Showing posts with label Prince o Peace. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Prince o Peace. Show all posts

Saturday, December 21, 2024

Gift of Wonder

 

For the Child will be born to us, a Son will be given to us; and the government will rest on His shoulders; and His name will be called Wonderful Counselor, Mighty God, Eternal Father, Prince of Peace. (Isaiah 9:6, NASB)

That multi-part sentence's wordiness may make it hard for readers to understand its meaning. Possibly, those readers might have memorized it for a pageant, speech, or choir anthem. But has each part of this bulky verse been considered individually and as part of the whole prophecy? To understand what a passage meant to people back then, Bible students should examine the full text and its historical context. Only then can they truly carry its intent into their lives and times.

To understand this passage, we will review what we learned from verses one through five first, then consider verse six. Recall, Isaiah, a prophet, spoke to the northern kingdom (called Israel after the split) of the Promised Land after the split of Israel. Isaiah prophesied to them what God told him to say. He said their adversary would overthrow Israel and would capture them, making them slaves in a foreign land. (Assyria did this in 722BC.) Yet God wanted the people of Israel to have hope. Consider now what Isaiah said in verses one through six.

Isaiah prophesied to the people of Israel, which included Jews and Gentiles from the northern border tribes of Zebulun and Naphtali. From this, as the study titled The Dawn of the Light (Thoughts from Another Home ©: The Dawn of the Light) showed, we understand God’s promise is for all people, Jews and Gentiles. God wants all people to listen to Him and heed what He plans to do and give.

God, through Isaiah, said He would send a great light to the people, to the ones who live in a dark land. He would give them hope. God gave a continual hope, not a stagnant hope.

In verse three, God also stated He would multiply the nation—geography and numbers of His children. (Thoughts from Another Home ©: Gift of Joy) He said He would increase the people’s joy. With these promises, the people captured by Assyria held onto hope because the promises came from the ever-faithful God. He Himself would supply their light, increase their nation, and increase the people’s joy. The people of Israel they were not be alone, they realized. They still had a champion.

When God gives, especially when He gives joy, a natural reaction occurs—rejoicing. Isaiah the people would rejoice, like when they divided the booty from a battle victory and like when they harvested their crops. The joy God put into them would cause praising, worshipping, and feasting. Rejoicing generally includes more than one person; it does not containable in a person. Joy bubbles, then bursts forth from a person as rejoicing. Like when a person laughs, other people cannot help but laugh, too. Likewise, when one person rejoiced, people would join in rejoicing. Rejoicing is a communal reaction to God’s goodness and blessings. The person whom God blesses, as well as the community around that person, benefit from God’s blessings. Meals are shared. Praise bursts forth among them. Dancing and singing occur. Joy is uncontainable.

Isaiah continued prophesying to the people of Israel in verse four by telling what else God would do. Remember, these actions of God prophesied by Isaiah would give hope to the people then and while in captivity. They would help the people realize God had not forgiven them. These actions by God would give joy and cause a communal response of praise, worship, and celebration. Now, God said through Isaiah that He would break the yoke, the rod, and the staff of their oppressor, Assyria. (Thoughts from Another Home ©: Freedom from Oppression) The people’s captivity by another government, the cruelty of slave masters, and the burdens of work and of the heart would not last forever. God would rescue them like He did when He caused the defeat of the Midianites, a regular pest of the Hebrew people.

Continuing to use the battle metaphor, God said through Isaiah He would end wars and battles. They would not need armor and battle clothing. God would make the implements of war fuel for His eternal fire. (Thoughts from Another Home ©: Gift of Peace) He would defeat the Assyrians Himself. The Medes and Babylonians defeated them in 625BC and fulfilled that part of the prophecy.

