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Friday Dec 20, 2024
Sermon from December 18, 2024
Friday Dec 20, 2024
Friday Dec 20, 2024
Sermon for December 18, 2024
Based on Psalm 85 - Psalm for the Third Sunday in Advent
Let us pray: Let the words of my mouth and the meditation of our hearts be acceptable in Your sight, O Lord, our Rock and our Redeemer. Amen. (Psalm 19:14)
(You are encouraged to open up your Bible or Hymnbook to Psalm 85 and follow it, together with me. It is the psalm for the Third Sunday of Advent.)
Many think that Psalm 85 was written after the Babylonian captivity of God’s Old Testament people, the Jews. They had been sinful and rebellious and were worshipping false gods, and God finally allowed the Babylonians to destroy Jerusalem and the temple and carry many people away to Babylon, where some had been captives now for as long as about 70 years.
God had then allowed new leaders to take over Babylon, who permitted the Jews to return to their homeland of Israel. They could say, as the first three verses of Psalm 85 say: “Lord, You were favorable to Your land; You restored the fortunes of Jacob. You forgave the iniquity of Your people; You covered all their sin. You withdrew Your wrath; You turned from Your hot anger.”
God had helped and forgiven and given grace and favor to His people again and again in the past. And now he was giving them His blessing once again in setting them free from captivity. As God had promised through the prophet Jeremiah earlier, “I will satisfy the weary soul, and every languishing soul I will replenish” (Jeremiah 31:25).
Unfortunately, things did not go as expected. Many Jews chose to stay in Babylon or go to other places. Of those who returned to Israel, things were difficult. The people now in control of the land did not want these Jews to come back. We read in the Book of Ezra, “The people of the land discouraged the people of Judah and made them afraid to build and bribed counselors against them to frustrate their purpose” (Ezra 4:4).
It was hard, and the Jews began to focus on themselves and their own survival and forgot the Lord who had rescued them and wanted them also to help rebuild the walls of Jerusalem and especially their house of worship, the temple. We hear this report in Nehemiah, Chapter 1: “The remnant there in the province who had survived the exile is in great trouble and shame. The wall of Jerusalem is broken down, and its gates are destroyed by fire” (Nehemiah 1:3).
And the Lord God had to speak through the prophet Haggai, saying, “Thus says the Lord of hosts: These people say the time has not yet come to rebuild the house of the Lord... Is it a time for you yourselves to dwell in your paneled houses (meaning that the houses were getting pretty nice and fancy) while this house (of the Lord) lies in ruin?… Consider your ways. You have sown much and harvested little… My house lies in ruin while each of you busies himself with his house. Therefore, the heavens above you withheld the dew, and the earth has withheld its produce. And I have called for a drought on the land” (Haggai 1:2-11). (Notice in the psalm where what is good comes from, in v. 11-12, also, as we will soon hear again - from above.)
The Jewish people finally woke up and realized that only the Lord God could turn things around for them and help them. They cried out for that help and mercy with words like those of our psalm in verses 4-7: “Restore us again, O God of our salvation, and put away Your indignation toward us! Will You be angry with us forever? Will You prolong Your anger to all generations? Will You not revive us again, that Your people may rejoice in You? Show us Your steadfast love, O Lord, and grant us Your salvation.”
The words in v.4, ”Restore us again,” literally mean, “Turn us again, O God of our salvation.” We can’t get this all straightened out on our own. You are going to have to come and help us. And the words in v.6, “Will You not revive us again?” mean that we know that we faint and fail on our own, at times - isn’t that true of all of us, even in our own day? - and that we really need the Lord to lift us up and forgive and save us so that we may rejoice in Him.
God did help a remnant of His Old Testament people, and eventually, the walls of Jerusalem were repaired, and the temple was rebuilt, and people were kept in faith in the Lord and His promises. There were lots of ups and downs as time went on, too. There was a time when some people drifted so far from the Lord that He said, through the prophet Amos, “Behold, the days are coming when I will send a famine on the land - not a famine of bread, nor a thirst for water, but of hearing the Words of the Lord” (Amos 8:11).
The Word of God was still readily available in the Old Testament, but few people were listening to it, and there were no new messages from the Lord Himself between the end of the Old Testament and the beginning of the New Testament.
But the rest of our psalm is really a prophecy of what God would do in the future, beginning with the event we will celebrate in about a week, the sending and the birth of His own Son, Jesus.
The psalmist says in v.8 of our psalm, “Let me hear what God the Lord will speak, for He will speak” - and He did speak and act for us most clearly in Jesus Christ. The New Testament Book of Hebrews begins, “Long ago, at many times and in many ways, God spoke to our fathers by the prophets, but in these last days He has spoken to us by His Son" (Hebrews 1:1-2) - true God, conceived from the power of the Holy Spirit (Matthew 1:20) - “holy, the Son of God” (Luke 1:35) and yet true man, born of the virgin Mary (Matthew 1:21-23). When He was born, “His salvation was near,” as v.9 of our psalm says, “that glory might dwell in Him, in our land, on our earth.” And “He would speak peace” to us and all His people, as v.9 says. As the multitude of angels announced to the shepherds, praising God and saying at His birth, “Glory to God in the highest and on earth peace among those with whom He is pleased” (Luke 2:13-14).
And how are people, including us, pleasing to God? Only through Jesus Christ as our Savior and what he has done for us. In our psalm, in v.10, we hear that “Steadfast love and faithfulness” are personified, “meeting together,” together with “righteousness and peace,” who “kiss each other.” Only in Jesus, true God and true man, are these qualities combined together in a perfect way, in Jesus and what He did for us, in His perfect life, and sacrificial death for us, and His mighty resurrection from the dead.
I don’t think you want to be here all day, but we could look at Scripture after Scripture describing these qualities lived out in Jesus for us. The psalmist says in v.12, “Yes, the Lord will give what is good,” and it came to us, James writes, not from ourselves, but “every good gift and every perfect gift is from above, coming down from the Father… Of His own will He brought us forth (to a whole new and eternal life) by the Word of God and through the Word made flesh, our Lord Jesus (James 1:17-18).
Or as our Psalm says in v.11, “Righteousness looks down from the sky,” not from us, and “the Lord will give what is good, in Christ “our Righteousness” (Jeremiah 23:6 and 33:8,14-16). And as v.13 of the psalm says, “Righteousness will go before Him,” before Christ, in and with Him, and make His footsteps a way - in fact, the way to eternal life. As Jesus said, “I am the Way and the Truth and the Life. No one comes to the Father except through Me” (John 14:6). And as John wrote in his Gospel, “The Word became flesh and dwelt among us, and we have seen His glory, glory as of the only Son from the Father, full of grace and truth… For from His fullness we have all received, grace upon grace… Grace and truth came through Jesus Christ. No one has ever seen God; the only God (God the Son) who is at the Father’s side, He has made Him known” (John 1:14-18).
Finally, note that there is one strong word of warning in this psalm, at the end of v.8: “But let them not turn back to folly.” We are only foolish if we stop hearing what the Lord speaks in His Word and seeing the peace we have alone in Christ and His forgiveness and knowing the peace He brings to us in the Lord’s Supper, as well, that we will receive in a few moments.
So, we keep praying, with the psalmist, also: “Restore us, keep turning us again to You, O God of our salvation,” and “revive us,” strengthening us always with Your steadfast love in Christ. Amen.
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