting.
And what's interesting also is I think this time of year
tends to accentuate people's personality types
towards optimism or towards pessimism.
Some of us love Christmas.
We love just the festivity and the cheer and the treats or whatever.
And we just like it.
And we enjoy being around our families or friends or whatever.
We like this kind of thing.
There are others of us who, for various different reasons,
this time of year, accentuates our pessimism.
And we kind of see through it all, superficial, just about buying presents or whatever.
But like, you've got to go be around your family, which you don't really like, you know, or whatever.
And there's different, for some of us, our personalities get accentuated this time of year.
Now, here's an interesting question, and we're going to look at tonight one of the most famous kind of Christmas passages in the Old Testament prophets.
And the passage raises the question here.
That's also why I have this little silly jar of eggnog in my hands.
Is it, say I'm a follower of Jesus, what is, what's the mindset that I should adopt?
What is the mindset that's the most consistent with what it means to be?
A Christian, optimism or pessimism.
What do you think?
Sounds interesting, isn't it?
It's actually not a very simple question to answer because you say, okay, pessimism, it seems, is off the table.
In the sense that there are many horrible things that happen in the world.
but our core confession as a community of Jesus is in a God who has come among us to identify,
participate in our suffering, and in our hardship, and to absorb the pain and the sin of the world
into himself and the cross and to conquer its power through his love and the resurrection from the dead.
It seems to me that to believe and to confess allegiance to that kind of God
means that if there's this is the being that can conquer death
through the power of his love and grace,
that ultimate pessimism is off the table, it seems to me.
But I would actually also argue that optimism
should be off the table too
in the sense that optimism is naive.
If we truly take to heart what the scriptures are telling,
both in the stories they tell, in the poetry and so on,
exploring the depths of just the brokenness, selfishness,
of the sinful human heart.
And it's not just the scriptures,
I mean, just look at human history or something.
We just, if you were over 12 years old,
you were born in the 1900s,
which means that you were, congratulations.
You were born in like the bloodiest,
most murderous century in all of human history.
You know, that's our legacy
as people born in the 20th century.
It doesn't seem like things are getting better.
And we have a week like we just had in our country, right,
where we have two, two acts, random, senseless acts of evil, right?
Two young men who, whatever the stories, we don't know the stories yet,
they succumbed to deep lies about themselves, about other people.
They took their own lives and a lot of other people's with them.
And this just happens.
evil just erupts in our world
and it doesn't seem to be getting better.
So it seems like optimism is naive
but pessimism is off the table
because of the reality of the gospel
in the resurrection of Jesus.
And so what the passage that we're going to look at
explore I think offers us a third way
and it's a way that takes into account
the realities of both.
It's what the biblical authors call hope.
Hope.
Biblical or Christian hope.
If I'm a Christian, I'm not an optimist or pessimist.
I'm a person of hope.
And hope is different than optimism.
It's different.
And this kind of was, this struck me a while back as I was reading a passage, it was
in an interview, it was in the Rolling Stone magazine, and I was with a guy named Cornell
West.
I don't know if you've heard of him.
He's a professor of religious studies, African American studies at Harvard.
And this is, I'm going to show you the section of the quote here.
I also want to show it to you because his hair is amazing, right?
So I want you to see his hair, too.
He says, optimism and hope are different.
Optimism tends to be based on the notion that there's enough evidence out there
that allows us to think that things are going to get better.
It's much more rational and it's deeply secular,
whereas hope looks at the evidence and says it doesn't look good at all.
but I'm going to make a leap of faith.
I'm going to go beyond the evidence in the attempt to dream new possibilities.
Hope is based on dreams that become contagious enough to allow us engage in heroic actions against the odds.
That is hope.
Now, I might, and you might quibble with a few different things of what he's saying.
What I thought was most interesting is his description of,
optimism as rational and secular and very different from any kind of religious hope based on
faith. And I think that resonates with the message of the scriptures. Because what he's saying
is optimism is based on my circumstances. If I can look at the evidence around me and I can
interpret it in a way that says, yeah, like things are likely going to go and improve, I can look at
my life circumstances, I can kind of see the movement towards things getting better and so on. That's
fine as far as it goes. But what do you do when there is no evidence the things are going to get
better, right? What do you do when the evidence of your life or the world around you
points exactly in the opposite direction? The things are not getting better. Things are getting
much, much worse. Where are you at then? And see, this is where I think a very robust,
profound view of Christian hope can stand on its own two legs, because Christian hope is not based
on my circumstances.
