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remain standing for the reading
of God's word. Our New Testament lesson comes
from the Acts of the risen Christ through his apostles, the book
of Acts, chapter 2. Acts 2, verse 5. And they were dwelling in Jerusalem,
Jews, devout men from every nation under heaven. And when this sound
occurred, the multitude came together and were confused because
everyone heard them speak in his own language. And they were
all amazed and marveled, saying to one another, look, are not
all these who speak Galileans? And how is it that we hear each
in our own language in which we were born? Parthians, Medes,
and Elamites, those dwelling in Mesopotamia, Judea, and Cappadocia,
Pontus in Asia, Phrygia, and Pamphylia, Egypt, and the parts
of Libya adjoining Cyrene, visitors from Rome, both Jews and proselytes,
Cretans and Arabs. We hear them speaking in our
own tongues, the wonderful, works of God. So they were all amazed
and perplexed, saying to one another, what could this mean? Others, mocking, said they are
full of new wine. But Peter, standing up with the
eleven, raised his voice and said to them, Men of Judea and
all who dwell in Jerusalem, let this be known to you and heed
my words. For these are not drunk, as you
suppose, since it is only the third hour of the day. But this
is what was spoken by the prophet Joel. And it shall come to pass
in the last days, says God, that I will pour out My spirit on
all flesh, your sons and your daughters shall prophesy. Your
young men shall see visions, your old men shall dream dreams.
And on my menservants and on my maidservants, I will pour
out my spirit in those days and they shall prophesy. I will show
wonders in heaven above and signs in the earth beneath, blood and
fire. and vapor of smoke. The sun shall
be turned into darkness and the moon into blood before the coming
of the great and awesome day of the Lord. And it shall come
to pass that whoever calls on the name of the Lord shall be
saved." Men of Israel, hear these words. Jesus of Nazareth, a man
attested by God to you by miracles, wonders and signs which God did
through him in your midst, as you yourselves also know him
being delivered by the determined purpose and foreknowledge of
God, you have taken by lawless hands, have crucified and put
to death whom God raised up, having loosed the pains of death
because it was not possible that he should be held by it. This
is the wonderful word of God. Turn now to our Old Testament
lesson in Isaiah chapter nine. My plan is to spend five weeks,
not merely in Isaiah, but in the ninth chapter, indeed in
the sixth verse. Let us read Isaiah nine, six,
and seven together. For unto us a child is born. Unto us a son is given. And the government will be upon
his shoulder. His name will be called Wonderful, Counselor,
Mighty God, Everlasting Father, Prince. of peace. Of the increase
of his government and peace, there will be no end. Upon the
throne of David and over his kingdom to order it and establish
it with judgment and justice. From that time forward, even
forever, the zeal of the Lord of hosts will perform this. May the Lord bless the reading
and proclamation of these words. Amen. You may be seated. For those of you visiting with us,
the last two years during December, it's become our custom of late
to look at texts used in Handel's Messiah. And to be more technical,
to look at the texts in the libretto arranged by Handel's friend,
Charles Ginens. If you look at what was going
on historically when Handel's Messiah was done, it was a time
of great challenge to Orthodox Christian faith. Deism and the
Enlightenment were picking up steam, and Charles Ginens, as
a devout Anglican, wrote a libretto for his friend Handel that emphasized
the reality of fulfilled prophecy, the reality of divine intervention
in human history and the fact of the incarnation of the Son
of God. He wanted to lead with and forefront
and highlight the supernatural in an increasingly secular age. I've shared this before, but
I got the idea of preaching through these texts from the example
of John Newton, known to most of you as the converted slave
ship captain who penned Amazing Grace. The one thing you may
not know about John Newton is in the year 1785, he was pastoring
in London, and he knew that there were gonna be several performances
of Handel's Messiah in the metropolis, and he was concerned that people
in his congregation Perhaps like you, we're going to go during
the holiday season to hear Handel's Messiah played. And in hearing
the music, you might not pay attention to the words. And Newton
wanted to correct that, and so he preached 50 sermons on the
texts used in Handel's Messiah. With his venerable, reformed
precedent in mind, I believe it would be imminently fitting
for us to do the same, for at least two reasons. First, so
that when you hear Handel's Messiah on the radio, or in a concert
hall, or in your car, you will not miss the words. You'll get
the words and the music together. And second, because I think that
this will help us frame our thoughts as a congregation. to celebrate
the glorious appearing of Christ in the world. Not because we
follow a church calendar, no, the Sabbath is the holy day that
we celebrate every week, but providentially and culturally,
this is a time of the year when the first coming of Christ is
on everyone's minds. Even unbelievers hear carols
on the radio and they're attuned They're ripe for a gospel message
of the coming of Christ, and as we celebrate that event, these
texts will prepare us to do so. The first seven movements of
Handel's Messiah come primarily from Isaiah 40 and Malachi 3,
with just a little smattering of Haggai 2. Now, besides Matthew
1, 23, the next five movements come entirely from the book of
Isaiah. In fact, Isaiah gets a lot of
air time and handles Messiah. Of the 81 verses in the entire
work, 21 come from this prophet. And in these five movements,
Charles Jennings, who wrote the libretto, moves from chapter
seven to chapter 40, to chapter 60, to chapter nine, concluding
with our text we just read, Isaiah 9.6. Now in context, Isaiah 9.6
has the prophet giving reasons for the joy mentioned in verse
three. Look back at verse three. It
says, you have multiplied the nation and increased its joy.
