In the future, God will restore the universe to its original purpose and remove the curse of sin from His creation and His people.
When I was in Bible interpretation class, they told us an important principle of interpretation is that we should always seek the author’s original intention in every text, we should try to find out what the author’s original intention was. I came to find out later the reason that they taught us that is that in history, there were some that went in for things called allegorical interpretations that were very fanciful and not in any way tied directly to the Bible texts, they floated away like one of your kid’s helium balloon floated away last time you got one at Kroger’s and they weren’t tied around their wrist, they just floated right away, and we had no idea what they were rooted in, such is allegorical interpretation. So they taught us we need to go to the author’s original intention. I was thinking about that phrase when it came to Isaiah 35. I think it’s important for us to understand what Isaiah meant with this, I think it’s more important to understand the true Author, God and what his intention is in this text.
But I didn’t stop there, I went beyond it to say, what was the author of creation’s original intention in creating the universe? Why did he make this world? Why did he make heaven and earth? What did he intend when he separated the sea from the dry land and he caused living creatures to multiply on both? In the sea and the dry land? When he created it, he caused the land to blossom and to flourish with living things, with seed-bearing plants. What was his original intention in creating the fish of the sea and the birds of the air, all of the different species? What was his original intention in making an incredibly, magnificently, beautiful world, filling it with his glory, with beauty and majesty? What was his original intention in all of that? And what did he intend when he created man to walk the surface of the earth? And he made man with special attributes and abilities. What was his original intention when he created the eye? What did he make the eye to do? Why did he create the ear with all of its abilities, its complexities? What was his purpose?
Now, there’s a text, Isaiah 45:18, and we’ll preach…and I’m looking at Isaiah 35 today, but in Isaiah 45:18, there’s an important verse that gives us insight into the text we’re looking at today. There it says, “For this is what the Lord says—he who created the heavens, he is God; he who fashioned and made the earth, he founded it.” Now listen, “He did not create it to be empty, but he formed it to be inhabited—he says: ‘I am the Lord and there is no other.’” Note the words, God did not create it to be a desert. That’s not why he made it. He did not want a howling wasteland. This begs the question then, why is so much of the earth the desert? Why are parts of the earth then a howling wasteland? Now, in Isaiah, again and again, the image of the desert is used as a picture of God’s judgment on man for sin. Parts of the earth are a wasteland, are a desert, because of human sin.
But let’s extend this idea still further. Why did God create the eye with all of its complexities? He did not form it to be blind, but he made it to be able to see. When God said, “Let there be light,” he also by implication said, “Let there be sight.” There’s no point in the universe being filled with radiance of God’s glory and there being no sight, no receptors of that glory. What’s the point? Why then are maybe 256 million people vision impaired? Why are 39 million people, completely, totally blind? Same reason—human sin ultimately caused disease and brokenness to enter this world. Why did God create the air? Why did he make the eardrum and all the tiny little bones, and all those little hairs and all of that, that make hearing possible? Was it not so that we could hear the sounds that God wanted us to hear? The chirping of the birds, the crash of the ocean, the blowing of the wind and the trees, all of those things are just beautiful sounds. The sound of a baby crying or laughing, giggling. All of these sounds. He did not form the ear to be deaf, but he formed it so that it could hear. Why then, are 275 million people in the world hearing impaired? Same reason, because human sin has entered the world and moved it off of the Author’s original intention. From the beginning, God formed Adam and Eve with perfect sight, perfect hearing, and perfect everything else, and put them in a perfect world to look at all of God’s glorious beauty that he had woven into physical creation. He put them there so that they would see it and worship him, their hearts would be filled with joy at what they saw and what they heard, and God would get the glory. And it wasn’t enough for just that first couple, God commanded them saying, “Be fruitful and multiply and fill the world with my image.”
But sin entered the world, and death through sin, and in that way, corruption and decay in futility has come to all the earth. Romans 8:19 and following, it says, “The creation waits in eager expectation for the sons of God to be revealed. For the creation was subjected to [futility,] frustration, not by its own choice, but by the will of him who subjected it, in hope that the creation will be liberated from its bondage to decay and brought into the glorious freedom of the children of God. We know that the whole creation has been groaning as in the pains of childbirth right up to this present time. And not only so, but we ourselves, who have the first fruits of the Spirit, groan inwardly as we wait eagerly for our adoption as sons, the redemption of our bodies.” So I just put in equal in there, “Adoption as sons equals the redemption of our bodies,” and we’re waiting for that. It hasn’t come yet. And we’re groaning, because sin has devastated this universe, God’s original intentions are not being met. And so, this is the glorious good news: God sent his only begotten Son into the world to make it all right, to restore it, to redeem it, to buy it back, to bring it back and make it what it should have been. And to Jesus Christ alone be the glory for all of that. What a wonder-working God he is.
And so as Jesus began his earthly ministry, he went to his hometown synagogue in Nazareth, and Jesus stood up on a certain Sabbath, and the scroll of Isaiah the prophet was handed to him. And opening the scroll, he found the place where these words were written, “‘The Spirit of the Lord is on me, because the Lord has anointed me to preach good news to the poor. He has sent me to proclaim freedom for the captives and recovery of sight to the blind, to release the oppressed, to proclaim the year of the Lord’s favor.’ And then he rolled up the scroll, and gave it back to the attendant and sat down, and he began by saying these words, ‘Today, in your hearing, this scripture is fulfilled.’” Wouldn’t you love to have been there at that moment? Fulfilled? That scripture fulfilled? Yes, as they heard Jesus speak, as they heard him preach from Isaiah, the scripture was fulfilled. But Jesus went on from there to live out of ministry, rich with the power of the Holy Spirit, infinitely rich with the display of the power of the Spirit of God, doing signs and wonders in the sight of all the people.
And these signs and wonders, these miracles proved that he was unique, he was special, unlike anyone that had ever lived before, he was God the Son, God incarnate. It proved that he was who he claimed to be, the Son of God, those miracles. But they were also signs, like on a highway, pointing to a reality we haven’t reached yet. They were signs, they’re called signs and wonders. There were signs pointing to something we don’t have yet—a place where all death and mourning and decay and suffering are gone forever, a place where there are no blind eyes and no deaf ears and no lame people and no mute tongues anymore. He didn’t banish those things from the Earth, he healed individuals of those maladies, case by case. I was joking with some people, I don’t mean to be disrespectful, I was just thinking about it, there’s no account ever of anyone getting more than one healing from Jesus, I think he probably could have done it, but imagine, let’s say a blind man, he’s saying, “Oh, this is incredible, this is greatest, best day of my life. You know, I have actually been having trouble my lower back recently. I mean, while you’re at it, would you mind? Just something on the back, ’cause I know you can do it.” There’s actually no record of that. I don’t know if any of those healed people went home and said, “You know, I wish I had asked him about that too.” And all of the people that Jesus healed are dead now. All of them. They’re all dead, all of those seeing eyes are blind by death, all those hearing ears now, they are deaf by death, all of them. They’re just signs, pointing ahead to something that isn’t here yet, a reality that is coming.
When John the Baptist was languishing in prison and wasn’t sure whether Jesus really was who he claimed to be, he was weak. Just like our text talks about, his hands were feeble, his knees were giving away, it happens to everybody, maybe it’s been happening to you, maybe this sermon will strengthen your hands and your weak knees. I pray so. But the messengers came, and remember what John’s messenger said to Jesus? “Are you the one who was to come, or should we expect someone else?” Someone else? “Go back and report to John what you see and hear: The blind receive sight, the lame walk, those who have leprosy are cured, the deaf hear, the dead are raised, and the good news is preached to the poor. And blessed is the man who does not fall away on account of me.” Go back and tell him that.
And so we come to today’s Scripture. And today’s Scripture predicts 700 years before it happened, this very ministry that Jesus did, predicts it. Look at verses 5-6 in Isaiah 35, “Then will the eyes of the blind be opened and the ears of the deaf unstopped. Then will the lame leap like a deer, and the mute tongue shout for joy.” The—actually, the whole chapter extends to all of creation itself, the desert blooming like the crocus, and what a stunning contrast Isaiah 35 is to Isaiah 34, which we looked at last week. Isaiah 34 represents the wrath of God on all nations, Isaiah 34:2. And then we had the picture of Edom, the reprobate nations, the reprobate people. And it says that, “Edom’s streams will be turned into pitch, and her dust in the burning sulfur; her land will become blazing pitch! It will not be quenched night and day; its smoke will rise forever. From generation to generation, it will lie desolate.” That’s in Isaiah 34. Another word for that is a desert. It will lie as a desert, and “no one will ever pass through it again.” But this chapter, Isaiah 35, speaks of the blooming of a desert, a howling wilderness turned into the garden of Eden all over again, the judged land restored and made beautiful again.
Now, many scholars have different interpretations of Isaiah 35, telling us what the author originally intended. So then they take their crack at what the author’s original intention was. Isaiah was speaking, they say, about the restoration of the Jews back to the promised land, when they would come back out of Babylon and they would take again their places in the promised land. Others say, it refers to the salvation of the gentiles by the proclamation of the gospel to the ends of the earth. Or others say it may be applied individually, to the personal spiritual experience of individual sinners that are saved and their eyes are open and then they can see at last. I once was blind, and now I see. I was deaf and now I can hear. And it’s speaking metaphorically of the salvation work of God and Jesus and individual sinners. Some scholars say it refers to the millennial kingdom, when after Christ returns, he will set up a perfect world and he will make all of these things physically happen in the millennial kingdom, and he changes the curse to a blessing. And some say it’s just talking about the joys of the new heaven and new earth, the joys of the new heaven or new earth.
Well, I say, why not all of the above? What do you say? I don’t know about all of that, but why not? Why not just say, this is poetry, and we probably don’t need an engineer to preach on it, we just need more of a poet kind of person to preach on it, and we’re not gonna get meticulous about whether it’s this or that or the other, let’s take it all. Well, this engineer says “amen” to that. Let’s take it all. Let’s say God intends rich, lavish blessings, both on the physical creation and on human beings, and he is intending to bring us to a world that is gonna be so rich and so beautiful and so full, that you can’t even describe it, no words can capture it right now. ‘Cause it’s the purpose of the word of God to cause faith and hope to rise up in your heart and to give you a renewed strength so that you make it there, you finish your journey and get there. So let’s do it.
“God intends rich, lavish blessings, both on the physical creation and on human beings, and he is intending to bring us to a world that is gonna be so rich and so beautiful and so full, that you can’t even describe it, no words can capture it right now “
I. Creation Transformed: From Sterile Desert to Fruitful Garden (vs. 1-2)
Look at verses 1-2, creation transformed from a sterile desert to a fruitful garden. It says there, “The desert and the parched land will be glad; the wilderness will rejoice and blossom. Like the crocus, it will burst into bloom; it will rejoice greatly and shout for joy.”
So you know, at the beginning, God made the earth, and he made it beautiful and fertile and perfect in every way, but he had a special place called the Garden of Eden, and that was where man was to get his start, and it was beautiful with all kinds of fruit trees, and it was just a lush and lavish garden, flourished with all manner of growing things, it was perfectly fruitful. And the whole world was radiant with the glory of God, and Adam and Eve to fill the Earth and to explore it and to move out on its surface and find out all of the beauties that God had wrapped up into the physical universe. In a similar way, lesser of course, ’cause it’s after the fall, but in a similar way, the Jewish nation, when they crossed over the Jordan, they were entering what was known as the promised land, and it was described in similar terms. In Deuteronomy 11, “The land you are crossing the Jordan to take possession of is a land of mountains and valleys that drinks in the rain from heaven.” Doesn’t that sounds beautiful? Just drinks in the rain from heaven. You’re not gonna need to irrigate it with a foot pump like they do in Egypt, but “it’s a land the Lord your God cares for; the eyes of the Lord your God are continually on it from the beginning of the year to its end.” Take special care of it, and therefore in that same chapter, it’s called “a land flowing with milk and honey.”