Christian hope is a vision of hope
that keeps my heart and my mind
alert and alive to what God is doing in the world,
and it has nothing to do with how well my life is going
or how well the world is going.
And it seems like it's that kind of hope
that we and our world desperately needs.
And it's the kind of hope explored
in the passage we're going to look at here tonight.
once you turn in your Bible's with me to the book of Isaiah
the book of Isaiah chapter 9
and that's right in the middle of your Old Testament
it might be one of those times you need to use your table of contents in your Bible
go for it no shame whatsoever
Isaiah 9 might take a second
so it'll allow me to imbibe
Isaiah chapter 9
and we're going to dive in in verse 1
we're exploring the nature of biblical hope.
Biblical hope.
Isaiah 9, verse 1.
But there will be no more gloom
for the one who was in anguish.
In the former times,
he brought into contempt
the land of Zebulun
and the land of Naftali.
But in the latter times,
he makes glorious the way of the sea,
the land beyond the Jordan,
Galilee of the nations.
All clear?
Right?
No, this is not clear, is it?
What on earth?
What's who?
So there's gloom, former time, latter time,
something to do with the land of Zevallon, whatever.
You're like, who is Zevallon?
Who would name their kid Zevallon?
You know what I'm saying?
Like, what on earth is happening here?
So this is a challenge, welcome to reading the ancient Hebrew prophets.
Right?
So you're kind of thrown in the midst of stories,
in poetry and you're like who what when where i don't know i don't know so that's okay so we're
going to stop from and reflect on who who what when where uh this book of poetry is a is a collection
that's connected to what prophet obviously isaiah so isaiah uh he comes on to the scene of israel
about halfway through the kingdom period israel's first uh well actually second but most famous
king of Israel, King David. Isaiah comes about 250 years after David. And so Isaiah's on the scene,
and he's on the scene at a pretty dark chapter in Israel's history. For the most part, the last
250 years and the couple hundred years that are to follow of David's kingdom, the Israelite
kingdom, they're dark years. Because Israel, on the whole, there are a few good kings, but not
very many. On the whole, Israel's kings and the people, they've abandoned the cover.
that they made with Yahweh, the God who redeemed them out of Exodus and so on, out of Egypt and slavery and so on, brought them into the land.
And so they said, the kingdom and the land and things are not going well.
The kings for the most part, they abandoned Yahweh.
They worship other gods.
So do the people, the kings and the people allow the very types of injustice and neglect of the poor, the very things that in the covenant they made with Yahweh at Sinai, they said they wouldn't do these things or allow these things.
It's precisely what they allow and what they do.
And so Isaiah's role in the book is to warn the people, to warn them.
First of all, to call them on the carpet for what they're doing,
to remind them that God rescued them by his grace out of Egypt and so on,
and that he calls them to obey the terms of the covenant.
And if they don't obey the terms of the covenant,
then this was the role of the prophets to warn the people
that Yahweh would give them over to the consequences of their judgment.
decisions and that Yahweh would allow various means of calling his people to justice and so on
for violating the covenant. In Isaiah's day, the decisions they were making were just steam rolling them
right into the face of the big bad empire in Isaiah's day. What's the big bad empire in Isaiah's
day? Almost. Almost. It's a good Bible trivia. That was a tricky question. I'm sorry. I shouldn't
have done that to you. So Assyria, Assyria is the big bad empire.
empire in Isaiah's day. And so what he's referring to here, if you look back down to verse one,
he's referring to an event that was taking place in his lifetime. The big bad nation of
Assyria was going to come and to bring into shame and contempt and to bring gloom on these
lands that we mentioned here, the land of Zebulun, the land of Naftali, and so on. What's he
talking about? It's actually, what he's talking about is an event that took place in his lifetime.
and that's talked about elsewhere in the Old Testament.
This is a bit of like biblical kind of history lesson or so on,
but it's crucial to make sense of what's happening in the passage.
This is the event that Isaiah is talking about.
It's recorded in 2nd Kings chapter 15.
The king of Assyria is going to come into the land of Israel
and just take out this northern region called Galilee that you see here.
So Isaiah lived in Jerusalem,
and the region to the north was called the region of Galilee.
And so this is the event that he sees.
on the horizon. During the reign of Pekha, king of Israel, the king of Assyria, Tiglas, Pilazer,
what his parents were thinking when they named him, no idea. So he attacked Israel again.