They rejoice before you according to the joy of harvest, as men
rejoice when they divide the spoil. If you're reading Isaiah,
Isaiah is living in a time when the Assyrians are about to invade
and assault Jerusalem. And you might wonder, with the
coming of the Assyrians, why are people rejoicing? What's
the reason? Well, he then gives three reasons
in a row for joy, each one is fronted with the word for. You
see that in verse four, verse five, and verse six. Three reasons,
each marked by the word for. Look, first of all, in verse
four. For you have broken the yoke
of his burden and the staff of his shoulder, the rod of his
oppressor, as in the day of Midian. Verse five, four, every warrior's
sandal from the noisy battle in garments rolled in blood will
be used for burning and fuel for fire. The reason there's
gonna be joy is there's going to be victory, and it'll have
the spoils and plunder of war. There's a third and final reason
for joy in verse six. A reason for joy in the midst
of darkness, in the midst of misery, in the midst of death. A reason for joy. Four, unto
us a child is born. Unto us a son is given. Unto us. Not merely is Christ
promised to be with us, that's the Emmanuel promise, but Christ
is for us. Unto us a child is born. A promise. hundreds of years
prior of the coming of the Son of God into the world, the glorious
fact of the incarnation. That 2,000 years ago, from our
standpoint, the eternal Son of God became man and so was and
continues to be God and man in two distinct natures and one
person forever. He became man by taking to himself
a true body and a reasonable soul, being conceived by the
power of the Holy Ghost in the womb of the Virgin Mary and born
of her yet without sin. Great is the mystery of godliness. God was manifest in the flesh. Unto us a child is born. Unto
us A son is given. Yes, Isaiah is telling us that
this Messiah will be a son of David, but there's more here. This is really language of the
son of God, the eternal, only begotten son. A son is given. What does that make you think
of? John 3.16, for God so loved the world that he gave. His only
begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in Him should not perish,
but have everlasting life." This is a gospel call implied in what
Isaiah is saying. When he says, a son is given
unto us, a child is born unto us, a son is given, this is a
call to Offer Christ to the nations, to look unto Him, all the earth.
If there's anyone here who doesn't know Christ, come to Christ. Unto us a child is born, unto
us a son is given, and if you will but receive him in faith,
you shall be saved. Isaiah continues, and the government
shall be upon his shoulders. Not merely a child born of a
woman, the Son of God given for us, but a king. The government should be upon
his shoulders. That's a picture of kingly authority. If you keep
reading Isaiah in chapter 22, he talks about Eliakim, the son
of Hilkiah, who will have the key of the house of David on
his shoulder, and he shall open and no one shall shut, and he
shall shut and no one shall open. A child, a son, A king. Who is Isaiah speaking of? Who
is this child? Who is this son? Who is this
royal figure? Well, here we come to, tempted
to call it the holy of holies in Isaiah chapter nine, because
we have enumerated for us five glorious titles of Christ. Five messianic titles, and his
name shall be called Wonderful, Counselor, the Mighty God, the
Everlasting Father, the Prince of Peace. Five messianic titles. E.J. Young, the great commentator,
says of them, they are a healing balm in which the Christian soul
will find comfort and strength throughout time and eternity. It is one of the saddest points
in the entire history of exposition that so many have refused to
see the true import of these glorious names. And if you're
not sold on the fact that we're gonna spend five weeks in one
verse, hopefully E.J. Young's point convinces you that
these five titles are a balm comfort and strength. Do you feel weak? Go to Isaiah
9.6. Do you feel discouraged? Go to Isaiah 9.6. Marinate your soul in Isaiah
9.6. And my plan is to look at each
of these titles in turn, beginning with wonderful, wonderful. Now the first two, technically,
could be taken and read together. And often you'll find this in
more modern translations. Wonderful counselor, or even
a wonder of a counselor. But I, following the older translations,
believe it's fitting to look at wonderful in a kind of splendid
isolation. That's what we're gonna do tonight.