But in both cases, both in terms of the Garden of Eden and the Promised Land, there was an unbreakable link between the people and the land. And when the people sinned, the land was cursed in both cases. In Eden, God cursed the ground because of Adam and it would not produce fertile, lush harvest any longer, but thorns and thistles. And so also in the case of the promised land, one of the curses on it was a curse on the land itself. In Deuteronomy 28, said if you turn away from me and if you violate my covenant, and if you do not keep its stipulations, I will curse the land that you’re living in. Deuteronomy 28:23-24, “The sky over your head will be bronze and the ground beneath you iron. The Lord will turn the reign of your country into dust and powder; it will come down from the skies until you are destroyed.” So the turning of that fruitful land into the desert represents the cursing of the land because of the sin of the people. Verse 1 speaks, in our text, speaks of a desert and a parched land. How did it get to be that way? God didn’t create it to be a desert. How did it get to be that way? Psalm 107:33-34, it says this, “God turned rivers into a desert, flowing springs into thirsty ground, and fruitful land he turned into a salt waste, because of the wickedness of those who live there.” You see? The same thing happened at Sodom and Gomorrah. The same thing. A very lush fertile ground, that’s why Lot chose to go there, God turned it into a salt ground. Cursed by God, why? Because of the wickedness and the sin in the people who live there. As we saw in Isaiah 34, God stretched out over Edom the plumb line of…measuring line of chaos and the plumb line of desolation. What’s another word for desolation but a desert? God turned Edom into a desert because of their wickedness and their sin.
And so it is in the world we live in today. You can just hear, if you know what to listen for, you can hear the groaning of creation because of man’s sin. Earthquakes claiming the lives of thousands of people, a third of a million people died in that earthquake in Haiti. Tsunamis and tidal waves like happened in over a year ago in Miyagi, Japan, killing 19,000 people and displacing again about a a third of a million people from their homes. Volcanoes in the world like Mount Marapi in Indonesia, that erupted and killed 122 people in November of 2010. Hurricane Katrina, as you know, killing over 1800 people and causing 81 billion dollars of damage. Heavy rains in the year 2010, heavy rains and floods and Gansu, China resulted in a devastating mud slide, leaving 1407 dead people. Floods in the Philippines in December last month related to a typhoon, again, killed over 500 people. In our own country last year during tornado season, just one killer tornado after another, just ripped through that part of our country, killing 19 people in Kentucky, 12 in Indiana, three in Ohio. Blizzards, droughts, wildfires, hailstorms—these are the sounds of the groaning of creation, with an attended death toll.
So what then is the blooming of the desert? What does it mean that the desert will bloom? Well, it’s a supernatural act of intervening grace by a sovereign God. He steps into our groaning creation and changes everything. Isn’t that magnificent? Look again at the words, “The desert and the parched land will be glad; the wilderness will rejoice and blossom. Like the crocus, it will burst into bloom; it will rejoice greatly and shout for joy. The glory of Lebanon will be given to it, the splendor of Carmel and Sharon; and they will see the glory of the Lord, the splendor of our God.” This is just a magnificent blooming of creation, where once there was nothing but sterility and dust and thorns and thistles and curse, it’s just totally reversed, and instead, now it’s just this flourishing garden of Eden all over again.
“What does it mean that the desert will bloom? It’s a supernatural act of intervening grace by a sovereign God. He steps into our groaning creation and changes everything.”
And the desert here is personified, the desert itself is rejoicing greatly and the desert is shouting for joy, so instead of the sounds of groaning, you’re hearing the sounds of creation shouting for joy. And the natural beauty is lavish, and he uses terms that we might be able…if we had been Jews in Isaiah’s day, we would have understood, and we can extend our minds a little bit to understand it, the glory of Lebanon will be given to it. Lebanon was known for its cedars, it’s huge trees, its forests. So maybe you’ve never been there, but maybe you’ve seen the redwoods in northern California, some other magnificent forest, and it’s just gonna be incredibly beautiful like that. And Carmel and Sharon, we don’t know that much about them, but just picture beautiful places on earth, you see, God didn’t make the whole world a desert. He didn’t make everything look openly cursed, he left enough beauty in this world so that we’ve seen it haven’t we? We’ve seen some really beautiful scenery, and we can imagine maybe like one of those islands in the South Pacific, like Tahiti or Bora Bora, some place like that, and it’s just lush and beautiful or maybe the Amazonian rain forest, and you can imagine all of that without any of the groaning or decay that happens there.
So these things are going to happen, and this is a prophecy. God is putting his word, his power behind this. This is going to happen. It’s going to flourish. And it’s gonna be beautiful. And it’s going to be, as it says in this text, they will see the glory of the Lord, the splendor of our God. And this is already getting on to my second point, but the minds of the observers will be changed, and no longer will we worship and serve created things. We’re not gonna look at it and worship the tree, we’re not gonna worship the whale, we’re not gonna worship the rainbow or worship any of that stuff, we’re going to worship the God who made those beautiful things. And the earth will be filled at last with the knowledge of the glory of the Lord as the waters cover the sea. It’s gonna be magnificent.
II. People Transformed: From Cursed Weakness to Blessed Strength (vs. 3-7)
Nature will be redeemed, and so will our eyes, our hearts to be able to receive it. So that’s the second point. Look at verses 3-7. People transform, not just nature transform, but people transform from cursed weakness to blessed strength. Verse 3 and following, “Strengthen the feeble hands, steady the knees that give way; say to those with fearful hearts, ‘Be strong, do not fear; here God will come, he will come with vengeance; with divine retribution he will come to save you.’ Then will the eyes of the blind be opened and the ears of the deaf unstopped. Then with a lame leap like a deer and the mute tongue shout for joy. Water will gush forth in the wilderness and streams in the desert. The burning sand will become a pool, the thirsty ground bubbling springs. In the haunts were jackals once lay, grass and reeds and papyrus will grow.” So now we get to the human condition, still a lot of natural language here, but here we’re talking about people, hands and knees and hearts, eyes, ears, legs, we’re talking about people.
Now, human weakness is a result of the Fall, human disease is a result of the Fall. Now, the weakness of the human race is of two kinds: physical and spiritual. Our bodies are diseased and our souls are diseased, and we must have a full salvation from these. People’s bodies are weak through injury and disease and aging and fatigue, just simple fatigue. People’s souls are weak through sin and rebellion and guilt and unbelief, and then discouragement and despair. And both of those together make life very, very difficult to live in this world, and some people so bad it feels like a curse just to be alive. But here God addresses, he speaks directly into the weakness of our human situation and sin, and he speaks to us a word of redemption, a word of salvation through Jesus Christ, and so we have human weakness transformed to strength. Look at verses 3-4, “Strengthen the feeble hands, steady the knees that give way; say to those with fearful hearts, ‘Be strong, do not fear; your God will come to you.’” So I took that as a personal message this morning. I said, “God was saying that to me.”
Just like Isaiah 40, when he spoke to Isaiah the prophet and said, “‘Comfort, comfort my people,’ says your God.” So I wanna do that for you if I can. So I just wanna be a conduit of strength and steadying and banishment of fear by the word of God. But this isn’t just something the pastor can do behind the pulpit. Why don’t you all do that for each other the rest of the week? Why don’t you just speak God’s promises to each other the rest of the week, and why don’t you steady those feeble knees that are about to buckle? Why don’t you find some weak hands that are about to give up, and strengthen them? And isn’t it amazing what strengthened them, right in the text? “Say to those” etcetera, just the word, just the word, the feeble word. Just speak the word, ’cause it’s not feeble, “it’s the power of God for salvation for everyone who believes.” I think this is going on right now while I preach. I think your hope is getting stronger again, you’re actually eager for the future, you’re actually saying, “When will it come, O Lord? I wanna see all that. It’s gonna be beautiful. I wanna get there. Not there yet, but I wanna get there.” So it’s already happening.
“Why don’t you just speak God’s promises to each other the rest of the week, and why don’t you steady those feeble knees that are about to buckle? Why don’t you find some weak hands that are about to give up, and strengthen them?”
Now, for the Jews in Isaiah’s day maybe it would be you are in exile like Daniel was or some of the others that were carried off into exile and you’re wondering, when can we go back? But that’s not enough for me. I wanna speak even beyond that to say to all of God’s people throughout history, we know the real battle is not with the Assyrians or the Babylonians. The real battle is with the world, the flesh and the devil, and oh, how weary we get when we’re fighting it. And we need to be reminded that God’s commands are actually promises when he says, “Be perfect, therefore, as your heavenly Father is perfect,” some day you will be, some day you will be by the sovereign power of God, because your God will come, and he will come to save you. And you may feel feeble and weak on the external journey too, say, “How can I do anything for anyone else? How can I lead anyone to Christ? They never seem to come to Christ. How can we plant churches and unreached people groups? It just seems impossible for us to do anything.” Banish those thoughts, they are from Satan himself. God will be exalted in the world, he’ll be glorified, and he will save all of his elect and those churches will get planted and those people will get saved. All of them, not one will be missing.
And so here’s the message of encouragement to strengthen us, and we have a responsibility to do this for each other. I preached on this, kind of, a few months ago in Hebrews 12, as the author quoted this, Hebrews 12:12-13, it says, “Therefore, strengthen your feeble arms and weak knees.” Does that sound familiar? Now we’re getting it from the back side. On that Sunday, I quoted Isaiah 35. Now, in the Sunday, I’m quoting Hebrews 12. Isn’t that fun, how the Bible’s interconnected? But it says to the church, “Strengthen each other, build each other up, encourage one another. Speak words of blessing to one another.” “‘Make level paths for your feet,’” he says there in Hebrews 12:13, “so that the lame may not be disabled, but rather healed.” What path are you on? We’ll get to that in a minute, but it’s called the Highway of Holiness, that’s the path you’re on, and it’s a long, long journey. But let’s strengthen each other.
So not only do we get a message of encouragement, we also get a promise that our bodies will be radically, supernaturally transformed. Look at verses 5-6. Those of you that are fans of Handel’s Messiah, you can hum along, but do it quietly. “Then will the eyes of the blind be opened and the ears of the deaf unstopped. Then with a lame leap like a deer, and the mute tongue shout for joy.” Shall we just cut to the chase? This is a clear prediction of the ministry of Jesus Christ. That’s what it is. It’s not metaphorical alone. We’ll get to that in a minute. It is a clear prediction that someone would come to do this and that someone is Jesus. Now, isn’t it amazing when you contemplate the wonders of Jesus, the signs and wonders, the miracles. I believe in every case, you can make a case, every time it was a restoration to the author’s original intention. He is basically restoring back to the way things should have been, what sin has done in the world.
Think for example of the stilling of the storm, God it did not make the storm to make the sea to be a killer. He didn’t intend for his apostles to drown in a boating accident, it’s not the world God intended, where nature eats you alive and you drown. And so he got up and what did he do? He rebuked the wind and the waves, and he stilled the storm. Or think of the feeding of the 5000 out in that desert place, and there was nothing to eat. God did not make your body your stomach to starve, he didn’t create you to die by starvation, that’s evidence of the Fall, but instead he fed you. Think of the changing of the water to wine at the banquet. I believe this represents the flowing of the Holy Spirit, and God did not intend for us to sit at a banquet and to be sterile of joy and have no presence of the Spirit, etcetera, but he lavished blessing on them. But notice I kind of didn’t mention the real miracle is 90 percent of them or more were what? They were healings. Most of them are healings, and that is so obviously a restoration back to what God originally intended, he did not create the eye to be blind. He didn’t have all of those magnificent functions, the retina, the cornea, and the optical nerve, and all the capability of sight—he didn’t make all that so that it wouldn’t work.
Four different times in the Gospels there are accounts of Jesus healing blind people, the best by far, of course, John 9, in which John creates space in his very tight gospel, he only had certain things in there, but he has a whole chapter on this one miracle, whole chapter. On the healing of a man born blind. And it’s such an incredible thing that the man himself said, “Never since the world began has it been heard that anyone opened eyes of a man born blind.” This has never been done before. Utterly astonishing display of the power of God. But there are other miracles listed here as well. The ears of the deaf are unstopped, like when Jesus puts saliva on the tips of his fingers and touched the man’s tongue, and then he put his fingers in the man’s ears and said, “ ,” which is, “Be opened.” It’s direct fulfillment of this, Isaiah 35, “Then will the ears of the deaf be unstopped…and the mute tongue will sing for joy.” Supernatural display of the power of God.
