Behold your God!
Wrapping, I realize, is just the final touch of
anticipation. The presents my wife has bagged
and boxed for our kids and grandkids remind me of my childhood Decembers –
filled with impatient longing for Christmas morning. And for the moment of unveiling as I’d enter
the living room: there are my presents! And for that final barrier of paper removed. At
last!
365 days wait a long
wait. But it’s nothing compared to 70
years.
These days, my thoughts about Advent are framed
by Isaiah 40. This is because of a centuries-old earworm
called Handel’s Messiah that puts the well-known verses on a loop in my
brain. (Interestingly, I discovered that
the “lyrics” weren’t compiled by Handel, but by his frequent collaborator, a
wealthy arts-supporter named Charles Jennens, who had a deep knowledge and love
for Scripture.)
In Isaiah 40, God
sends a promise of hope to his people in captivity in Babylon. After 70 years, their sins are forgiven and their time of
return is coming. More than that, in
this rescue they will see God revealed:
Go
on up to a high mountain,
O
Zion, herald of good news;
lift
up your voice with strength,
O
Jerusalem, herald of good news;
lift
it up, fear not;
say
to the cities of Judah,
“Behold
your God!” (Isaiah 40:9)
Handel’s melody gets
higher step by step, as if climbing Mt. Zion, until the chorus dramatically
thunders the last line: Behold
your God!
And who is he?
Verse 10 reveals a God
of might, bringing his reward with him.
The long wait has not diminished his power. He will move triumphantly and decisively to
bless his people. When God bares his
arm, watch out!
But amazingly, verse
11 follows with an astonishing twist:
He
will tend his flock like a shepherd;
he
will gather the lambs in his arms;
he
will carry them in his bosom,
and
gently lead those that are with young. (Isaiah 40:11)
What a tender
portrait! This omnipotent God, who later
in the chapter is described as “marking the heavens with a span (of his hand),”
to whom “the nations are like a drop from a bucket,” stoops to rescue the most
vulnerable and lovingly carries them near his heart.
Fatherlike He tends and
spares us;
Well our feeble frame He knows.
In His hands He gently bears us,
Rescues us from all our foes.
Praise Him! praise Him!
Widely as His mercy flows!
Well our feeble frame He knows.
In His hands He gently bears us,
Rescues us from all our foes.
Praise Him! praise Him!
Widely as His mercy flows!
This
is our God unwrapped, revealed in the deliverance of his people through the
birth of his Son. No gift can ever
compare.
Omnipotent,
glorious God, we long to have you reveal your might and mercy in our lives
every day. Help us to look with
anticipation for your presence as much as we did for childhood presents. You are our delight, Lord Jesus!
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