This blog is designed to help pastors preach with greater accuracy by connecting Christ-centered hermeneutics to homiletics. Preaching portions have ways of displaying theology which, in turn, create relevant messages for the Church. Those interested in Christ-centered preaching will observe numerous ways in which the Gospel fleshes out the interpretation and application of Scripture.
Thursday, December 27, 2012
Isaiah 65:17-25 Theology Through Visions of the Future
Isaiah 65:17-25 contains a wonderful picture of the new world God will create for His people to inhabit. Your theology will probably lock you into either a millennium or eternal state understanding of the description. But do not let those systematic categories detract from Isaiah's purpose. Long before Peter urges Christians to holy living in light of God's return, Isaiah does the same. The description moves back and forth between the new creation and marred creation. God knows that His children will read this description and desperately want to inhabit His new world. Isaiah 65:23 describes the type of person who will live there. Cf. Genesis 17:7 and Isaiah 53:10. This person was described repeatedly as God's "servants" in Isaiah 65:13-14. Isaiah is ending as he began: urging all professing Believers to give proof of their faith through obedience to the Word of God (the opposite of rebellion). The Gospel is prefigured in Isaiah 65:20. On the cross our Savior was the accursed sinner, dying the death we should have died. His death and resurrection life opens the door into God's new world for all who genuinely believe.
Friday, December 21, 2012
Isaiah 63:15--65:16 Theology in Isaiah's Prayer
As you near the end of Isaiah's Gospel, you discover a lengthy prayer (cf. Isaiah 63:15-19 and Isaiah 64:1-12 and Isaiah 65:1-16). This section functions much like the earlier section of Isaiah that read like a Psalm. So, Isaiah intends that God's people pray this prayer. I find it best to focus on the requests, the special relationship we have with God, the problem that gives rise to the requests, and the solution to the problem (cf Isaiah 64:4-5). The last section continues to carry Isaiah's intention forward: creating a righteous people ready for Christ's return. One unique feature of Isaiah 65:1-16 is that it contains God's answer to a very specific question (cf. the question in Isaiah 64:12 and God's answer in Isaiah 65:6). A saved remnant is hinted at in Isaiah 65:8. The repetition in Isaiah 65:13-14 is a strong call for every congregant to be sure they can be accurately identified by God as his "servants." Of course, the only way any of us can be identified as the servants of God is because God's Servant, our Lord Jesus Christ, took all our uncleanness upon Himself (cf. Isaiah 64:5-7) when He died on the cross for us sinners, when He literally "spread out" His hands for a rebellious people (cf. Isaiah 65:2).
Thursday, December 20, 2012
Monday, December 10, 2012
Isaiah 63:7-14 Theology In Isaiah's Psalm
Isaiah 63:7-14 reads like a Psalm of David and it functions like one, too. Isaiah's memories are designed to shape our own memories. We are to remember God's "steadfast love" (Isaiah 63:7-9); we're to remember our terrible tendency to spurn God's steadfast love (Isaiah 63:10). Finally, thankfully, God Himself (according to the ESV and KJV reading) remembers the time when He rescued His people. All that remembering is designed to lead God's people to put an end to their rebellion and their grieving "His Holy Spirit." Or, to use the language of Isaiah 63:14, the Psalm of Isaiah is designed to make sure all of us are being led by God. According to Romans 8:14, being led by the Spirit of God confirms that we belong to God. Paul can instruct his readers in Ephesians 4:30 to stop grieving the Holy Spirit because faith in Christ gives the desire and capacity to do so. Isaiah 63:9 previews the Gospel. Christ truly "was afflicted" on the cross and those who receive Him respond to His love by yielding to His Spirit.
Monday, December 3, 2012
Isaiah 62:11--63:6 Responding to Prophecy
One of the ways in which Isaiah 62:11-12 and Isaiah 63:1-6 function for the Church is by urging us to evaluate whether the future name of God's people ("The Holy People") is appropriate for us in part now. All along the study of Isaiah, Christians have been challenged to make sure a profession of faith is matched with corresponding holiness and righteousness. In Isaiah 63:1-6 the scene shifts from total deliverance to total destruction. It's a warning for any of us Christians. Despite our profession of faith, we do not want to be caught on "the day of vengeance" (cf. Isaiah 63:4) on God's bad side. So, this section provides the best news ever (Isaiah 62:11-12), the worst news ever (Isaiah 63:1-6), and leaves us readers with the decision to embrace the best news and so avoid the worst news. This means embracing the Savior pictured in this section. In Isaiah 63:3 the prophetic vision of our Redeemer shows Him stained with the blood of God's enemies, including those who were in church. There was a time in history, of course, where our Redeemer was stained with His own blood as He gave His life for us. Faith in Christ is the starting point for a holy life and assures us that on His Day we, too, can be called "The Holy People" (cf. also 2 Corinthians 7:1; Hebrews 12:14 to see the necessity of holiness-in-process).
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