God gave the people of Israel hope by saying He would give Jews and Gentiles hope, light, joy, and peace and would multiply their people. He did not say this would happen once. God is faithful to His promises. Prior to their captivity, the people heard the prophecy. They remembered it during their captivity. The people recognized the metaphors and understood this prophecy foretold the future defeat of their enemies and that the light contrasted with the persistent darkness (evil) in the world. Aligned with other prophecies, this one spoke of God’s evil defeat of darkness where He rules supreme and peace reigns. The people may have hope before the captivity, during it, and hold on to it forever because God does not change, and their adversary would continue until the prophesied Messiah arrived.

With this hope and the reminder in verses one through five of the Messianic prophecies, Isaiah spoke eternal words of hope that would end all fear. He said, “For a Child will be born to us, a Son will be given to us” (vs. 6a). Other Old Testament writers wrote about the Messiah in Psalm 2, 89:26,110:1, 2 Samuel 7:13-14, Proverbs 30:4, and 1 Chronicles 17:13-14. The Old Testament contains numerous Messiah references, including these few. God gave the people of Israel an eternal that included the past, present, near future, and eternal future.

Isaiah referred to the Messiah when he prophesied of the “Child” and “Son” to be born and given by Yahweh God to every person. God said through Isaiah that this Son—the Messiah—would be the government, the ultimate leader. Leaders of the people of Israel and other types of leaders amongst those they encountered included emperors, kings, governors, soldiers, advisors, priests, town elders, and tribal leaders. Recall these leaders subjugated them, impoverished them, beat them, etc. They harmed the people in heart, mind, body, and spirit. What sort of leader would this “Child” and “Son” be?

Isaiah prophesied “the government will be on His shoulders.” Though fathoming a child carrying the burden of ruling any group is hard, he did not intend a literal interpretation of this sentence. Notice, the “Child” is a “Son.” The young child ages, like all people. Consider God’s divine purpose for this “Son.” He foretold “the government would be on His shoulders.” This meant the “Son” would bear burdens on his shoulders, like people and beasts carry heavy-weighted items. This phrase symbolizes strength and support. It carries the connotation of being a leader and carrying responsibilities. The “Son” would carry burdensome weight, literally and metaphorically.

By using the words “the government,” Isaiah meant the “Son” foretold would rule by God’s divine appointment. For people of the time, particularly Jews, it meant the “Son” would be a king. He would bring justice and peace among the people. The “Son” will lead people. This leader, the Jews thought, meant He would be a warrior leading them to defeat their enemies or a king who would grow their nation into an international symbol of superiority. People saw leadership in Jesus as a twelve-year-old boy who remained at the temple and astonished the educated men with His understanding. They saw it during Jesus’ three-year ministry.

Despite being captives, the people of Israel held onto hope as they believed in God's ongoing control over everything. He would punish their captors for battling God’s people. Israel's people, both Jews and Gentiles, past and present, can hold on to hope for the arrival of the Messiah, who will rule the world with supremacy. This “Son” would be their King ruling in righteousness, bringing justice and peace. Compare that with the current leaders of the Zebulun and Naphtali tribes and of the entire northern and southern kingdoms. Those leaders ruled selfishly. They dominated their people. Those rulers sought their own good first. They did not lead the people to seek and to worship God.

The “Son” in Isaiah 9:6 is the foretold Messiah. As such, this prophecy states the Messiah will reign supreme with righteousness. He will bring peace and justice. The Messiah literally will bear the burden by carrying the cross to Calvary and figuratively by lightening the burden of God’s people. God’s people would carry a lighter burden because peace and righteousness would reign and be how the people lived. Revelation 21:4 records the future time of the Messiah’s reign.

He will wipe away every tear from their eyes; and there will no longer be any death; there will no longer be any mourning or crying or pain; the first things have passed away. (NASB)

What sort of government would this “Son” bring? How would He rule? The people of Israel may have wondered if He would match King David’s stature. The prophecies foretold the Messiah would sit on the throne of David eternally. Isaiah used four descriptors in this prophecy to tell the people about this “Child” and “Son.” He prophesied in verse six, saying, “And His name will be called Wonderful Counselor, Mighty God, Eternal Father, Prince of Peace.” These descriptors spark hope within in a person. They sound grand and powerful. What did God mean by them?