And he captured the towns of Ion, Avobath Makha, Yanoa, Kadesh, and Khatsoor. He also conquered
the regions of Gilead, Galilee, and all of Naftali. And he took the people to Assyria
as captives. Now look at some of the place names up there and look at Isaiah 9 verse 1. Do you see some
overlap there? Yeah, they were talking about the Galilee, the land of Naftali. This was the land
of where the tribes of Naftali and Zevloon were given their inheritance and so on. This was the
very region that the king of Assyria came, invaded, took over all the towns, annexed it,
and deported all of the Israelites who were living there. The equivalent in our day would be
like Canada.
So I don't know why it's funny.
But Canada gets aggressive for whatever reason.
They invade the state of Washington or something like that.
Why is this funny?
I don't know why it's funny.
It was funny at the last service, too.
So, I mean, really trying to manage it,
because this stuff happens in human history.
It still happens today.
One people group invades the land of another.
All of the population is deported.
You have aunts and uncles.
You have related extended family.
Gone.
They're gone.
They're deported. Just deported far, far away. You never see them again, ever.
This invasion of Assyria was what wiped most of the tribes of Israel off of the map of history till this very day.
This was one of the most tragic events to hit the people of Israel in their entire history.
And it's a result, Isaiah says, of their horrible decisions in abandoning Yahweh and faithfulness to Yah.
They're working out the consequences of their decisions.
And so, so yeah, in chapter 9, verse 1, Isaiah refers to this.
He says, in the former time, he, that is Yahweh, he let this land fall into shame and contempt and gloom.
But is that the end of the story?
Is that the last word?
What does he say?
That was in the past.
But what about the future?
He says, in the latter times, though, he's going to honor or make glorious,
this same exact region.
In other words, in Isaiah's day,
he sees that Israel's sin
has led to this region of Israel being devastated,
but that's not the final word.
When you're dealing with the God of the scriptures,
human sin and rebellion never gets the last word.
God's purpose to bless,
to save, and to restore always,
always gets the last word.
And so in the future,
in the latter days,
he's going to honor this same region of land.
And how?
How?
Let's keep reading.
Verse two.
The people who walked in darkness
have seen a great light.
Those who dwell in a land of deep darkness
on them a light has shined.
So Assyria kind of comes into the land
and devastates the land.
It's like somebody turned the lights off
and just things go pitch black.
Right?
And you can imagine what all these different Israelites
are thinking.
right? Where is God? What's God's
what's God's role in this
devastation? You know like
what is the habit is God asleep at the wheel
like what's happening? What about his promises to Abraham
and so on? Like where is God?
Where is God? The lights are turned out
but that's not the last word. He says
for those sitting in the darkness
a light is going to turn back on again
a bright light. What is the light?
What is it? When and what?
When's it going to happen to what?
it's going to be when Yahweh turns the lights back on again. And here, Isaiah just comes into his own
as a poet here. The metaphors, the images are just going to spill and stumble over one and another.
It's such a beautiful poem. Verse three, here's what it's going to be like. He says,
you've multiplied the nation and you've increased its joy. They rejoice before you like the joy
at the harvest, like people are glad when they divide up the spoil. So, so you're always going to
restore the nation and it's joy, and it's going to be like harvest time. So you, you know,
you plant your seeds in the spring, right, and you water, and you weight, and you weight, you work,
you tend to the ground, you weed, and so on, there's a lot of w's. I didn't think about that,
work, weed, water, weight, so on, right? And months, and months, and months, go by patience,
patience and then you begin to see your hope come into fruition and grow and then the harvest
time comes and you have it right you have your apples your olives or whatever it's so the joy that
you have seeing your hope fulfilled or it's joy i like this metaphor it's joy uh the characterizes
people when they divide up plunder so he's describing like soldiers who just won a battle and they're
stoke because they get all this free stuff right so or think of like pirates pirate booty and stuff like
that, you know, booty.
Again, why is that funny?
Pirates booty. Well, no, don't read into my words.
Come on.
All right.
So that's what it's like.
It's like harvest time.
It's like soldiers and pirates celebrating over the plunder.
Verse four.
Why?
Why?
Because the yoke of his burden, Israel's burden,
the yoke of his burden, the staff on his shoulder,
the rod of his oppressor, you have broken those things.
like on the day of Midian
and we're all like
oh yeah the day of Midian
yeah like that day
so he's referring to a well-known event
in Israel's story
this is the story of Gideon
in the book of judges
and his little band of 300
soldiers that overcomes
an army of tens of thousands and so on
with fire torches
and clay pops
it's a wonderful story
and so it was just like
when we were rescued from the Midianite oppressors way back in,
so Yahweh is going to deliver us from the yoke.
