12-6-20 Grace-Benson & Vail Sermon

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December 6, 2020. Isaiah 40:1-11 Sermon. Grace-Vail, Grace-Benson. James was desperate to get the sliver out of his big toe, and when he did, he breathed a sigh of relief. Then his wife asked, “Aren’t you going to do something about your broken foot?” John figured out a way to pay the water bill for a few hundred dollars, but then realized he had no way to pay his mortgage of a few thousand dollars. Jack figured out a way to land a crashing plane, but then realized he was about to be captured by enemy soldiers. We all have times in life where we solve one problem, only to realize a much bigger problem needs solving. God saw Judah in the days of Isaiah with a problem, the main problem on their mind up to that point in Isaiah’s life wasAssyria, who came with an army and threatened to kill, destroy, and conquer. God in Isaiah chapters 1-35 told the people he had a solution for the Assrian problem, they only needed to trust in him. And in chapters 36-37 he made Assyria go away. You could imagine Judah easily saying, “Great, problem solved. Life is good..” and getting complacent in their walk with God. God knew they’d face more problems and need to rely on him for more solutions in the future. We also can have times when we come to God for help with our problems, but as soon as a solution comes, we get complacent and rely on God less. We need to be trained to trust in God for solutions to future problems as well. We can learn from Isaiah 40 that God offers solutions for problems, and he offers SOLUTIONS for PROBLEMS. Before we dive into Isaiah 40, I want to you to know what happened in Isaiah 39. After God had solved the Assyria problem for King Hezekiah, in chapter 39 God told King Hezekiah about a future problem that wasn’t even on his radar. He told him about a nation called Babylon. At that time, Babylon wasn’t powerful or intimidating, just a small far away country who came for a visit. But God told Hezekiah that in the future Babylon would come and carry away everything from Jerusalem as plunder. Right after sharing those details about a future problem that hadn’t even happened yet; the next words in Isaiah’s prophetic book are chapter 40. “Comfort, comfort my people, says your God.” To a people who he had just announced a troubling future, in the next breath God says, “Comfort.” As you face this future challenge I want you unworried, unstressed, not frantic; but comforted, relaxed, peaceful, at ease with what the future will bring. War, massive destruction is coming, but Take a deep breath, be consoled. Be comforted to know that God still invites you to call him my God, and he still calls you my people. In other words he’s not allowing the hardship to get rid of you, but to get closer to you. How does that comfort come to people? “Speak to the heart of Jerusalem and call out to her.” It comes through human communication, through speech, through a message shared. A message spoken to the heart, not the head. Spoken to the emotional center, the inner person, the soul. And who does this message of comfort come to? To Jerusalem. The city where people who should have known better had repeatedly and often rejected God’s Word. The city where God because of the


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