Or the lame leaping like a deer in Matthew 9. You remember the story of the paralyzed man, they brought him on a mat and they couldn’t get toward…they couldn’t get near Jesus, there is too many people, and so they dug through the roof. Those are great friends. You need friends like that, friends that don’t give up and they dig through the roof. I don’t know if they later fixed the roof and paid for it or what happened with all that, but they dug through the roof and they lowered this man down right in front of Jesus. I often wondered if pieces of the roof were falling in front of Jesus while he was teaching or whatever he was doing, that they all looked up wondering what was happening, I wonder if it took like 10 or 15 minutes to finish the job, I wonder if Jesus used that time well to keep teaching and then finally the opening was big enough, I think about things like this. And it took a while, but there it was, and the man was descended, he was lowered down right in front of Jesus.
And it says, “When Jesus saw their faith, he said to the paralytic, ‘Take heart, son; your sins are forgiven.’” Still paralyzed. Still paralyzed. Let me give you what you really need. You know what you really need? You need forgiveness by Almighty God, and I’m here to give it to you. And remember how the people were offended, and they said in their own hearts, “This fellow is blaspheming!” Who can forgive sins but God alone? And he said, “Why do you say these things in your hearts?” That’s a bit eerie, to be in the presence of Jesus reading your mind. “‘Which is easier: to say, “Your sins are forgiven,” or to say to this paralyzed man, “Rise and walk”? But so that you may know that the Son of Man has power on earth to forgive sins,’ and he said to the paralyzed man, ‘Rise and walk.’ And he did.”
Jesus still has power to forgive sins, that’s what Isaiah 35:5-6 is ultimately about the power of Jesus to forgive your sins, and you are a sinner and so I am I. And we need that forgiveness, without it we will be lost. Read about it in the last chapter. And the smoke of the torment rises forever and ever. Flee that. Flee to Jesus, who has the power to heal you from sin, but actually, I believe that these healings were not just physical, I believe they were metaphorical. How can you believe both? I think they pointed to a higher healing, which was spiritual. Not only were our eyes physically damaged, our ability to see God, to see his glory was damaged. We were blind toward God. Because later in that same chapter, in John 9, you remember Jesus’ enemies come out, the very ones that kicked the blind man, now seeing out of the synagogue ’cause he testified to Jesus, they kicked them out, Jesus goes and finds them like the Good Shepherd, that’s the very next captor, he goes and finds him to bring him in. And the enemies are there, they’re the wolves and the enemies, and they’re right there. And Jesus says to them, “‘For judgment I have come into the world, so that the blind will see and those who see will become blind.’ Some Pharisees who were with him heard him say this and said, ‘What? Are we blind too?’ And Jesus said, ‘If you were blind you would not be guilty of sin; but now that you claim you can see, your guilt remains.” So it’s not just a physical blindness that Jesus is dealing with there; clearly, it’s a spiritual blindness too.
And it’s not just that he’s able to open physically deaf ears so they can now physically hear sounds, it’s that we were deaf to the word of God, we were not listening to him, you see? So at the end of each of Jesus’ parables, what does he say every time? “He who has ears to hear, let him hear.” Have I given you the ability to hear me? Then listen to me. And it’s not just that physical lameness was going on, people couldn’t get up and walk around—it’s that we had no power to walk in the way of God, we had no power to walk in the commands of God, we were paralyzed toward his commands. And it’s not just that our tongues were physically mute and we couldn’t speak physically—it’s that we could not speak the words of God, we could not speak the praise of God, we saw sunrises and sunsets, and we said, “Praise be Baal. Praise be Molech. Or isn’t that a beautiful sunset?” and never thought about God and we did not speak and say, “To God be the glory for all of this.” All of that needed healing, we needed to be healed, so that we could spiritually see God and hear him speak by his word, and walk in the path of his commands and speak the words of God to one another and the praises of God. That’s the healing we needed, and so do you see how perfect it is that Jesus did these healings as these miracles? It did everything all at once. Pointed to both the physical salvation of the universe and the spiritual salvation of the universe.
And so the desert comes alive. Look at verses 6-7, “Water will gush forth in the wilderness and streams in the desert. The burning sand will become a pool, the thirsty ground bubbling springs. In the haunts where jackals once lay, grass and reeds and papyrus will grow.” Physically, this is a clear picture of what the new heaven and new earth will look like. It’s going to be incredible, lush, and beautiful. But I think it’s also a clear picture of the pouring out of the Holy Spirit of God. I believe often the Spirit is likened to water. With the Samaritan woman, he’s likened to water. In John 7, “Out of your inner being, streams of living water will flow,” by this he meant the Spirit. Later in Isaiah, listen to this, this is so clear. You get that Hebrew parallelism that beautiful poetry and it’s so clear that the Holy Spirit equals water. Isaiah 44:3-4, “For I’ll pour water on the thirsty land, and streams on the dry ground; I will pour out my Spirit on your offspring, and my blessing on your descendants.” See, that’s just directly parallel. “They will spring up like grass in a meadow, like poplar trees by flowing streams.” So the agricultural images go right over to people, we are like green grass, we are like poplar trees by flowing streams by the power of the Spirit.
III. The Transforming Event: “Your God Will Come to Save You” (vs. 4)
And what is the transforming event? Verse 4, I already said, this is what it is. Verse 4, “Say to those with fearful hearts, ‘Be strong, do not fear; your God will come.’” Friends, these transformations I’ve been talking about, they do not come by human power, they don’t come by human ingenuity. I don’t wanna hear about what the Jews are doing with irrigation in the promised land. That’s marvelous and incredible—that’s not this. You understand? It’s a supernatural transformation that only God can do. We can celebrate the skills of friends of ours, church members, at giving sight to blinded people, but I believe this text is talking about a day when there will be no blind people at all, and there’ll be no deaf people and no lame people and no mute people at all, when disease itself will be banished forever. And the key to everything is your God will come. God’s gonna intervene, he’s gonna step into history, says Isaiah, the prophet, seventh century BC, he’s gonna step, he’s gonna come.
Well, you know, the ultimate expression of this is the birth of Jesus of Nazareth, born of a virgin. And the angel Gabriel said to her very plainly, “‘The virgin will be with child and will give birth to a son, and they will call him Immanuel,’ which means, ‘God with us [or similar to your God has come].’” He is here, now, and he comes to save his people. Says, your God will come, he will come not to wipe you out, he will come to save you. And so in that same chapter, Matthew 1:21, “She will give birth to a son, and you are to give him the name Jesus, because he will save his people from their sins.” Jesus is the Savior of the world, he is the one who comes to do these things, 1 John 4:14, “And we have seen and testified that the Father has sent his Son to be the Savior of the world.” Now, the text also says he will come with vengeance and with divine retribution, he will come to do that too. There are sheep and there are goats. There’s wheat, and there are weeds. There are good fish, and there are the bad fish. And there’s going to be a vast separation, Jesus has taught this very plainly, and he will come it says “with the vengeance and with divine retribution,” we saw that in the last chapter.
Now, these things were fulfilled at the first and will be fulfilled at the second coming of Christ. The two comings of Christ fulfill these prophecies. He will come to save you. He saves you by dying on the cross, by taking on our sins in his body and dying on the cross into the wrath and judgment of God, he comes to save you that way. And not only that, but being raised from the dead on the third day in a resurrection body that is our future. Those are the eyes that will never be blind, those are the ears will never go deaf, the resurrection body. Second coming, he will come with vengeance and with divine retribution. In Revelation 19, heaven will stand open and we will see One on a white horse leading the armies of heaven back to bring wrath and judgment on all those who have not repented and trusted in Christ.
So, for me, I urge you to flee to Christ, now, to listen to these words, to allow these words to transform your heart, that your eyes will be opened and you will see in Christ crucified—you can’t see any images or pictures, nothing’s flashing up on the screen, we’re not looking at tha—just in your mind Jesus Christ is publicly portrayed as crucified this morning, dead for you in your place. But not only that, on the third day, risen from the dead, as though you are in the upper room and you’re able to put your fingers in the nail marks and your hand on the side and say, “He’s not just a spirit, he’s not a ghost, he’s been bodily raised from the dead, he is my Savior.” And say with Thomas, “My Lord and my God.” If you walked in here lost, you walked in here unregenerate, you walked in here blind and deaf and lame and mute, don’t walk out here like that. You can walk out seeing and hearing and walking spiritually and speaking the praises of God. What do you have to do? You don’t have to do anything. Believe him. Believe him. You don’t have to move a muscle, just believe him. Look at the order in Matthew 9. First, to the paralyzed, man, “Your sins are forgiven.” Second, “Rise and walk.” There’s your priority structure. Let Jesus speak into your soul, your sins are forgiven. Confess him as your Lord.
“If you walked in here lost, you walked in here unregenerate, you walked in here blind and deaf and lame and mute, don’t walk out here like that. You can walk out seeing and hearing and walking spiritually and speaking the praises of God. “
Is that the end of it? No, it’s not even the end of the chapter. You’re wondering how can even the pastor can’t get through 10 verses, well I think you know. Just look at it—it’s a magnificent. This morning, I decided it would be two sermons. How can I describe the Highway of Holiness in four minutes? It can’t be done. So it won’t be done, but what I will do is I will read it to you and I’ll say it points toward the rest of your life after you come to faith in Christ. Look what it says, “And the highway will be there; it will be called the Way of Holiness. The unclean will not journey on it; it will be for those who walk in that Way; wicked fools will not go about on it. No lion will be there, nor will any ferocious beast get up on it; they will not be found there. But only the redeemed will walk there, and the ransom of the Lord will return. And they will enter Zion with singing.”
The moment you trust in Christ, your eyes are opened and you can see him at last, you begin, God sets you on a journey, and he calls it here in this text, the Highway of Holiness. And you’re not allowed to be on that unless you’re redeemed, only the redeemed can be on it, they’re the only ones on that highway. And it’s a place of safety and security and protection, no lion can get there, and you’re going to make it, friends, you’re gonna make it right to the end, and at the end you’re going to enter Zion, the Holy Place of God, and there will be a rich, warm welcome for you, and you will be singing and they will be singing, and you will spend eternity in bliss and joy. “Everlasting joy will crown your head…and sorrow and sighing will flee away from you.” That’s the future. So next time I preach in Isaiah, not next week, two weeks from now, I’ll finish this chapter. So let’s close in prayer.
Father, we thank you for the marvels of salvation, thank you for the marvels of Jesus’ power. We thank you for the marvels of the promise. “Then will the eyes of the blind be opened and the ears of the deaf unstopped. Then will the lame leap like a deer, and the mute tongue shout for joy.” Oh God, make it happen. I pray it would be happening spiritually right now. I pray there wouldn’t be a single person leaving this room unregenerate, not one person leaving this place not believing in Jesus. I pray that they would trust in him and that they would get up from that, and then begin walking the walk of holiness. Oh God, I pray, give us time, if it be your will, that two weeks from now we can talk more about that. Oh God, make us holy. Help us to yearn to put sin to death and to walk that way until at last we come into Zion forever. In Jesus name, Amen.
The Author’s Original Intention: what was God’s original intention in CREATION??? What did God intend when He made heaven and earth? What did He intend when He created the seas and the dry land…the vegetation, the trees of the forest and the plants of the field, the flowers and the fruit trees… crafting the creatures of the sea and land—the whale and the ox, the tropical fish and the eagle? And especially, what did God intend when He made man on earth? What was God’s original intention in making the eye, the ear, the hands and feet, the mouth?
Isaiah 45:18 For this is what the LORD says– he who created the heavens, he is God; he who fashioned and made the earth, he founded it; he did not create it to be empty, but formed it to be inhabited– he says: “I am the LORD, and there is no other.