He uses this image of like the heavy wooden kind of U-shaped
or W-shaped thing that would set on the necks across the necks of cattle.
And then that would be attached to a plow.
And it's what you would use to harness the energy and so on.
This was the image of slavery in the ancient world.
It's like people having these things, people treated like animals
to benefit the well-being of the oppressor with others.
And Isaiah says, Yahweh is going to break the yoke of the oppressor,
shatter the rod and so on, like in the day of Midian.
Freedom. Freedom.
Verse 5.
For every boot of the trampling, every warrior in battle tumult,
every garment rolled in blood,
it will all be burned like fuel for the fire.
All of the boots and the clothes
that are stained with blood from oppression and war,
all of it done away with.
When Yahweh turns the lights back on.
It's very rich poetry here.
What's he getting at?
So there's some of you type A people who are like,
okay, that's really beautiful.
What's he talking about?
So what's he getting at?
When? What is it going to be?
verses 6 and 7 this is what all the images refer to here
some of you have this magnet on your refrigerator or something like that verse 6 and 7
it's a famous Christmas verse for to us a child is born
and to us a son is given
and the government will be upon his shoulders
and his name will be called
and so let's pause quickly here
so this is the
a child's going to be born
this is going
and his birth is going to mean
Yahweh turning lights back on
and joy at the harvest
and freedom from slavery
and an era of peace
from war and so on
a king
a royal child is going to be born
he's going to bear the government
on his shoulders
the rule and the kingdom
he's going to carry
and his name will be called
so he's going to be called all these
symbolic names. Now, if you've read the Old Testament any length, people get all kinds of crazy
sounding names, right? Like we read Tig Glass Pillazer and Zevaloon, whatever, but they're all,
they all have meanings in Hebrew, which character, it symbolizes their character, or their destiny,
or what they're called to do, and so on. So here are the symbolic names given to this royal king.
He's called Wonderful Counselor, which doesn't mean he's going to be a good therapist. He may be.
He may be. That's what counseled. That was a joke.
So counselor means that in American English.
That's not what it means in the scriptures.
So counselor is referring to strategy when it comes especially to military or political planning and so on.
He's a king.
He's a king.
And so he's wise and through strategy he's going to be able to accomplish great wonders.
He's a counselor of a planner of wonderful acts and feats of salvation and deliverance and so on.
He's a wonderful counselor.
What else will the child be called here?
Verse six, mighty God and everlasting father.
Okay, who is called by those two names?
I mean, look at the wrist.
The child is called mighty God.
And the son is called everlasting father.
What on earth here?
So Isaiah envisions that this child to be born
will be the very embodiment of Israel's God,
of his faithfulness, of his mercy,
of his mission to bless and to save, and so on.
This child will be the embodiment of the mighty God
and the father of eternity.
How much he grasped the depth of his poetry, right,
and how it would prove true?
We're not sure.
But it's very powerful, very powerful.
It will be the embodiment of Israel's God among his people.
And what's the last name that this son is given?
prince of peace
and if this is probably the one Hebrew word
you do know yeah peace
so shalom yeah shalom
and peace is a fine translation
it gets you about halfway there
so peace means the absence of conflict
in English
and shalom in Hebrew means the absence of conflict
but also the presence of a whole bunch of other things
namely unity
relational harmony
friendship and that
tight-knit communities
resulting in safety and security and abundance
and so on as Shalom.
He will be the prince of Shalom
because his reign will bring Shalom.
Verse 7. Of the increase of his government
and of peace, there will be no end.
On the throne of David,
he'll be a descendant of David,
and over his kingdom to establish it
and to uphold it with justice
and with righteousness.
He's going to set all wrongs right
from this time forth forevermore the zeal the passion of the Lord of hosts will do this amen
amen it's like his big crescendo here at the end it just picks up steam and so on this is what's
going to happen when Yahweh turns the lights back on he allowed Israel to be because of their
unfaithfulness covenant unfaithfulness their rebelliousness they're allowing oppression and
injustice these are the people Yahweh saved out of Egypt he gives them over
into the consequences of their sins
but not forever
he will restore and bring the king
he'll turn the lights back on and it will be
an era of shalom
and it will bring peace
and joy and freedom and so on
so powerful
to people again you know we laughed
when we think about Canada invading and so on
but just imagine yourself in this set of circumstances
Isaiah there's no reason for optimism
in Isaiah's day
and he just boldly sets out
this bright vision of hope.