“Wonderful Counselor” speaks of advisors. Counselors are educated men. Today, international, national, military, community, and religious leaders, et al. have advisors. They are cabinet members, parliament, congress, and specialists in areas the leaders are not. From these advisors, leaders gather information to help them make better decisions about what they consider doing, what occurred, and what transpires in the present. Though many possibilities exist about which leaders need to be aware, advisors educated in various facets of life can help him or her make the best decision to reach the intended goal.

The prophesied “Wonderful Counselor” would be extraordinary and a marvel to see and hear. He would understand things beyond human comprehension, things only God knows. This “Counselor” would inspire awe and reverence for God. What He said and did would represent God’s power and presence manifested. Because of this “Wonderful Counselor,” God would deliver His children.

This “Counselor” would show God’s active involvement in the world. He impacts humanity's past, present and future. The “Counselor” and Messiah would transcend all understandings or imaginings. This wise "Wonderful Counselor," possessing complete knowledge and power, needs no guidance to fulfill his plans. Comparing the “Wonderful Counselor” with Israel’s much lauded King Solomon, the Messiah would be absolutely correct and need no advisor. Solomon, renowned as the wisest ruler of all, failed and paled when compared to the Messiah. The Messiah, not Solomon, is the standard toward which human counselors/advisors, and all people, should strive.

God’s “Son,” the Messiah, would be the Wonderful Counselor. He would need no advisor. The Messiah would be marvelous and awesome in deed and word. No one could surpass Him. For this, people would clamor to follow Him and be in His presence and kingdom.

The “Child” and “Son” would be the inerrant, “Counselor” and “Mighty God.” What He intends could and would be done by Him. Nothing could stop Him. Humans described as mighty in Bible times were heroes, like Saul, Gideon, and David. People held them in high regard. The “Child” and “Son” would need no advisor to make the best decision. The Messiah would be courageous and moral, unlike the Israelite heroes, such as Saul, Gideon, and David.

This hero — “Child” and “Son” — would not be only in human form. He would be God, El. El described the true, mighty, and powerful One with the people of the Old Testament. For the Hebrews, El was Yahweh, the eternal One who exists past, present, and future. He is the pre-existent One who was before creation. He created everything from nothing. The “Child” and “Son,” about which Isaiah prophesied in verse six, would be almighty and ever-present (omnipresent). He is mightier than anything or anybody. He is eternal, with nothing before or after Him.

This “Child” and “Son” would be mighty and supreme God with, for, and in them. The Jews called Him the Messiah, the anointed One. He is the chosen One God sent to rectify the relationship rupture between God and humanity because people’s sins. Only God could be the “Wonderful Counselor and Mighty God.” God added to these descriptors of the “Child” and “Son.” He called Him “Everlasting Father.”

The "Everlasting Father," referenced in Isaiah's prophecy of the "Child" and "Son," signifies God's eternal nature. He is the One who made covenants—promises—with the Hebrews. The Hebrews did not keep their side of the Mosaic covenant with God. Yet God faithfully fulfilled His side. He is faithful; God is true to Himself and His promises. What He promises will occur. Because these people greatly relied on God’s promises, hearing this prophecy about the “Child” and “Son,” the Messiah, would give them hope God remembered them and would fulfill His promises.

The last descriptor Isaiah used for this “Child” and “Son” is “Prince of Peace.” A prince is a ruler, though fallible, prone to selfishness and self-aggrandizing, like humanity often does. The “Prince” Isaiah prophesied about would be a ruler, not a tyrant, enslaver, or selfish and fallible leader. He would be a champion for His people, promises, and kingdom. This “Prince” would not be an errant human. This just and righteous leader would bring peace, justice, and righteousness to the world.