Note the words: God did not create it to be empty, but formed it to be inhabited. He did not want the earth to be a DESERT… a wasteland… This begs the question, “Why then is the earth a wasteland, a howling desert in so many places?” In Isaiah, again and again, the image of the desert is used as a picture of the judgment of God on man for SIN. Parts of the earth are a wasteland because of HUMAN SIN.
But let’s extend the idea even further.
Why did God create the eye? Why did He make the exquisitely complex organ, with its lens and cornea and retina and optic nerve? Was it not to SEE light, to see the radiant glory God has woven into the universe? God did not form the eye to be blind, but to see!! Why, then are 285 million people in the world visually impaired, and 39 million totally blind? SAME REASON: HUMAN SIN resulted in the curse from God and the physical problem of blindness
Similarly: Why did God create the ear? Why did He make the ear, with its eardrum and tiny bones and hairs and complex shape? Was it not to HEAR the sounds of this incredibly glorious world? If so, then why are there 275 million people with moderate to profound deafness in both ears? SAME REASON: HUMAN SIN resulted in the curse from God and the physical problem of deafness.
But from the beginning, it was not so. God formed Adam and Eve with perfect eyesight and perfect hearing, and put them in a perfectly beautiful world to see/hear the glory of God and serve Him.
Sin has devastated all of that…
Romans 8:19-23 The creation waits in eager expectation for the sons of God to be revealed. 20 For the creation was subjected to frustration, not by its own choice, but by the will of the one who subjected it, in hope 21 that the creation itself will be liberated from its bondage to decay and brought into the glorious freedom of the children of God. 22 We know that the whole creation has been groaning as in the pains of childbirth right up to the present time. 23 Not only so, but we ourselves, who have the firstfruits of the Spirit, groan inwardly as we wait eagerly for our adoption as sons, the redemption of our bodies.
Because sin has devastated this universe, God’s original intentions are not being met. So God sent His only begotten Son into the world to REDEEM and RESTORE the world, to enable the world to be what God originally intended… a universe filled with His glory
Jesus Christ began His ministry in Nazareth:
Luke 4:18-21 “The Spirit of the Lord is on me, because he has anointed me to preach good news to the poor. He has sent me to proclaim freedom for the prisoners and recovery of sight for the blind, to release the oppressed, 19 to proclaim the year of the Lord’s favor.” 20 Then he rolled up the scroll, gave it back to the attendant and sat down. The eyes of everyone in the synagogue were fastened on him, 21 and he began by saying to them, “Today this scripture is fulfilled in your hearing.”
Jesus’ ministry would be RICH with the power of the Spirit of God—doing great signs and wonders in the sight of all the people. These miracles proved His unique personhood, the proved He was who He claimed to be—the Son of God. But they also were a SIGN of a coming world in which all the decay and curse and defectiveness of this present sin-cursed world would be GONE FOREVER.
Matthew 11:5 The blind receive sight, the lame walk, those who have leprosy are cured, the deaf hear, the dead are raised, and the good news is preached to the poor.
Today’s scripture also predicts this very thing… the establishment of a world in which all sickness is BANISHED FOREVER!!
Isaiah 35:5-6 Then will the eyes of the blind be opened and the ears of the deaf unstopped. 6 Then will the lame leap like a deer, and the mute tongue shout for joy.
But it extends to creation itself: a desert blooming to the glory of God!! The stunning contrast from Chapter 34 to Chapter 35:
Edom, representative of all the godless nations on earth, is turned into a desert
Isaiah 34:2 The LORD is angry with all nations; his wrath is upon all their armies.
Isaiah 34:9-10 Edom’s streams will be turned into pitch, her dust into burning sulfur; her land will become blazing pitch! 10 It will not be quenched night and day; its smoke will rise forever. From generation to generation it will lie desolate; no one will ever pass through it again.
But this chapter speaks of the majestic blooming of a desert… a howling wilderness is turned into the Garden of Eden all over again. The judged land is returned to being the Promised Land… a land flowing with milk and honey
Many different interpretations have been given for it:
· It may be applied to the restoration of the Jews back to the Promised Land from their exile to Babylon;
· Or it may be applied to the salvation of the Gentiles, or the whole era of the growth of the church of Jesus Christ
· Or it may be applied more individually to the personal spiritual experience of every believer in Christ as he moves from the curse of being an unbeliever to the joy of salvation in Christ
· Some say it refers to the delights of the Millennial Kingdom, when the second coming of Christ changes the curse of the earth to the richest of earthly blessings
· Or it may be speaking of the eternal joys of heaven.
But WHY NOT ALL OF THE ABOVE???? This chapter is poetry, and it speaks directly of the blessings of God on a once cursed land. The use of poetry means that a mathematical precision about each image is not the intended result… rather, it is a massive painting with brush strokes of color and detail that works together to speak of the glories of the saving work of God in Christ.
I. Creation Transformed: From Sterile Desert to Fruitful Garden (vs. 1-2)
Isaiah 35:1-2 The desert and the parched land will be glad; the wilderness will rejoice and blossom. Like the crocus, 2 it will burst into bloom; it will rejoice greatly and shout for joy. The glory of Lebanon will be given to it, the splendor of Carmel and Sharon; they will see the glory of the LORD, the splendor of our God.
A. The Garden of Eden and the Promised Land
1. God created the earth a lush and fruitful place
2. It flourished with all manner of growing things, perfectly fruitful
3. God particularly prepared a garden, the Garden of Eden, with all manner of fruit-bearing trees… there He put Adam and Eve to live
4. The whole world was radiantly full of the glory of God
5. In a similar way, after the Exodus, God brought the Jews to the Promised Land… and it was magnificent… described marvelously in Deuteronomy 11
Deuteronomy 11:11-12 the land you are crossing the Jordan to take possession of is a land of mountains and valleys that drinks rain from heaven. 12 It is a land the LORD your God cares for; the eyes of the LORD your God are continually on it from the beginning of the year to its end.
Deuteronomy 11:9 a land flowing with milk and honey.
B. The Link Between the Land and the People
1. In both cases, the sin of people brought a curse on the land and a withering of the lush fruitfulness
2. In Eden… God cursed the ground because of the sin of Adam
3. In the Promised Land, God cursed the land because of the sin of the people
Deuteronomy 28:23-24 The sky over your head will be bronze, the ground beneath you iron. 24 The LORD will turn the rain of your country into dust and powder; it will come down from the skies until you are destroyed.
C. The Desert Represents the Cursing of the Land
1. Verse 1 speaks of the desert and the parched land… this is the state of the land the Jews had inherited…
2. It was a desert because of God’s curse on the land:
Psalm 107:33-34 He turned rivers into a desert, flowing springs into thirsty ground, 34 and fruitful land into a salt waste, because of the wickedness of those who lived there.
3. This is plain in Isaiah 34:
Isaiah 34:9-11 Edom’s streams will be turned into pitch, her dust into burning sulfur; her land will become blazing pitch! … God will stretch out over Edom the measuring line of chaos and the plumb line of desolation.
4. So it is today… the groaning of creation, of this sin-cursed world, is loud and clear
a. Earthquakes claiming thousands of lives show the groaning of the earth under our feet… like the one that took 320,000 lives in Haiti in 2010
b. Tsunamis and Tidal waves sweeping over coastlines and wiping out communities, like happened in Miyagi, Japan, December, 2011, killing 19,000 and displacing 325,000 from their homes
c. Volcano, Mt. Merapi in Indonesia, erupts and kills 122 people in November of 2010
d. Hurricane Katrina killed 1836 people and caused $81 billion in damage
e. 2010: Heavy rains and floods in Gansu, China, resulted in a devastating mudslide, leaving 1407 dead people
f. Floods in the Philippines in December related to Typhoon Bopha pushed death toll to over 500 people
g. A series of tornadoes ripped through the Midwest and south in March of 2012, leaving 19 dead in Kentucky, 12 in Indiana, three in Ohio and one each in Alabama and Georgia
h. Blizzards, droughts, hailstorms, heat waves and forest fires… all are evidence of the GROANING OF CREATION…
D. The Blooming of the Desert: A Supernatural Act of Grace by a Sovereign God
Isaiah 35:1-2 The desert and the parched land will be glad; the wilderness will rejoice and blossom. Like the crocus, 2 it will burst into bloom; it will rejoice greatly and shout for joy. The glory of Lebanon will be given to it, the splendor of Carmel and Sharon; they will see the glory of the LORD, the splendor of our God.
1. A marvelous BLOOMING of creation… the desert springing to life
2. desert is personified REJOICES GREATLY …SHOUTS FOR JOY
3. The natural beauty is lavish… the glory of Lebanon, the splendor of Carmel and Sharon
a. God has left enough beauty here on earth so that we can imagine what it would be like if He lavished His favor
b. Picture perhaps the lush rainforests of the Amazon, or the magnificent tropical islands of the South Pacific, like Tahiti; or the spectacular redwoods of northern California
E. A Display of God’s Glory
1. No longer will people look at nature and worship it
2. Rather, worshipers will see the glory of God IN NATURE and give Him the proper praise for every aspect of it
3. NATURE WILL BE REDEEMED… resurrected in eternal glory; brought into the glorious freedom of the children of God
II. People Transformed: From Cursed Weakness to Blessed Strength (vs. 3-7)
Isaiah 35:3-7 Strengthen the feeble hands, steady the knees that give way; 4 say to those with fearful hearts, “Be strong, do not fear; your God will come, he will come with vengeance; with divine retribution he will come to save you.” 5 Then will the eyes of the blind be opened and the ears of the deaf unstopped. 6 Then will the lame leap like a deer, and the mute tongue shout for joy. Water will gush forth in the wilderness and streams in the desert. 7 The burning sand will become a pool, the thirsty ground bubbling springs. In the haunts where jackals once lay, grass and reeds and papyrus will grow.
A. Human Weakness is a Result of the Fall
1. The weakness of the human race is of two kinds: physical and spiritual
2. In this section, BOTH kinds are directly addressed
3. People’s bodies are weak through disease and fatigue
4. People’s spirits are weak through discouragement and despair
5. It makes it very difficult to live, very difficult to make progress in life
6. Here, God addresses the weakness of the human condition, and REDEEMS HIS PEOPLE
B. Here: Human Weakness Transformed to Strength
Isaiah 35:3-4 Strengthen the feeble hands, steady the knees that give way; 4 say to those with fearful hearts, “Be strong, do not fear; your God will come
1. Feeble hands = human weakness in action
2. Weak knees = inability to keep moving, to keep walking, to keep making progress
3. It refers to the overwhelming feeling of discouragement that comes on the people of God in this world
a. For the Jews, EXILE
b. For Christians, world, the flesh and the devil… Satan’s temptations and accusations can be so effective that our hands drop and our knees sag… HOW CAN WE BE PERFECT AS OUR HEAVENLY FATHER IS PERFECT? How can we take the gospel to our neighbors, or to the unreached people groups? How can we make any difference at all? Why even bother? I want to give up entirely!!!!
C. A Message of Encouragement to Strengthen the Weak
1. YOUR GOD WILL COME
2. STRENGTH = HOPE in the promises of God
3. responsibility to other believers… to strengthen those who are weak
Hebrews 12:12-13 Therefore, strengthen your feeble arms and weak knees. 13 “Make level paths for your feet,” so that the lame may not be disabled, but rather healed.
D. Human Bodies Amazingly Transformed
Isaiah 35:5-6 Then will the eyes of the blind be opened and the ears of the deaf unstopped. 6 Then will the lame leap like a deer, and the mute tongue shout for joy.