Hope has nothing to do with their current circumstances.
It has to do with Yahweh's promises
to send a deliverer to bring blessing
to all the nations through the family of Abraham,
through a descendant of the family of Abraham.
That was God's promise.
He's going to fulfill it.
And that's a word of hope.
It's a word of hope.
Now, here's where things get really interesting, I think.
All right.
So we're a community of Jesus.
And one of the core confessions of the first, you know, followers of Jesus, right back to Jesus himself,
was that the Old Testament prophets, the stories are all pointing forward and meeting and finding their fulfillment in Jesus of Nazareth and what he accomplished in his life and death and resurrection and so on.
And so this passage, Isaiah chapter 9, it's a famous Christmas passage, especially verses 6 and 7, these meet their fulfillment in Jesus.
that's our confession, right, as a community of faith in Jesus.
And the New Testament gospel is actually make this very, very clear
that this is the claim that Jesus brought these promises to their fulfillment.
So just to be super clear, get us all on the same page here,
this happens very clearly in Matthew chapter 4,
just one of many examples, but you'll see why we look at it.
So Matthew chapter 4, just read with me.
When Jesus heard that John the Baptist had been arrested,
He left Judea, which is down near Jerusalem,
and he first went to Nazareth,
and then he left there and moved to Copernium,
you know, beside the sea of Galilee
in the region of Zevlin and of Naftali, hint, hint.
And as a reader steeped in the Old Testament scriptures,
you go, whoa, that's kind of crazy.
And then he just comes right out and says,
doesn't here? This fulfilled what God said through the prophet Isaiah. In the land of Zevalon
and in the land of Naftali, the words we just read here, in the land of Zevalon and of Naftali
beside the sea, beyond the Jordan River in Galilee of the Gentiles, the people who sat
in darkness have seen a great light, and for those who lived in the land of deep darkness,
a light has shined. And what is the light? When Yahweh turns the lights back on, what is it? What is it?
Matthew says, from then on, Jesus began to preach,
turn from your sins, the kingdom, the reign and rule of heaven, of Israel's God,
is near, it's arrived, it's here.
So Matthew's super clear, he just connects the dots for you,
that what Jesus returning to this very region
that was taken out by Assyria in the past,
This is a fulfillment of Isaiah's word
that in the future, God would honor this same region again
and use it as the staging ground for the bursting of hope
and the coming of the king to rescue his people.
So some of us, we kind of look at that and we're like,
well, that's so cool, how the Old Testament, New Testament come together,
and it unites, and so on.
And that is awesome.
This is a really cool aspect of the scriptures
and how the New Testament authors, they tell the story of Jesus always as he's continuing the story of Yahweh and Israel together and so on.
But there are a number of features here that actually are kind of surprising.
And to me, give us a deep insight into the nature of biblical hope.
So let's just kind of ask first off here, how long, how far in time is Jesus separated from Isaiah?
This is real Bible trivia.
that to any of you, right? So we're talking about 700 years here. Is this a long time? Yes, this is
quite a long time. This is a very long time. Seven hundred years, holy cow. So we read Isaiah 9 and
we're like, wow, it's so crazy because he's talking about like current day events and his day,
Isaiah's day. And then the next breath he's talking about this king to be born and so I'm like,
what? So how does all of this come together? Again, welcome to reading the ancient Hebrew prophets. So
maybe I'll kind of draw a little drawing here that I think will illustrate what's happening
here in Isaiah 9, but it happens all over the Hebrew prophets.
So let's say this is Isaiah, right?
And I'm sorry I lost my really crisp black marker.
Can you guys see there?
Brown?
Is that okay?
How about the balcony?
Hey guys done?
Somebody give me a, okay, thumbs up.
All right, thanks.
So let's say this is Isaiah here.
And, of course, he's a Bible guy, right?
So he always has to get a beard.
He would also fit in in Portland, right?
So there you go.
All right.
So let's say we have some hills in the foreground here.
Let's say Isaiah is looking out at a grand kind of mountain scene here.
And he can see hills in the foreground.
But then in the back, you know, let's say he's looking at Mount Hood or something, big Mount Hood,
A little snowy cat there.
Okay.
So, and maybe some of you have, like, seen a view similar to this, looking at Mount Hood, right?
So you can go east to Portland, go to Sandy or something, you get the valley going up to the mountain.