The peace this “Prince” would bring would not only keep their borders firm. It would bring more than physical peace. This “Prince’s” peace would be complete and without end. With the total welfare of each person in mind, God’s peace would give heart, mind, spirit, body, and soul peace. No uncertainties challenged its mental assurance. No sin could remove it from the soul and spirit. No trauma could remove it from the heart, mind, and spirit. And when His kingdom comes, nothing could constrain the whole and total peace to the body. What El, “Mighty God” gives, nothing can take from His children or kingdom. The “Prince of Peace,” the Messiah from God the Father, would give complete welfare in all things. None of His children will lack anything and peace will reign because of this “Prince of Peace.”

This “Prince of Peace,” “Everlasting Father,” “Mighty God,” and “Wonderful Counselor” has more significance than what they appear to mean. Consider these adjectives describing the prophesied “Child” and “Son” to come. He is the Light in verse two. This “Son” will multiply the nation with the salvation He gives, which brings complete peace. This “Child” will bring increasing and everlasting joy. This “Son” will unite Jews and Gentiles as children of God. This “Son” is the “Mighty God” who breaks the yoke, staff, and rod of the oppressor. This “Child” will be unlike the aggressor, conqueror, slavedriver, insatiable, and fallible humanity called Assyria. The “Child” will be the omniscient Counselor, omnipotent God and King, eternal and omnipresent Father, and Peace-giving Prince.

God’s prophecy to the people of Israel is not a history lesson. Like the Israelites who were familiar with God and held onto His eternal promises, God’s promises apply to our lives today. The final part of His Messianic covenant written and sealed by Jesus’ death and resurrection has not yet occurred. Jesus is yet to return to earth for the second time to distinguish believers from non-believers. He tarries so no one will die forever separated from Him.

God wants an eternal and right relationship with each person. He loves each of us that much (John 3:16). Because humanity broke the Mosaic covenant sealed between God and them, God created an eternal covenant with humanity that requires just His action to fulfill it. He began fulfilling it by sending His Son, Jesus the Messiah, to be born in human form. Jesus will fulfill (consummate) the covenant at His second coming. People do nothing to receive this covenant except believe Jesus is the Son of God who died for their sins. This Messianic covenant is a one-sided covenant; humanity does not have to fulfill a side because they are incapable, since they are sinful. God gave the covenant and fulfilled and consummates it at Jesus’ second coming. God gives each person the choice to decide if they want to be part of this covenant. Paul wrote about this covenant in Romans 10:9-10.

If you confess with your mouth Jesus as Lord and believe in your heart that God raised Him from the dead, you will be saved. For with the heart a person believes, resulting in righteousness, and with the mouth he confesses, resulting in salvation. (NASB)

Don’t be confined by weak wisdom, limited leaders, helpless heroes, and paltry peace.

Jesus is the

Wonderful Counselor,

Mighty God,

Eternal Father, and

Prince of Peace.

Believe in Him and you will have surety, safety, hope, and peace now and forever with Him in His kingdom.


