“Unlimited or misplaced vengeance pervades our societies. . . and [it] always has.”[1] This has been the same daily story, the same lived experience, that we deal with since the beginning of our story as a people. When we have the option to locate, or create, a different story, we do not easily do so. We would often prefer something different, but today’s text asks us to think differently.
This choice, the choice of vengeance upon other which leads to a personal type of suffering, is also the story that God’s children lived with, and lived through, since the time of Abraham.
It is the story of the Israelites during the time where Isaiah wrote to the exiles as he concludes his book.
And it is also our story today as we move closer to Advent and the celebratory work of the incarnation—even if our hearts are fresh off the work of memory as the Body of Christ.
So, I wonder, what is there each day that we can take hold of to find hope? To locate hope?
Isaiah 65 has that word for us. And rather than offer this word just as something ‘out there’ or even in Advent, which comes sooner than we think. Perhaps this hope is a thing that we can reach out towards and grasp. A lived change that no one might see coming, but a change that will lead us toward Christ the King?
The word that Isaiah has for us begins powerfully with something that only God can do. This passage begins where everything began… Creative Creation.
Move 1- Creative work
The creative work begins with the Lord first. And in this affirmation, we instance where God encourages us to find, and practice, hope.
Historically the exiles who read Isaiah’s words have been through a great deal and so any practice where hope is called out, or called forth, would be challenging. Just as it would be for us. Yet the prophet asks them to put their faith into practice in spite of what they are dealing with on a daily basis and believe.
Isaiah accesses the people’s hope in the same way that God draws us towards himself in relationship… in creation.
The creative work here from the prophet is attributed to the voice of the Lord solely and totally. God does this work. Only God creates in this way. The word that captures this is “bara.” It is the word that opens the Holy Scriptures. And while human authors will write it, no human can create like this. For “in the beginning God created…” Again only God creates in this way.
Unlike ‘asah’ (to make or do) or ‘yatsar’ (to form… like the potter who works the clay and forms something from the clay), ‘bara’ never takes a human subject. ‘Bara’ is not our word. You and I cannot ‘bara’ anything. It is God’s word only and always. This is God’s work, as it is God’s word alone. God’s prerogative. Rooting all subsequent anthropology, morality, and stewardship in God’s authorship—not ours.[2]
“Bara” does not, for instance, take a few eggs, maybe a bit of milk, some cheese and ham, maybe a nice pepper or two, and then make a nice omelete for breakfast as you and I might have done this morning. That is not an act of ‘bara.’
“Bara” takes nothing and out of nothing… ‘behold, I create new heavens a new earth’ says the Lord.
Creation taking place. A place where there was weeping and mourning because the exiles had been through so much. Lost so much. Suffered so much. Relationally doubted that God was ever going to hear their prayers. Care for them. Provide for them. Come back to them. This was the place where that was natural, expected, anticipated, the place where these people (much like you or I could dwell and live each day) and it becomes a place of rejoicing. Something new coming back to them… to us.
Creative acts. From places where nothing existed before. Not creation as transformation. Like eggs becoming breakfast.
This is how our text began and God says, ‘I am doing something new, different, exciting. Transformational. Because this is what I do because you and I are in relationship and I will not leave you, even if the evidence that you see each day makes you think that I am gone or a long way off.’
God wishes to create something new, and in fact IS, creating something new for us that will bless and bring us home.
Move 2-
And you can see how this creative place, this place where God uses, ‘bara,’ this becomes the place, the moment, where in verse 25 something that is not natural, something that is not possible under normal circumstances becomes possible. This is the place, and the moment, where we see the promise of Christ presented yet again in the words of Isaiah.
The wolf and the lamb together. The lion and the ox eating together. The dust being the serpent’s food. Normally these things are not possible; unexpected. But in the new place that God creates for us and with us… it is possible. For with God all things are possible—even if we think we dwell in a place of exile and suffering. Even as we think that God no longer listens and vengeance and separation are the order of the day.
God has chosen not to leave us alone.
For as chapter 65 began, God wonders if His people will choose to dwell close by Him? Will they remain close enough so that he can transform them yet again?
God states that He is here. It is the reverse of the call of Isaiah from chapter 6 where God wonders who will go for Him. Whom shall I send? Who will go for us? At that time Isaiah said, ‘I am here send me.”
Now God is saying I am here, who will return to me and find that I have not moved. For God is faithful. God is steadfast. And in both God’s faithfulness and steadfastness, we once again find a reason and place to hope and trust in Him.
We are being asked to come home to God. Return to the creative place that God makes for us.
This is where the prophet, as the mouthpiece of God, gives us the messianic word in our text. A word that we will consider and remember in a few short weeks.
For where else could this creative work take shape outside of God and God’s creative acts and movements? Where else do we find hope like this outside of God and God’s presence?
Where else but in God do we find reconciliation and hope taking shape when so much of the discourse, and so much of the daily experience that we live with is vengeance, pain, suffering? Where else expect in, and with, the creative God who is at work all around us in places and moments where the worldly evidence suggests that this is not so.
In those moments and places God says, ‘I am creating something new for you where you will find space to rejoice and believe yet again that I am with you preparing to do something that will heal and restore you for that is my nature and that is the nature of our relationship.
Move 3- Banah
And this creative work, though, does not stop with God… it extends into partnership with us.
For two verses of this text stand out as partnering verses in this work: verses 21 & 22. The wording that sticks out is: “to build.”
On the surface the wording of these two verses could sound like the opposite of what Babylon did to the Israelite people. For at a first glace the verse seems to state that we going to spread out and build and build and get bigger and bigger. But when we look deeply at what God says through Isaiah’s words, we once again find a far richer idea that links back up with the creative acts of God that are taking place.
The people hearing Isaiah 65, like you and I today, we are not only going to physically build these things (vineyards & houses), but this word underscores a sense of care and concern that is much deeper and longer lasting. When used in other places in God’s word, this idea underscores a sense child rearing and building and watching over a family. Lovingly. Deeply. Compassionately.
Not hording fruit—to use Isaiahs’ imagery.
Not building a house bigger than my neighbors so they might become envious of me or being to think that I look better than them.
Instead, once again this is building as an act of creative, but this time the creative act is one of caring.
So yet again, the care of God, the creative care of God, the promise of God care for us, leads back into nature and presence of one who is coming in a few short weeks for us. Even through all we deal with and all we struggle against; God is with us.
Conclusion
God keeps his promises to us. As the Lord did in the life of the Israelites. While the children of Israel may have wondered for a great while if God was indeed going to be faithful and care for them, that did not stop the Lord from creatively working in their lives when they wondered if God was still present or active.
And so, as we continue to care for our community, and wonder about our choices of faithfulness in this community, the question comes for us: can we see the promise of God coming? The promise is creative. And the promise calls us to be partner with him in the work.
DM