And it's very, obviously, these are breathtaking views and so on.
It's a very grand kind of picture that you see.
Now, can you tell, you can obviously tell these hills in the foreground, they're closer than the big mountain behind that, right?
Yeah.
Yes, we're on the same page there.
But precisely how far, when you have this vantage point from Sandy looking up to Mount Hood,
how far exactly is this hill from that hill and that one from that one and that one from now?
It's actually very difficult, isn't it, when you're looking on a broad landscape there
to discern the precise mileages between the different hills and so on.
But you can definitely tell what's in front of you and what's behind that.
And so this is kind of like what it was happening when we're reading Isaiah chapter 9.
Isaiah sees right in the foreground.
This would be my little action comic pow here.
So disaster, right, of Assyria, right?
The empire of Assyria come and invade Israel.
Disaster strikes in Isaiah's lifetime.
But because of what Isaiah knows about God's promises to Abraham, God's promises to David,
he knows that this cannot be the final word.
And so he holds out this vision of hope,
a very bold vision of hope,
of a coming Davidic king.
So again, forgive my little silly cartoons.
A coming king.
And does the king come after the disaster?
Answer?
Yes.
Precisely how far?
Well, that's not the point of this poem.
The point of this poem is not to give you a timeline
or something like that.
The point of the poem is to tell you something about God's character, that God's promises
can be trusted. He's going to fulfill his promises to David, to Abraham, to redeem, and
to save, no matter what to the present circumstances look like. There's no ground for optimism
in the present, only hope in God's character and his promises. It's the first part of biblical
hope. But we know that things aren't going to be this simple as they play out in history, right?
And so let's say we were to turn this drawing sideways and get another vantage point at it.
Let's say Isaiah is now looking this way.
And so as we watch the events of history kind of play out the fulfillment,
because we know there's 700, at least 700 years in between the two of these here.
And so we can see there are certain events right here, right, on the foreground.
There's certain events, big mountains.
Sorry, my pen's not the best tonight.
And so here's our snowy mountain, and so we can see, yes, immediately, pow, right?
And then way, way back here is the coming of the king.
And yes, oh, we begin to catch a vision of how far separated these events are, 700 years.
So this, I think, raises a question, and it's a question that I just really want us to stare at,
the nature of biblical hope.
because hope is, yes, it's based in God's promises,
but biblical hope is also about trusting in God's freedom
and God's creativity
for how exactly he's going to fulfill his promises.
And the reality is the story of the people of Israel
and the story of the people who profess allegiance to this God
is that this history is not easy for God's people.
You read the book of Psalms, and it's full of people,
beating on God's chest going, how long, how long?
And they're not joking around.
They're really serious,
because they're watching, in their own days,
whatever poets you read in the book of Psalms,
they're watching evil erupt in their own day.
And they're wondering, where is God?
It's like, the lights are turned out, and where is God?
Where is it?
Is there a reason to hope in moments like that?
And the promises, God's promises, say yes.
Biblical hope says yes,
but we can't assume that the fact that God is going to be faithful to his promises
means that I can then presume to tell God how he ought to fulfill them in his timeline and so on.
This is the wrestling match of God's people throughout history.
And the timeline is very difficult.
Do you want to wait 700 years?
That's difficult for us to swallow.
And that's okay.
That's what the book of Psalms is for in the Bible.
To legitimate the struggle and the tension of holding on to hope in God's promises
when it looks like I have no reason for optimism in the present.
And the timeline is just, we're just getting started here.
Look at, go back to Isaiah 9 with me.
Look at verses 6 and 7.
And this is, I think, where it gets really, really profound.
So Matthew just told us that Jesus coming into the region of Galilee, announcing the kingdom and so on,
it was the beginning of the fulfillment of these promises.
Look down at verse 6 and 7.
Can you think of how Jesus, did Jesus fulfill these promises in any kind of straightforward way?
So a kingdom of justice and peace forever and ever.
justice and righteousness, the end of all war, and so on.
It's okay to say yes, or to say no, to say no.
Well, I guess depending on your opinion.
So it does not seem like Jesus fulfilled these promises in any kind of straightforward way.
What's going on here?
What made Jesus so scandalous to his contemporaries was not that he claimed to be the Messiah.
It was that he claimed to be the Messiah, but the kinds of things that he would.
was doing did not fit the expectation that people had.
So Isaiah 9 tells us that when this king is born
that the yoke and the burden of the oppressor,
that the power of the enemy is going to be shattered.