1. clear prediction of the miracle working power of Jesus Christ
2. Jesus displayed His supernatural power in many ways… always a REESTABLISHMENT of the beauty and order of original creation
a. The stilling of the storm… brought peace out of chaos
b. The feeding of the five thousand brought plenty to the hungry
c. The changing of water to wine brought joy and richness to a banquet
d. But the HEALINGS were the most plentiful part of Jesus’ miraculous ministry
3. The healing of the BLIND was especially powerful
a. Four different times in the gospels, Jesus heals the blind
i) Most powerful of all, John 9, Jesus heals a man born blind… an ENTIRE CHAPTER devoted to it
ESV John 9:32 Never since the world began has it been heard that anyone opened the eyes of a man born blind.
b. utterly astonishing display of the power of Jesus Christ
4. Other miracles listed here as well:
a. The ears of the deaf unstopped… like when Jesus healed a deaf man by putting His fingers in the man’s ears and saying “Be opened!”)
b. The lame will leap like a deer
Matthew 9:2 Some men brought to him a paralytic, lying on a mat. When Jesus saw their faith, he said to the paralytic, “Take heart, son; your sins are forgiven.”
c. The mute tongue will shout for joy
E. Human Souls Also Amazingly Transformed
1. The deeper issue is the SPIRITUAL BROKENNESS of the human condition… physical miracles symbolize SPIRITUAL HEALING
2. Our “blindness” was more spiritual than physical… our inability to SEE God’s glory, to SEE God’s truth clearly… we were SPIRITUALLY blind to the realities of God
John 9:39-41 Jesus said, “For judgment I have come into this world, so that the blind will see and those who see will become blind.” 40 Some Pharisees who were with him heard him say this and asked, “What? Are we blind too?” 41 Jesus said, “If you were blind, you would not be guilty of sin; but now that you claim you can see, your guilt remains.
3. Our lameness was a picture of our inability to walk the walk of the righteous or run in the path of God’s commands
4. Our muteness was a picture of our inability to speak the praises of God or to speak the truth of God’s word
5. Jesus came to heal us BOTH physically and spiritually… a comprehensive salvation
F. The Desert Comes Alive
Isaiah 35:6-7 Water will gush forth in the wilderness and streams in the desert. 7 The burning sand will become a pool, the thirsty ground bubbling springs. In the haunts where jackals once lay, grass and reeds and papyrus will grow.
Physically, a clear picture of the transformation of nature in the New Heavens and New Earth
Spiritually: A clear picture of the pouring out of the Holy Spirit on us
Isaiah 44:3-4 For I will pour water on the thirsty land, and streams on the dry ground; I will pour out my Spirit on your offspring, and my blessing on your descendants. 4 They will spring up like grass in a meadow, like poplar trees by flowing streams.
III. The Transforming Event: “Your God Will Come to Save You” (vs. 4)
Isaiah 35:4 say to those with fearful hearts, “Be strong, do not fear; your God will come, he will come with vengeance; with divine retribution he will come to save you.”
A. This is the Key to Everything!
B. “Your God will come…”
1. God intervenes… He acts in history to wipe out the Assyrians, or to bring down the Babylonians…
2. The ultimate expression of “your God will come” is the birth, life, death, resurrection, and second coming of Christ
Matthew 1:23 “The virgin will be with child and will give birth to a son, and they will call him Immanuel”–which means, “God with us.”
C. God Also Comes to Save His People… in the Death and Resurrection of Christ
Isaiah 35:4 say to those with fearful hearts, “Be strong, do not fear; your God will come, … he will come to save you.”
1. Jesus is the very one who fulfilled the miracles mentioned in this passage
2. He also is the very one who is the Savior of the world
Matthew 1:21 She will give birth to a son, and you are to give him the name Jesus, because he will save his people from their sins.”
1 John 4:14 And we have seen and testify that the Father has sent his Son to be the Savior of the world.
D. God Also Comes to Bring Vengeance and Retribution… in the Second Coming of Christ
Isaiah 35:4 your God will come, he will come with vengeance; with divine retribution
Revelation 19:11 I saw heaven standing open and there before me was a white horse,
whose rider is called Faithful and True. With justice he judges and makes war.
E. The Two Comings of Jesus Christ Fulfills these Words:
1. The first coming: “He will come to save you”
2. The second coming: “with vengeance, divine retribution”
IV. The Journey of the Transformed: A Highway of Holiness (vs. 8-10)
Isaiah 35:8-10 And a highway will be there; it will be called the Way of Holiness. The unclean will not journey on it; it will be for those who walk in that Way; wicked fools will not go about on it. 9 No lion will be there, nor will any ferocious beast get up on it; they will not be found there. But only the redeemed will walk there, 10 and the ransomed of the LORD will return. They will enter Zion with singing
A. The “Way of Holiness” Described Here
1. Remember the thrice-yearly pilgrimages to Jerusalem
2. These times of movement from where you lived to the central place of worship were pictures, types, symbols of salvation
3. The pilgrimage would not be physical but spiritual
4. Others think the issue is the return from exile that God effected… as the ransomed of the Lord would return from Babylon to reestablish homes in Jerusalem; these returning Jews would travel the King’s highway back from Babylon to Jerusalem
5. But that is also merely a type and shadow of the salvation Christ works
6. The descriptors here are powerful:
a. A highway will be there: picture a graded, raised road, built by the king for the economic unity of his empire… enabling commerce more freely, allowing his soldiers to move quickly where the king wanted them, allowing communication from the capital city to the distant provinces [Roman roads: over 250,000 miles of interconnected roads]
b. It will be called the Way of Holiness: just like a King’s Highway was governed by his laws, and would be exclusive for his purposes, so this is a HIGHWAY of HOLINESS… only holy people can make this journey
c. Wicked fools and the unclean will not be permitted on it: this is the exclusive nature of the journey; you ENTER THROUGH THE NARROW GATE—justification by faith in Jesus Christ—before you can make a single step of salvation
d. No lion or ferocious beast will get up on it: a picture of safety and protection
Pilgrim’s Progress: John Bunyan understood this image better than almost anyone else in church history; his allegory pictured the Christian life from conversion through to the end in the Celestial City—heaven. At one point, Christian has to walk between two chained lions. He cannot see the chains, but if he stays on the path—the highway of holiness—the lions cannot harm him
So it is with Satan and his evil henchmen:
1 Peter 5:8 Be self-controlled and alert. Your enemy the devil prowls around like a roaring lion looking for someone to devour.
e. Only the redeemed and the ransomed of the Lord will enter and walk there: It is impossible to begin the Christian journey to heaven without faith in Jesus Christ; when faith in Christ comes, we have been redeemed—bought with a price from slavery—we have been ransomed (rescued from captivity); then we may walk on the highway of Holiness to the heavenly Zion… and we will enter Zion with singing!!
B. The Highway of Holiness is the “Way” of Salvation
1. Justification leads to Sanctification, which leads to Glorification
2. Jesus IS the “Way”, He IS the “Highway of Holiness”
John 14:4-6 You know the way to the place where I am going.” 5 Thomas said to him, “Lord, we don’t know where you are going, so how can we know the way?” 6 Jesus answered, “I AM THE WAY and the truth and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me.
C. Progressive Sanctification is Essential to True Salvation
1. Justification by faith alone: Our present and future obedience cannot pay for our past disobedience
2. Through faith in Christ, we stand perfectly righteous in the sight of God
3. BUT every truly justified person immediately begins a journey of sanctification, putting sin to death
4. If that process isn’t going on, then justification never happened
Romans 8:13-14 For if you live according to the sinful nature, you will die; but if by the Spirit you put to death the misdeeds of the body, you will live, 14 because those who are led by the Spirit of God are sons of God.
BEING LED BY THE SPIRIT is the way of holiness… putting sin to death by the Spirit
D. The “Way of Holiness” Described
1. “Holiness” is that which conforms to God’s perfect character, as expressed in God’s law
2. The “Way of holiness” is a lifestyle of purity, of freedom from corruption, conforming to Christ’s character and God’s moral laws
1 John 1:5-7 This is the message we have heard from him and declare to you: God is light; in him there is no darkness at all. 6 If we claim to have fellowship with him yet walk in the darkness, we lie and do not live by the truth. 7 But if we walk in the light, as he is in the light, we have fellowship with one another, and the blood of Jesus, his Son, purifies us from all sin.
1 John 5:3-4 This is love for God: to obey his commands. And his commands are not burdensome, 4 for everyone born of God overcomes the world. This is the victory that has overcome the world, even our faith.
3. Four Purities: the Negative Aspects of Holiness… freedom from darkness
a. Speech Purity… freedom from impure language, gossip, slander, lies, false doctrine, discouragement, arguments, complaining
Mouth Filter: Ephesians 4:29 Do not let any unwholesome talk come out of your mouths, but only what is helpful for building others up according to their needs, that it may benefit those who listen.
b. Sexual Purity: freedom from adultery, fornication, impure thoughts, lust, sinful use of the internet or other electronic media
Ephesians 5:3 But among you there must not be even a hint of sexual immorality, or of any kind of impurity, or of greed, because these are improper for God’s holy people.
c. Relational Purity: freedom from anger, arguments, bitterness, selfishness, unforgiveness, pride, superiority, judgmentalism… anything that would break our fellowship with each other
Philippians 2:2-4 being like-minded, having the same love, being one in spirit and purpose. 3 Do nothing out of selfish ambition or vain conceit, but in humility consider others better than yourselves. 4 Each of you should look not only to your own interests, but also to the interests of others.
d. Purity in Lawful Pleasures: freedom from enslavement to the good gifts of God… greedy for more time to pursue hobbies, watch movies, enjoy sports, eat pleasure foods, own possessions, go on trips; any of God’s good gifts can become idols if we attach too much of our hearts to them
1 Corinthians 6:12 “Everything is permissible for me”– but not everything is beneficial. “Everything is permissible for me”– but I will not be mastered by anything.
4. Positive Sanctification: Spending yourselves in sacrificial love for God and others
Matthew 22:37-39 “‘Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind.’ 38 This is the first and greatest commandment. 39 And the second is like it: ‘Love your neighbor as yourself.’
Isaiah 58:10 if you spend yourselves in behalf of the hungry and satisfy the needs of the oppressed, then your light will rise in the darkness, and your night will become like the noonday.
5. Progress is made gradually and increasingly
Romans 6:19 I put this in human terms because you are weak in your natural selves.
Just as you used to offer the parts of your body in slavery to impurity and to ever-increasing wickedness, so now offer them in slavery to righteousness leading to holiness.
This is the HIGHWAY OF HOLINESS
V. The Destination of the Transformed: Glorious Zion (vs. 10)
Isaiah 35:10 They will enter Zion with singing; everlasting joy will crown their heads.
Gladness and joy will overtake them, and sorrow and sighing will flee away.
A. The Final Destination of the Highway: Zion… the New Heaven and New Earth
B. The Joy of their Arrival… entering Zion with singing
2 Peter 1:11 you will receive a rich welcome into the eternal kingdom of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.
C. Heaven Described
1. Everlasting joy crowning their heads
2. Gladness and joy overtaking them… Hebrew word means to obtain as a goal you’d been pursuing all your lives
3. Sorrow and sighing will FLEE AWAY… like the light driving away shadows
VI. Applications
A. See in Christ the Fulfillment of this Chapter
1. By the ministry of Christ, God’s “original intention” for the universe will be fulfilled
2. It was Christ who opened the eyes of the blind… both physically and spiritually… enabling us to see and savor the glory of God in the universe and in the Word
3. It was Christ who unstopped the ears of the deaf… both physically and spiritually… enabling us to hear the beautiful sounds of God’s universe, and the even more beautiful sounds of His Word
4. It was Christ who enabled the lame to leap like a deer… both physically and spiritually… so they could physically walk home after decades of paralysis, and so they could walk on the Highway of Holiness spiritually
5. It was Christ who enabled the mute tongue to speak… both physically and spiritually… speaking words to loved ones, and speaking prayers and praise to God
B. Come to Christ: BY THE CROSS OF CHRIST WE ARE HEALED
Isaiah 53:5-6 But he was pierced for our transgressions, he was crushed for our iniquities; the punishment that brought us peace was upon him, and by his wounds we are healed. 6 We all, like sheep, have gone astray, each of us has turned to his own way; and the LORD has laid on him the iniquity of us all.