Friday, December 18, 2015

GOD WITH US


Isaiah was the Messianic prophet of God. People call him the Messianic prophet because a large number of his teachings to Judah and Jerusalem foretold the coming Messiah. A very famous passage from Isaiah foretells the coming Christ child who will take away the gloom and anguish people feel and fear. The people who walk in darkness will see a great light and will rejoice. Let us consider this passage now from Isaiah 9:1a, 2-4, 6-7.
1There will be no more gloom for her who was in anguish, (Isaiah said).
2The people who walk in darkness will see a great light. Those who live in a dark land, the light will shine on them, (Isaiah said).
3You (the Lord) shall multiply the nation; You shall increase their gladness. They will be glad in Your presence as with the gladness of harvest, as men rejoice when they divide the spoil.
4For You (Lord) shall break the yoke of their burden and the staff on their shoulders, the rod of their oppressor, as at the battle of Midian.
6For a child will be born to us, a son will be given to us, and the government will rest on His shoulders. And His name will be called Wonderful Counselor, Mighty God, Eternal Father, Prince of Peace.
7There will be no end to the increase of His government or of peace on the throne of David and over his kingdom to establish it and to uphold it with justice and righteousness from then on and forevermore. The zeal of the LORD of hosts will accomplish this. [NASB]
Isaiah exhorted the Judeans to repent from their sins and return to God. He spoke God’s judgment on them for their sins urging them to repent. Isaiah foretold the destruction God would allow to overcome them if they did not return to Him. The enemies of Judah would overtake, enslave, oppress, and torment them.
By returning to and following the LORD, Isaiah said the Judeans would no longer experience gloom from famine and enemies. He told them to stand strong and keep faith with God and He would send a great light – one who would multiply their nation, break their yokes of burden and the rods of their oppressors. This Light would be their warrior so the Judean warriors needed no war boots or cloaks. These verses led Isaiah’s listeners to expect a warrior to save them. Isaiah said something new with the next verses.
With verse six, Isaiah explained their Savior, the Messiah, would arrive as a child. The anointed and chosen one – the Messiah - who would deliver people would come as a meek and mild child. Isaiah further stated the government would rest on His shoulders. “How could that be if He was a child?” they might have wondered. “A child and a King? Impossible,” they might have thought. Isaiah broadened the image of the Messiah as being more than a warrior, child, and king.
v  He said this Messiah, this chosen One, would be a “Wonderful Counselor.” He would be extraordinarily and astonishingly more wise and intelligent than their own elders and leaders with the wisdom and knowledge of God.
v  This Messiah would be called Mighty God, Isaiah said. He would not be a mere fallible man, but would come from the LORD and people would know He is God.
v  This Chosen One would be Eternal Father. He would be the One whom the Judeans knew from their past and Who existed from before time, the One they called Abba Father with trust and love.
v  This Messiah would be called the Prince of Peace, the Ruler and Bringer of complete peace, welfare, and contentment in life, in their hearts, and in their minds.
This Chosen One from God who is God would counsel and guide them so they could live in peace. The Messiah would be Warrior, Prince, King, and Counselor for all people and would come as a child. He would bring salvation from their enemies and from their sin and lead people to be in an eternal relationship with the LORD God.
Isaiah continued by saying His government, His Kingdom, and His peace would increase and never end. The Messiah would come from the line of David and would establish and uphold it with justice and righteousness from that time and forever. The LORD would be the one to make it happen. Nothing the Israelites could do would establish God’s kingdom on earth because they were sinful humans and incapable to save themselves. God in His righteousness would provide the Savior, the sacrifice for human sin. God’s passion for people and His zeal would make this happen, Isaiah said.
When the Judeans needed comfort, God sent a prophet – Isaiah – to proclaim salvation and peace and tell them of His Chosen One, the Messiah. They may have been incredulous when considering a child as a Savior, King, and Warrior. God had a plan. He would send His Son, the Messiah, into the world as the lowest –a baby - so even the people whom society casts out would hear and recognize Him. He raised the Messiah up to be teacher, deliverer, and Savior for all humankind. Through Jesus the Messiah’s birth, life, death, and resurrection, every person for all time can know the love of God. Because this Messiah came down from God to earth, Isaiah called Him “God with us” in Isaiah 8:10 and “Immanuel” in Isaiah 7:14. Matthew called Him Emmanuel in Matthew 1:23, meaning “God with us.”
This Emmanuel did not come only to return to His kingdom. He came to be God with us and for us until we each join Him in His Kingdom. The Messiah came to save people from their sins, and through His indwelling Holy Spirit, give His wisdom, strength, power, love, and hope to all who believe in Him. This is Emmanuel, God with us. We are not alone and will never be alone as long as we remain faithful to the Lord.
This is God for us-
The Messiah – the Christ - is our
Prince of Peace,
Wonderful Counselor,
Mighty God, and
Everlasting Father.

God with us