So did Jesus come and trounce on the enemy?
What big bad enemy did people think Jesus was going
to come trounce on if he said he was the Messiah?
Rome, this is a big bad empire
in Jesus' day, right? And just the long history of empires over Israel in those 700 years,
from Assyria to Rome to Persia, right, to Greece, to, excuse me, well, whatever, you get the
point, right? It was a lot of empires, right? There's a lot of empires leading up to Rome
in Jesus' day. It was just a whole line of empires. And Jesus didn't set his target on
anybody in Rome. But Jesus did very clearly set his target on the,
enemy. But he claimed and believed he was doing battle with in those years. He was going around
Galilee, announcing that Yahweh is becoming king again. And what enemy is that? So it's the enemy
that he told his followers to pray that we would not fall into the temptation of the lies of
of evil.
This personal, mysterious, dark force, the New Testament calls this being by many different names,
the Satan, the accuser in Hebrew, right?
The diabolical one.
And so we kind of play this off or whatever.
It's hard for us for many of us to kind of get this or whatever,
because we still have the image of somebody wearing red tights and holding a fork or something.
Look at that, whatever.
What the Bible is trying to tell us is so profound.
about the nature of evil in our world.
And it's not like, oh, the devil may be do it or something.
The fact that evil, the most consistent name that evil is given,
this being is given in the scriptures, is the accuser or the liar.
And it's this mysterious force at work among humanity lying to us
about who we are, about who God is, about who other people are.
and it's the random, senseless, tragic way
that humans give in to the enemy
and give in to those lies.
And it results in these tragic eruptions of evil.
Guys, whatever the story is of what happened
with these two young men in the last week or so,
somewhere involved in that story
is about those two young men believing deep lies about themselves
and others of giving in to those
in a way that there's no hope
and they become vehicles of what the Bible
calls evil.
And we're naive to think that this is going to change
just on its own. If humanity is left to its own devices
because it just keeps happening
and it's so destructive and it's so random.
And Jesus very clearly said
that was his target.
target. The powers of evil was his target. Because he believed that if you hit that enemy
that is destroying human beings made in the image of God, if you can destroy that enemy
and find a way to renew and restore the human heart and mind through God's power, through God's
grace and new life, then you've really begun to bring something worthy of being called
salvation in the human story. And so Jesus goes around announcing the reign of the kingdom of God
and that he is bringing it to bear and that this is his enemy. And he includes tax collectors and
prostitutes among this community of the forgiven. Those among who Jesus' grace and forgiveness of them
is defeating and conquering that evil and bringing new life inside of them. This is what is the
like to read the Gospels.
And did Jesus, did he,
he clearly is announcing a kingdom
and he has this target on an enemy.
What about this whole stuff about
the throne and so on?
Was Jesus ever recognized as the king?
So think, look at verse,
look at verse 6.
The government will be upon his shoulders.
Did Jesus ever take the government
upon his shoulders?
You bet he did.
Yeah, you bet he did.
He took a Roman execution rack on his shoulders.
And the climactic point of every single one of the Gospels,
Matthew, Mark, Luke, John, Jesus is recognized as a king.
He gets a robe, right?
He gets a crown.
He gets a scepter, and he's exalted, and he's lifted up.
In the Gospel of John, Jesus says, I will be lifted up.
It's the language of exaltation and enthronement on the cross.
And so what each of the gospel,
The Gospels is saying is this surprising, unexpected way that the God of Israel, the God of the
Scriptures, is fulfilling his promises. Not only is the timeline surprising to us, but the actual way
that he is fulfilling the promises. This is how the kingdom of God is coming. It's this upside-down
value system of the kingdom of God, where God wins by giving up his life, right? He conquers by
losing because his love is stronger than even the strongest weapon that the enemy of evil has in
its hands, death. Let death do its worst on the son of God. And this creator's love is more
powerful than death. This is the surprising way that Jesus takes the throne of David.
This is the surprising way that Jesus creates a pathway for shalom in people's lives.
who saw this coming
and you can say
well you could read a little further
in the book of Isaiah
and you can to chapter 53
and you'd get this image
of a suffering servant figure
whose death would bring life to others
but almost nobody in Jesus' day
put together that the Messiah
would have this vocation
Jesus was the one who put this together
he saw that this was how
God was going to conquer evil
and this was a surprising way
that God fulfilled his promise
The Humble King, right?
We're going to sing about next week.
The Humble King.
He wins by losing.
I guarantee none of us would have thought of this plan.