C. Understand the Fullness of the Redemption that God Has Planned for the Universe… Romans 8, the Creation LIBERATED FROM DECAY
1. The present physical creation was cursed in the sin of Adam, and is groaning as we learned
2. The images of the wasteland flowing with water and flowering will be literally fulfilled in the New Heavens and New Earth
D. Embrace Life on the Highway of Holiness
1. Understand clearly the relationship between justification and sanctification
2. Diagnose your personal holiness… are there besetting patterns of sin that the Holy Spirit wants out of your life?
3. Analyze the four-fold purity: purity in speech, sexual purity, purity in relationships, purity in lawful pleasures
4. Put sin to death by the power of the Holy Spirit
5. Analyze your life of ministry as well
E. Look Forward to the Beauty of the New Heaven and New Earth, a wasteland will become a flourishing garden by the power of Christ
When I was in Bible interpretation class, they told us an important principle of interpretation is that we should always seek the author’s original intention in every text, we should try to find out what the author’s original intention was. I came to find out later the reason that they taught us that is that in history, there were some that went in for things called allegorical interpretations that were very fanciful and not in any way tied directly to the Bible texts, they floated away like one of your kid’s helium balloon floated away last time you got one at Kroger’s and they weren’t tied around their wrist, they just floated right away, and we had no idea what they were rooted in, such is allegorical interpretation. So they taught us we need to go to the author’s original intention. I was thinking about that phrase when it came to Isaiah 35. I think it’s important for us to understand what Isaiah meant with this, I think it’s more important to understand the true Author, God and what his intention is in this text.
But I didn’t stop there, I went beyond it to say, what was the author of creation’s original intention in creating the universe? Why did he make this world? Why did he make heaven and earth? What did he intend when he separated the sea from the dry land and he caused living creatures to multiply on both? In the sea and the dry land? When he created it, he caused the land to blossom and to flourish with living things, with seed-bearing plants. What was his original intention in creating the fish of the sea and the birds of the air, all of the different species? What was his original intention in making an incredibly, magnificently, beautiful world, filling it with his glory, with beauty and majesty? What was his original intention in all of that? And what did he intend when he created man to walk the surface of the earth? And he made man with special attributes and abilities. What was his original intention when he created the eye? What did he make the eye to do? Why did he create the ear with all of its abilities, its complexities? What was his purpose?
Now, there’s a text, Isaiah 45:18, and we’ll preach…and I’m looking at Isaiah 35 today, but in Isaiah 45:18, there’s an important verse that gives us insight into the text we’re looking at today. There it says, “For this is what the Lord says—he who created the heavens, he is God; he who fashioned and made the earth, he founded it.” Now listen, “He did not create it to be empty, but he formed it to be inhabited—he says: ‘I am the Lord and there is no other.’” Note the words, God did not create it to be a desert. That’s not why he made it. He did not want a howling wasteland. This begs the question then, why is so much of the earth the desert? Why are parts of the earth then a howling wasteland? Now, in Isaiah, again and again, the image of the desert is used as a picture of God’s judgment on man for sin. Parts of the earth are a wasteland, are a desert, because of human sin.
But let’s extend this idea still further. Why did God create the eye with all of its complexities? He did not form it to be blind, but he made it to be able to see. When God said, “Let there be light,” he also by implication said, “Let there be sight.” There’s no point in the universe being filled with radiance of God’s glory and there being no sight, no receptors of that glory. What’s the point? Why then are maybe 256 million people vision impaired? Why are 39 million people, completely, totally blind? Same reason—human sin ultimately caused disease and brokenness to enter this world. Why did God create the air? Why did he make the eardrum and all the tiny little bones, and all those little hairs and all of that, that make hearing possible? Was it not so that we could hear the sounds that God wanted us to hear? The chirping of the birds, the crash of the ocean, the blowing of the wind and the trees, all of those things are just beautiful sounds. The sound of a baby crying or laughing, giggling. All of these sounds. He did not form the ear to be deaf, but he formed it so that it could hear. Why then, are 275 million people in the world hearing impaired? Same reason, because human sin has entered the world and moved it off of the Author’s original intention. From the beginning, God formed Adam and Eve with perfect sight, perfect hearing, and perfect everything else, and put them in a perfect world to look at all of God’s glorious beauty that he had woven into physical creation. He put them there so that they would see it and worship him, their hearts would be filled with joy at what they saw and what they heard, and God would get the glory. And it wasn’t enough for just that first couple, God commanded them saying, “Be fruitful and multiply and fill the world with my image.”
But sin entered the world, and death through sin, and in that way, corruption and decay in futility has come to all the earth. Romans 8:19 and following, it says, “The creation waits in eager expectation for the sons of God to be revealed. For the creation was subjected to [futility,] frustration, not by its own choice, but by the will of him who subjected it, in hope that the creation will be liberated from its bondage to decay and brought into the glorious freedom of the children of God. We know that the whole creation has been groaning as in the pains of childbirth right up to this present time. And not only so, but we ourselves, who have the first fruits of the Spirit, groan inwardly as we wait eagerly for our adoption as sons, the redemption of our bodies.” So I just put in equal in there, “Adoption as sons equals the redemption of our bodies,” and we’re waiting for that. It hasn’t come yet. And we’re groaning, because sin has devastated this universe, God’s original intentions are not being met. And so, this is the glorious good news: God sent his only begotten Son into the world to make it all right, to restore it, to redeem it, to buy it back, to bring it back and make it what it should have been. And to Jesus Christ alone be the glory for all of that. What a wonder-working God he is.
And so as Jesus began his earthly ministry, he went to his hometown synagogue in Nazareth, and Jesus stood up on a certain Sabbath, and the scroll of Isaiah the prophet was handed to him. And opening the scroll, he found the place where these words were written, “‘The Spirit of the Lord is on me, because the Lord has anointed me to preach good news to the poor. He has sent me to proclaim freedom for the captives and recovery of sight to the blind, to release the oppressed, to proclaim the year of the Lord’s favor.’ And then he rolled up the scroll, and gave it back to the attendant and sat down, and he began by saying these words, ‘Today, in your hearing, this scripture is fulfilled.’” Wouldn’t you love to have been there at that moment? Fulfilled? That scripture fulfilled? Yes, as they heard Jesus speak, as they heard him preach from Isaiah, the scripture was fulfilled. But Jesus went on from there to live out of ministry, rich with the power of the Holy Spirit, infinitely rich with the display of the power of the Spirit of God, doing signs and wonders in the sight of all the people.
And these signs and wonders, these miracles proved that he was unique, he was special, unlike anyone that had ever lived before, he was God the Son, God incarnate. It proved that he was who he claimed to be, the Son of God, those miracles. But they were also signs, like on a highway, pointing to a reality we haven’t reached yet. They were signs, they’re called signs and wonders. There were signs pointing to something we don’t have yet—a place where all death and mourning and decay and suffering are gone forever, a place where there are no blind eyes and no deaf ears and no lame people and no mute tongues anymore. He didn’t banish those things from the Earth, he healed individuals of those maladies, case by case. I was joking with some people, I don’t mean to be disrespectful, I was just thinking about it, there’s no account ever of anyone getting more than one healing from Jesus, I think he probably could have done it, but imagine, let’s say a blind man, he’s saying, “Oh, this is incredible, this is greatest, best day of my life. You know, I have actually been having trouble my lower back recently. I mean, while you’re at it, would you mind? Just something on the back, ’cause I know you can do it.” There’s actually no record of that. I don’t know if any of those healed people went home and said, “You know, I wish I had asked him about that too.” And all of the people that Jesus healed are dead now. All of them. They’re all dead, all of those seeing eyes are blind by death, all those hearing ears now, they are deaf by death, all of them. They’re just signs, pointing ahead to something that isn’t here yet, a reality that is coming.
When John the Baptist was languishing in prison and wasn’t sure whether Jesus really was who he claimed to be, he was weak. Just like our text talks about, his hands were feeble, his knees were giving away, it happens to everybody, maybe it’s been happening to you, maybe this sermon will strengthen your hands and your weak knees. I pray so. But the messengers came, and remember what John’s messenger said to Jesus? “Are you the one who was to come, or should we expect someone else?” Someone else? “Go back and report to John what you see and hear: The blind receive sight, the lame walk, those who have leprosy are cured, the deaf hear, the dead are raised, and the good news is preached to the poor. And blessed is the man who does not fall away on account of me.” Go back and tell him that.
And so we come to today’s Scripture. And today’s Scripture predicts 700 years before it happened, this very ministry that Jesus did, predicts it. Look at verses 5-6 in Isaiah 35, “Then will the eyes of the blind be opened and the ears of the deaf unstopped. Then will the lame leap like a deer, and the mute tongue shout for joy.” The—actually, the whole chapter extends to all of creation itself, the desert blooming like the crocus, and what a stunning contrast Isaiah 35 is to Isaiah 34, which we looked at last week. Isaiah 34 represents the wrath of God on all nations, Isaiah 34:2. And then we had the picture of Edom, the reprobate nations, the reprobate people. And it says that, “Edom’s streams will be turned into pitch, and her dust in the burning sulfur; her land will become blazing pitch! It will not be quenched night and day; its smoke will rise forever. From generation to generation, it will lie desolate.” That’s in Isaiah 34. Another word for that is a desert. It will lie as a desert, and “no one will ever pass through it again.” But this chapter, Isaiah 35, speaks of the blooming of a desert, a howling wilderness turned into the garden of Eden all over again, the judged land restored and made beautiful again.
Now, many scholars have different interpretations of Isaiah 35, telling us what the author originally intended. So then they take their crack at what the author’s original intention was. Isaiah was speaking, they say, about the restoration of the Jews back to the promised land, when they would come back out of Babylon and they would take again their places in the promised land. Others say, it refers to the salvation of the gentiles by the proclamation of the gospel to the ends of the earth. Or others say it may be applied individually, to the personal spiritual experience of individual sinners that are saved and their eyes are open and then they can see at last. I once was blind, and now I see. I was deaf and now I can hear. And it’s speaking metaphorically of the salvation work of God and Jesus and individual sinners. Some scholars say it refers to the millennial kingdom, when after Christ returns, he will set up a perfect world and he will make all of these things physically happen in the millennial kingdom, and he changes the curse to a blessing. And some say it’s just talking about the joys of the new heaven and new earth, the joys of the new heaven or new earth.
Well, I say, why not all of the above? What do you say? I don’t know about all of that, but why not? Why not just say, this is poetry, and we probably don’t need an engineer to preach on it, we just need more of a poet kind of person to preach on it, and we’re not gonna get meticulous about whether it’s this or that or the other, let’s take it all. Well, this engineer says “amen” to that. Let’s take it all. Let’s say God intends rich, lavish blessings, both on the physical creation and on human beings, and he is intending to bring us to a world that is gonna be so rich and so beautiful and so full, that you can’t even describe it, no words can capture it right now. ‘Cause it’s the purpose of the word of God to cause faith and hope to rise up in your heart and to give you a renewed strength so that you make it there, you finish your journey and get there. So let’s do it.
“God intends rich, lavish blessings, both on the physical creation and on human beings, and he is intending to bring us to a world that is gonna be so rich and so beautiful and so full, that you can’t even describe it, no words can capture it right now “
I. Creation Transformed: From Sterile Desert to Fruitful Garden (vs. 1-2)
Look at verses 1-2, creation transformed from a sterile desert to a fruitful garden. It says there, “The desert and the parched land will be glad; the wilderness will rejoice and blossom. Like the crocus, it will burst into bloom; it will rejoice greatly and shout for joy.”
So you know, at the beginning, God made the earth, and he made it beautiful and fertile and perfect in every way, but he had a special place called the Garden of Eden, and that was where man was to get his start, and it was beautiful with all kinds of fruit trees, and it was just a lush and lavish garden, flourished with all manner of growing things, it was perfectly fruitful. And the whole world was radiant with the glory of God, and Adam and Eve to fill the Earth and to explore it and to move out on its surface and find out all of the beauties that God had wrapped up into the physical universe. In a similar way, lesser of course, ’cause it’s after the fall, but in a similar way, the Jewish nation, when they crossed over the Jordan, they were entering what was known as the promised land, and it was described in similar terms. In Deuteronomy 11, “The land you are crossing the Jordan to take possession of is a land of mountains and valleys that drinks in the rain from heaven.” Doesn’t that sounds beautiful? Just drinks in the rain from heaven. You’re not gonna need to irrigate it with a foot pump like they do in Egypt, but “it’s a land the Lord your God cares for; the eyes of the Lord your God are continually on it from the beginning of the year to its end.” Take special care of it, and therefore in that same chapter, it’s called “a land flowing with milk and honey.”
But in both cases, both in terms of the Garden of Eden and the Promised Land, there was an unbreakable link between the people and the land. And when the people sinned, the land was cursed in both cases. In Eden, God cursed the ground because of Adam and it would not produce fertile, lush harvest any longer, but thorns and thistles. And so also in the case of the promised land, one of the curses on it was a curse on the land itself. In Deuteronomy 28, said if you turn away from me and if you violate my covenant, and if you do not keep its stipulations, I will curse the land that you’re living in. Deuteronomy 28:23-24, “The sky over your head will be bronze and the ground beneath you iron. The Lord will turn the reign of your country into dust and powder; it will come down from the skies until you are destroyed.” So the turning of that fruitful land into the desert represents the cursing of the land because of the sin of the people. Verse 1 speaks, in our text, speaks of a desert and a parched land. How did it get to be that way? God didn’t create it to be a desert. How did it get to be that way? Psalm 107:33-34, it says this, “God turned rivers into a desert, flowing springs into thirsty ground, and fruitful land he turned into a salt waste, because of the wickedness of those who live there.” You see? The same thing happened at Sodom and Gomorrah. The same thing. A very lush fertile ground, that’s why Lot chose to go there, God turned it into a salt ground. Cursed by God, why? Because of the wickedness and the sin in the people who live there. As we saw in Isaiah 34, God stretched out over Edom the plumb line of…measuring line of chaos and the plumb line of desolation. What’s another word for desolation but a desert? God turned Edom into a desert because of their wickedness and their sin.
And so it is in the world we live in today. You can just hear, if you know what to listen for, you can hear the groaning of creation because of man’s sin. Earthquakes claiming the lives of thousands of people, a third of a million people died in that earthquake in Haiti. Tsunamis and tidal waves like happened in over a year ago in Miyagi, Japan, killing 19,000 people and displacing again about a a third of a million people from their homes. Volcanoes in the world like Mount Marapi in Indonesia, that erupted and killed 122 people in November of 2010. Hurricane Katrina, as you know, killing over 1800 people and causing 81 billion dollars of damage. Heavy rains in the year 2010, heavy rains and floods and Gansu, China resulted in a devastating mud slide, leaving 1407 dead people. Floods in the Philippines in December last month related to a typhoon, again, killed over 500 people. In our own country last year during tornado season, just one killer tornado after another, just ripped through that part of our country, killing 19 people in Kentucky, 12 in Indiana, three in Ohio. Blizzards, droughts, wildfires, hailstorms—these are the sounds of the groaning of creation, with an attended death toll.
So what then is the blooming of the desert? What does it mean that the desert will bloom? Well, it’s a supernatural act of intervening grace by a sovereign God. He steps into our groaning creation and changes everything. Isn’t that magnificent? Look again at the words, “The desert and the parched land will be glad; the wilderness will rejoice and blossom. Like the crocus, it will burst into bloom; it will rejoice greatly and shout for joy. The glory of Lebanon will be given to it, the splendor of Carmel and Sharon; and they will see the glory of the Lord, the splendor of our God.” This is just a magnificent blooming of creation, where once there was nothing but sterility and dust and thorns and thistles and curse, it’s just totally reversed, and instead, now it’s just this flourishing garden of Eden all over again.
“What does it mean that the desert will bloom? It’s a supernatural act of intervening grace by a sovereign God. He steps into our groaning creation and changes everything.”
And the desert here is personified, the desert itself is rejoicing greatly and the desert is shouting for joy, so instead of the sounds of groaning, you’re hearing the sounds of creation shouting for joy. And the natural beauty is lavish, and he uses terms that we might be able…if we had been Jews in Isaiah’s day, we would have understood, and we can extend our minds a little bit to understand it, the glory of Lebanon will be given to it. Lebanon was known for its cedars, it’s huge trees, its forests. So maybe you’ve never been there, but maybe you’ve seen the redwoods in northern California, some other magnificent forest, and it’s just gonna be incredibly beautiful like that. And Carmel and Sharon, we don’t know that much about them, but just picture beautiful places on earth, you see, God didn’t make the whole world a desert. He didn’t make everything look openly cursed, he left enough beauty in this world so that we’ve seen it haven’t we? We’ve seen some really beautiful scenery, and we can imagine maybe like one of those islands in the South Pacific, like Tahiti or Bora Bora, some place like that, and it’s just lush and beautiful or maybe the Amazonian rain forest, and you can imagine all of that without any of the groaning or decay that happens there.
So these things are going to happen, and this is a prophecy. God is putting his word, his power behind this. This is going to happen. It’s going to flourish. And it’s gonna be beautiful. And it’s going to be, as it says in this text, they will see the glory of the Lord, the splendor of our God. And this is already getting on to my second point, but the minds of the observers will be changed, and no longer will we worship and serve created things. We’re not gonna look at it and worship the tree, we’re not gonna worship the whale, we’re not gonna worship the rainbow or worship any of that stuff, we’re going to worship the God who made those beautiful things. And the earth will be filled at last with the knowledge of the glory of the Lord as the waters cover the sea. It’s gonna be magnificent.
II. People Transformed: From Cursed Weakness to Blessed Strength (vs. 3-7)
Nature will be redeemed, and so will our eyes, our hearts to be able to receive it. So that’s the second point. Look at verses 3-7. People transform, not just nature transform, but people transform from cursed weakness to blessed strength. Verse 3 and following, “Strengthen the feeble hands, steady the knees that give way; say to those with fearful hearts, ‘Be strong, do not fear; here God will come, he will come with vengeance; with divine retribution he will come to save you.’ Then will the eyes of the blind be opened and the ears of the deaf unstopped. Then with a lame leap like a deer and the mute tongue shout for joy. Water will gush forth in the wilderness and streams in the desert. The burning sand will become a pool, the thirsty ground bubbling springs. In the haunts were jackals once lay, grass and reeds and papyrus will grow.” So now we get to the human condition, still a lot of natural language here, but here we’re talking about people, hands and knees and hearts, eyes, ears, legs, we’re talking about people.
Now, human weakness is a result of the Fall, human disease is a result of the Fall. Now, the weakness of the human race is of two kinds: physical and spiritual. Our bodies are diseased and our souls are diseased, and we must have a full salvation from these. People’s bodies are weak through injury and disease and aging and fatigue, just simple fatigue. People’s souls are weak through sin and rebellion and guilt and unbelief, and then discouragement and despair. And both of those together make life very, very difficult to live in this world, and some people so bad it feels like a curse just to be alive. But here God addresses, he speaks directly into the weakness of our human situation and sin, and he speaks to us a word of redemption, a word of salvation through Jesus Christ, and so we have human weakness transformed to strength. Look at verses 3-4, “Strengthen the feeble hands, steady the knees that give way; say to those with fearful hearts, ‘Be strong, do not fear; your God will come to you.’” So I took that as a personal message this morning. I said, “God was saying that to me.”
Just like Isaiah 40, when he spoke to Isaiah the prophet and said, “‘Comfort, comfort my people,’ says your God.” So I wanna do that for you if I can. So I just wanna be a conduit of strength and steadying and banishment of fear by the word of God. But this isn’t just something the pastor can do behind the pulpit. Why don’t you all do that for each other the rest of the week? Why don’t you just speak God’s promises to each other the rest of the week, and why don’t you steady those feeble knees that are about to buckle? Why don’t you find some weak hands that are about to give up, and strengthen them? And isn’t it amazing what strengthened them, right in the text? “Say to those” etcetera, just the word, just the word, the feeble word. Just speak the word, ’cause it’s not feeble, “it’s the power of God for salvation for everyone who believes.” I think this is going on right now while I preach. I think your hope is getting stronger again, you’re actually eager for the future, you’re actually saying, “When will it come, O Lord? I wanna see all that. It’s gonna be beautiful. I wanna get there. Not there yet, but I wanna get there.” So it’s already happening.
“Why don’t you just speak God’s promises to each other the rest of the week, and why don’t you steady those feeble knees that are about to buckle? Why don’t you find some weak hands that are about to give up, and strengthen them?”
Now, for the Jews in Isaiah’s day maybe it would be you are in exile like Daniel was or some of the others that were carried off into exile and you’re wondering, when can we go back? But that’s not enough for me. I wanna speak even beyond that to say to all of God’s people throughout history, we know the real battle is not with the Assyrians or the Babylonians. The real battle is with the world, the flesh and the devil, and oh, how weary we get when we’re fighting it. And we need to be reminded that God’s commands are actually promises when he says, “Be perfect, therefore, as your heavenly Father is perfect,” some day you will be, some day you will be by the sovereign power of God, because your God will come, and he will come to save you. And you may feel feeble and weak on the external journey too, say, “How can I do anything for anyone else? How can I lead anyone to Christ? They never seem to come to Christ. How can we plant churches and unreached people groups? It just seems impossible for us to do anything.” Banish those thoughts, they are from Satan himself. God will be exalted in the world, he’ll be glorified, and he will save all of his elect and those churches will get planted and those people will get saved. All of them, not one will be missing.
And so here’s the message of encouragement to strengthen us, and we have a responsibility to do this for each other. I preached on this, kind of, a few months ago in Hebrews 12, as the author quoted this, Hebrews 12:12-13, it says, “Therefore, strengthen your feeble arms and weak knees.” Does that sound familiar? Now we’re getting it from the back side. On that Sunday, I quoted Isaiah 35. Now, in the Sunday, I’m quoting Hebrews 12. Isn’t that fun, how the Bible’s interconnected? But it says to the church, “Strengthen each other, build each other up, encourage one another. Speak words of blessing to one another.” “‘Make level paths for your feet,’” he says there in Hebrews 12:13, “so that the lame may not be disabled, but rather healed.” What path are you on? We’ll get to that in a minute, but it’s called the Highway of Holiness, that’s the path you’re on, and it’s a long, long journey. But let’s strengthen each other.
So not only do we get a message of encouragement, we also get a promise that our bodies will be radically, supernaturally transformed. Look at verses 5-6. Those of you that are fans of Handel’s Messiah, you can hum along, but do it quietly. “Then will the eyes of the blind be opened and the ears of the deaf unstopped. Then with a lame leap like a deer, and the mute tongue shout for joy.” Shall we just cut to the chase? This is a clear prediction of the ministry of Jesus Christ. That’s what it is. It’s not metaphorical alone. We’ll get to that in a minute. It is a clear prediction that someone would come to do this and that someone is Jesus. Now, isn’t it amazing when you contemplate the wonders of Jesus, the signs and wonders, the miracles. I believe in every case, you can make a case, every time it was a restoration to the author’s original intention. He is basically restoring back to the way things should have been, what sin has done in the world.
Think for example of the stilling of the storm, God it did not make the storm to make the sea to be a killer. He didn’t intend for his apostles to drown in a boating accident, it’s not the world God intended, where nature eats you alive and you drown. And so he got up and what did he do? He rebuked the wind and the waves, and he stilled the storm. Or think of the feeding of the 5000 out in that desert place, and there was nothing to eat. God did not make your body your stomach to starve, he didn’t create you to die by starvation, that’s evidence of the Fall, but instead he fed you. Think of the changing of the water to wine at the banquet. I believe this represents the flowing of the Holy Spirit, and God did not intend for us to sit at a banquet and to be sterile of joy and have no presence of the Spirit, etcetera, but he lavished blessing on them. But notice I kind of didn’t mention the real miracle is 90 percent of them or more were what? They were healings. Most of them are healings, and that is so obviously a restoration back to what God originally intended, he did not create the eye to be blind. He didn’t have all of those magnificent functions, the retina, the cornea, and the optical nerve, and all the capability of sight—he didn’t make all that so that it wouldn’t work.