You know what I'm saying?
So like, you know, like no-name guy born
Poh-Dunk Hill Country Town.
He has like a band of fishermen and prostitutes
and he gets executed by the Romans.
That's a plan.
You know what I'm saying?
Like, okay, here we go.
Like, what?
How is, but that is the surprise,
this is God's freedom?
in God's creativity to fulfill his promises.
And Jesus will ultimately and finally set things right in justice and righteousness
and bring in a kingdom of peace and shalom.
But we don't have to, it's not like it hasn't begun yet.
The claim of the Gospels is that it has already begun right here.
Okay.
If this is true in the broad sweep of history, the biblical hope is,
about trusting God's promises, but also trusting in God's creativity and freedom to fulfill
these promises in surprising, unpredictable ways to me. What does this mean for us? And how is this
a word of God for us? As individuals or as a community? So there might be some, I said this earlier
here. Like Christmas is actually not the cheeriest time. I eventually got really tired of like being around
churches during Christmas, and nobody ever acknowledged that Christmas is actually really difficult
for a lot of people. There are many of us who are not very cheery this time of view. There's lots of
us who we feel, where our lives feel like this, and we're precisely with the Israelites wondering
like, where is God again? And like somebody turned out the lights. And it might be your life
circumstances. It might be, for some of us, this Christmas comes,
And this is going to be a Christmas where we are remembering loss in a very deep and profound way.
Maybe for the first time this year.
There might be some of us.
We're not looking forward to being with our families.
And, you know, because it just reminds us of how screwed up we are whenever we revert into third grade mode or something when we get around them.
And it just, right, it makes us sad and it's difficult.
There's lots of us for whom that's true.
There are others of us for whom we love it.
and we get to be around family
and we love every part of it
we're telling the story
and egg dog and everything
and so that's great
just accept that as a gift
whether your circumstances are awesome
whether your circumstances are horrible
biblical hope
can stand on its own two legs
no matter what the circumstances are
because it's not optimism
and so there may be some of us
we're just we're in this like
valley shadow land
wondering like
where is God? How is he going to fulfill his promises to me? Is he even in my, I can't hear him
anymore? Like, where is God? Where is God? Don't tell me you haven't been there. And I know there's a
bunch of us who are here right now. It's just, I hear your stories throughout the week.
And that's an important part of the journey as we follow this God. I mean, it's just built
in to the package, as it were. That's why the book of Psalms is there in the scriptures.
Jesus was not thrilled in the Garden of Gisemone about what was about to happen.
He actually said he wished, I don't want this to happen, I don't want it, I don't want.
And there's a lot of us who are right there.
But see, here's the paradox of how God fulfills his promises.
This is precisely in those dark moments where we feel like God has turned out the lights.
And yes, it's great trust in God's promises or whatever.
What does that mean for me right now?
the power of the God, the power of this way of God becoming king
and of initiating the kingdom is that this is where God meets us
and the cross is Jesus going to the valley with us.
The cross is Jesus experiencing the absence of God's presence
and wondering where, where is God?
It's God crucified.
It's God being God forsaken.
That's the paradox of the cross.
And this is the core of biblical hope.
It's God's working out his salvation in our lives in a way that might surprise us.
We wouldn't have anticipated.
Many of us would not prefer that it happened this way.
But the promise of the gospel is that in the cross, Jesus meets us in the dark valleys
where we're waiting for God to turn the lives back on.
And he will.
He will.
That's his promise.
But it may take place in a time and in a way that we cannot predict.
how many of us need to hear that word of hope
it's precisely the kind of hope offered us in Isaiah 9
so as we go into our time of worship tonight
and we come to the bread in the cup
I mean the bread in the cup is such a perfect way
to think about what the birth of the humble king is leading towards
it's because this is the moment where God fulfills his promises to us
in a profound but surprising way.
And so there might be some of us
who we need to come to the table
and take the bread and the cup
to remind ourselves of the cross
and to ask Jesus to make himself real to us
as we're in the valley,
as we're in the dark shadow lands.
And there might be some of us
who just need to celebrate
in the gift of grace and of life tonight
as we come to the bread and the cup.
I'm not sure.
But this is the vision of hope
that's offered us
in the scriptures.
God's promise is his creativity
and his freedom
to work out as salvation in our lives
in ways that we cannot predict.
You guys, thank you for listening to exploring my Strange Bible podcast.
We're going to explore new, awesome things in scriptures together
in future episodes, so we'll see you next time.
Thank you.