Four different times in the Gospels there are accounts of Jesus healing blind people, the best by far, of course, John 9, in which John creates space in his very tight gospel, he only had certain things in there, but he has a whole chapter on this one miracle, whole chapter. On the healing of a man born blind. And it’s such an incredible thing that the man himself said, “Never since the world began has it been heard that anyone opened eyes of a man born blind.” This has never been done before. Utterly astonishing display of the power of God. But there are other miracles listed here as well. The ears of the deaf are unstopped, like when Jesus puts saliva on the tips of his fingers and touched the man’s tongue, and then he put his fingers in the man’s ears and said, “ ,” which is, “Be opened.” It’s direct fulfillment of this, Isaiah 35, “Then will the ears of the deaf be unstopped…and the mute tongue will sing for joy.” Supernatural display of the power of God.
Or the lame leaping like a deer in Matthew 9. You remember the story of the paralyzed man, they brought him on a mat and they couldn’t get toward…they couldn’t get near Jesus, there is too many people, and so they dug through the roof. Those are great friends. You need friends like that, friends that don’t give up and they dig through the roof. I don’t know if they later fixed the roof and paid for it or what happened with all that, but they dug through the roof and they lowered this man down right in front of Jesus. I often wondered if pieces of the roof were falling in front of Jesus while he was teaching or whatever he was doing, that they all looked up wondering what was happening, I wonder if it took like 10 or 15 minutes to finish the job, I wonder if Jesus used that time well to keep teaching and then finally the opening was big enough, I think about things like this. And it took a while, but there it was, and the man was descended, he was lowered down right in front of Jesus.
And it says, “When Jesus saw their faith, he said to the paralytic, ‘Take heart, son; your sins are forgiven.’” Still paralyzed. Still paralyzed. Let me give you what you really need. You know what you really need? You need forgiveness by Almighty God, and I’m here to give it to you. And remember how the people were offended, and they said in their own hearts, “This fellow is blaspheming!” Who can forgive sins but God alone? And he said, “Why do you say these things in your hearts?” That’s a bit eerie, to be in the presence of Jesus reading your mind. “‘Which is easier: to say, “Your sins are forgiven,” or to say to this paralyzed man, “Rise and walk”? But so that you may know that the Son of Man has power on earth to forgive sins,’ and he said to the paralyzed man, ‘Rise and walk.’ And he did.”
Jesus still has power to forgive sins, that’s what Isaiah 35:5-6 is ultimately about the power of Jesus to forgive your sins, and you are a sinner and so I am I. And we need that forgiveness, without it we will be lost. Read about it in the last chapter. And the smoke of the torment rises forever and ever. Flee that. Flee to Jesus, who has the power to heal you from sin, but actually, I believe that these healings were not just physical, I believe they were metaphorical. How can you believe both? I think they pointed to a higher healing, which was spiritual. Not only were our eyes physically damaged, our ability to see God, to see his glory was damaged. We were blind toward God. Because later in that same chapter, in John 9, you remember Jesus’ enemies come out, the very ones that kicked the blind man, now seeing out of the synagogue ’cause he testified to Jesus, they kicked them out, Jesus goes and finds them like the Good Shepherd, that’s the very next captor, he goes and finds him to bring him in. And the enemies are there, they’re the wolves and the enemies, and they’re right there. And Jesus says to them, “‘For judgment I have come into the world, so that the blind will see and those who see will become blind.’ Some Pharisees who were with him heard him say this and said, ‘What? Are we blind too?’ And Jesus said, ‘If you were blind you would not be guilty of sin; but now that you claim you can see, your guilt remains.” So it’s not just a physical blindness that Jesus is dealing with there; clearly, it’s a spiritual blindness too.
And it’s not just that he’s able to open physically deaf ears so they can now physically hear sounds, it’s that we were deaf to the word of God, we were not listening to him, you see? So at the end of each of Jesus’ parables, what does he say every time? “He who has ears to hear, let him hear.” Have I given you the ability to hear me? Then listen to me. And it’s not just that physical lameness was going on, people couldn’t get up and walk around—it’s that we had no power to walk in the way of God, we had no power to walk in the commands of God, we were paralyzed toward his commands. And it’s not just that our tongues were physically mute and we couldn’t speak physically—it’s that we could not speak the words of God, we could not speak the praise of God, we saw sunrises and sunsets, and we said, “Praise be Baal. Praise be Molech. Or isn’t that a beautiful sunset?” and never thought about God and we did not speak and say, “To God be the glory for all of this.” All of that needed healing, we needed to be healed, so that we could spiritually see God and hear him speak by his word, and walk in the path of his commands and speak the words of God to one another and the praises of God. That’s the healing we needed, and so do you see how perfect it is that Jesus did these healings as these miracles? It did everything all at once. Pointed to both the physical salvation of the universe and the spiritual salvation of the universe.
And so the desert comes alive. Look at verses 6-7, “Water will gush forth in the wilderness and streams in the desert. The burning sand will become a pool, the thirsty ground bubbling springs. In the haunts where jackals once lay, grass and reeds and papyrus will grow.” Physically, this is a clear picture of what the new heaven and new earth will look like. It’s going to be incredible, lush, and beautiful. But I think it’s also a clear picture of the pouring out of the Holy Spirit of God. I believe often the Spirit is likened to water. With the Samaritan woman, he’s likened to water. In John 7, “Out of your inner being, streams of living water will flow,” by this he meant the Spirit. Later in Isaiah, listen to this, this is so clear. You get that Hebrew parallelism that beautiful poetry and it’s so clear that the Holy Spirit equals water. Isaiah 44:3-4, “For I’ll pour water on the thirsty land, and streams on the dry ground; I will pour out my Spirit on your offspring, and my blessing on your descendants.” See, that’s just directly parallel. “They will spring up like grass in a meadow, like poplar trees by flowing streams.” So the agricultural images go right over to people, we are like green grass, we are like poplar trees by flowing streams by the power of the Spirit.
III. The Transforming Event: “Your God Will Come to Save You” (vs. 4)
And what is the transforming event? Verse 4, I already said, this is what it is. Verse 4, “Say to those with fearful hearts, ‘Be strong, do not fear; your God will come.’” Friends, these transformations I’ve been talking about, they do not come by human power, they don’t come by human ingenuity. I don’t wanna hear about what the Jews are doing with irrigation in the promised land. That’s marvelous and incredible—that’s not this. You understand? It’s a supernatural transformation that only God can do. We can celebrate the skills of friends of ours, church members, at giving sight to blinded people, but I believe this text is talking about a day when there will be no blind people at all, and there’ll be no deaf people and no lame people and no mute people at all, when disease itself will be banished forever. And the key to everything is your God will come. God’s gonna intervene, he’s gonna step into history, says Isaiah, the prophet, seventh century BC, he’s gonna step, he’s gonna come.
Well, you know, the ultimate expression of this is the birth of Jesus of Nazareth, born of a virgin. And the angel Gabriel said to her very plainly, “‘The virgin will be with child and will give birth to a son, and they will call him Immanuel,’ which means, ‘God with us [or similar to your God has come].’” He is here, now, and he comes to save his people. Says, your God will come, he will come not to wipe you out, he will come to save you. And so in that same chapter, Matthew 1:21, “She will give birth to a son, and you are to give him the name Jesus, because he will save his people from their sins.” Jesus is the Savior of the world, he is the one who comes to do these things, 1 John 4:14, “And we have seen and testified that the Father has sent his Son to be the Savior of the world.” Now, the text also says he will come with vengeance and with divine retribution, he will come to do that too. There are sheep and there are goats. There’s wheat, and there are weeds. There are good fish, and there are the bad fish. And there’s going to be a vast separation, Jesus has taught this very plainly, and he will come it says “with the vengeance and with divine retribution,” we saw that in the last chapter.
Now, these things were fulfilled at the first and will be fulfilled at the second coming of Christ. The two comings of Christ fulfill these prophecies. He will come to save you. He saves you by dying on the cross, by taking on our sins in his body and dying on the cross into the wrath and judgment of God, he comes to save you that way. And not only that, but being raised from the dead on the third day in a resurrection body that is our future. Those are the eyes that will never be blind, those are the ears will never go deaf, the resurrection body. Second coming, he will come with vengeance and with divine retribution. In Revelation 19, heaven will stand open and we will see One on a white horse leading the armies of heaven back to bring wrath and judgment on all those who have not repented and trusted in Christ.
So, for me, I urge you to flee to Christ, now, to listen to these words, to allow these words to transform your heart, that your eyes will be opened and you will see in Christ crucified—you can’t see any images or pictures, nothing’s flashing up on the screen, we’re not looking at tha—just in your mind Jesus Christ is publicly portrayed as crucified this morning, dead for you in your place. But not only that, on the third day, risen from the dead, as though you are in the upper room and you’re able to put your fingers in the nail marks and your hand on the side and say, “He’s not just a spirit, he’s not a ghost, he’s been bodily raised from the dead, he is my Savior.” And say with Thomas, “My Lord and my God.” If you walked in here lost, you walked in here unregenerate, you walked in here blind and deaf and lame and mute, don’t walk out here like that. You can walk out seeing and hearing and walking spiritually and speaking the praises of God. What do you have to do? You don’t have to do anything. Believe him. Believe him. You don’t have to move a muscle, just believe him. Look at the order in Matthew 9. First, to the paralyzed, man, “Your sins are forgiven.” Second, “Rise and walk.” There’s your priority structure. Let Jesus speak into your soul, your sins are forgiven. Confess him as your Lord.
“If you walked in here lost, you walked in here unregenerate, you walked in here blind and deaf and lame and mute, don’t walk out here like that. You can walk out seeing and hearing and walking spiritually and speaking the praises of God. “
Is that the end of it? No, it’s not even the end of the chapter. You’re wondering how can even the pastor can’t get through 10 verses, well I think you know. Just look at it—it’s a magnificent. This morning, I decided it would be two sermons. How can I describe the Highway of Holiness in four minutes? It can’t be done. So it won’t be done, but what I will do is I will read it to you and I’ll say it points toward the rest of your life after you come to faith in Christ. Look what it says, “And the highway will be there; it will be called the Way of Holiness. The unclean will not journey on it; it will be for those who walk in that Way; wicked fools will not go about on it. No lion will be there, nor will any ferocious beast get up on it; they will not be found there. But only the redeemed will walk there, and the ransom of the Lord will return. And they will enter Zion with singing.”
The moment you trust in Christ, your eyes are opened and you can see him at last, you begin, God sets you on a journey, and he calls it here in this text, the Highway of Holiness. And you’re not allowed to be on that unless you’re redeemed, only the redeemed can be on it, they’re the only ones on that highway. And it’s a place of safety and security and protection, no lion can get there, and you’re going to make it, friends, you’re gonna make it right to the end, and at the end you’re going to enter Zion, the Holy Place of God, and there will be a rich, warm welcome for you, and you will be singing and they will be singing, and you will spend eternity in bliss and joy. “Everlasting joy will crown your head…and sorrow and sighing will flee away from you.” That’s the future. So next time I preach in Isaiah, not next week, two weeks from now, I’ll finish this chapter. So let’s close in prayer.
Father, we thank you for the marvels of salvation, thank you for the marvels of Jesus’ power. We thank you for the marvels of the promise. “Then will the eyes of the blind be opened and the ears of the deaf unstopped. Then will the lame leap like a deer, and the mute tongue shout for joy.” Oh God, make it happen. I pray it would be happening spiritually right now. I pray there wouldn’t be a single person leaving this room unregenerate, not one person leaving this place not believing in Jesus. I pray that they would trust in him and that they would get up from that, and then begin walking the walk of holiness. Oh God, I pray, give us time, if it be your will, that two weeks from now we can talk more about that. Oh God, make us holy. Help us to yearn to put sin to death and to walk that way until at last we come into Zion forever. In Jesus name, Amen.