Simply his name shall be called wonderful. Our approach is very
simple. We're gonna ask two questions
of our text. First, what does it mean to be
wonderful? And then second, how is Christ
wonderful? What does it mean and how is
Christ wonderful? First, what does it mean to be
wonderful? It's a term much like beautiful
and love and even awesome that has to some degree been diluted
through frequent use and sloppy use in our English language. And so part of the challenge
is to get back to the grandeur of this title and not allow our
minds to settle for something lower and lesser than it really
is. This Hebrew word means literally
wonder. And his name shall be called
wonder. In the sense of wonderful, or
we could say full of wonder. This person is a wonder, he is
wonderful, he is full of wonder. It's used to describe things
that are unusual, extraordinary, a miracle, a marvel, a mystery,
something that's hard to grasp, something that's hard to put
into words, something that for humans like us is incomprehensible. You think of a tree. Out here,
you can touch a large oak tree, or perhaps you go to California,
the giant redwoods, or a sequoia. You can touch that tree, you
can apprehend it. You try to put your arms around
it, you're never gonna get to the other side, because it's
simply beyond you. You cannot comprehend it. Well,
in an infinitely greater way, this person is wonderful, incomprehensible,
beyond. Humans are fascinated with things
that are beyond us, with things that exceed our understanding. In fact, the science fiction
writer Arthur C. Clarke said that anything, what's
he say? He says that any technology sufficiently
advanced is indistinguishable from magic. For instance, if
someone from, Several hundred years ago or to time travel to
our era and they came into our sanctuary and hit the light switch
and the lights came on and off. They would say, this is magical.
This is wonderful. I can't understand it. We're
obsessed with things that exceed our ability to put them into
words. Aristotle said, it is owing to wonder. that men both
now begin and at first began to philosophize. Aristotle says
that the bedrock of all philosophy, whether it's Plato or Schopenhauer
or whomever, is this human wonder, this amazement, this marveling
at the world and trying to understand it. In the Hebrew scriptures,
the word used here, this is really important, It's only ever used
for God and his works. I know of no instance in which
this Hebrew word is ever used for a mere human, a mere mortal. It's used of God, it's a divine
title. For example, in Psalm 78, 12,
marvelous things or wonderful things he did in the sight of
their fathers in the land of Egypt in the field of Zoan. The
psalmist says that God's leading his people out of Egypt. He's
leading them across the wilderness, leading them to a promised land.
This was a wonderful thing. These were marvelous works. One of my favorite examples of
the use of this word is actually in the book of Judges, chapter
13, 18. Remember the story of Samson? Perhaps the children
remember that story? Do you remember his parents? Manoah was his father. And he
had an encounter with an angel, a messenger from the Lord. And
he goes to ask the angel, what is your name? And the angel says,
why do you ask my name, seeing it is wonderful? And then the
angel ascends in the smoke of the altar into heaven. We get
a glimmer that this was not merely a created being. This was not
just any messenger, this was THE messenger of Jehovah. This was the pre-incarnate Christ
appearing to Manoah, a Christophany. And it's intriguing that he says,
why do you ask my name, seeing it is wonderful? So when Isaiah
says, of this child, son, king, and his name shall be called
wonderful, full of wonder, this is code. He's telegraphing for
us. Whoever this is, he's going to
be divine. He's going to be God. He's going
to be God. He has divine prerogatives, a
divine title. E.J. Young speaks of the significance
that Isaiah begins with this title. He doesn't begin with
Counselor. He doesn't begin with Prince
of Peace. He begins with Wonderful. Why? Young says this, we are
brought head on as it were with God himself as we hear the names
of the child. From the very beginning a head-on
collision with God himself. It is our first encounter with
him. All the following designations are influenced by or stand under
the shadow of this first majestic name. I don't have a problem,
necessarily, with the translation, Wonderful Counselor, but really,
this front-loading of the series of names with wonderful could
be applied to all of them. Yes, Wonderful Counselor. but
also wonderful, mighty God, wonderful, everlasting Father, wonderful
Prince of Peace. Everything about Him is wonderful. It's a divine title stressing
God's uniqueness. That's what it means to be wonderful
or full of wonder. There's a second question that
I want us to answer, and that is, How is Christ wonderful? How is Christ wonderful? How is this a fitting title for
the anointed one of God, the Savior, the Messiah? Two reasons
or two ways that Jesus is wonderful. First, Jesus did wonderful works. He did, to use language of Acts
2, he did the wonderful works of God. He was a wonder worker. And this began, in some sense,
we could say, even before his incarnation, where the second
person of the Trinity, as the angel of Jehovah, came and at
various points in Israel's history did wonderful things. The angel
of Jehovah led the children of Israel through the Red Sea. He
led them. through that dry and barren land
with a pillar of fire by night, a pillar of cloud by day. He
led them and led through Joshua to conquer the promised land.
He did wonderful things. He came to Manoah. He came to
Joshua, the high priest. The angel of the Lord looms large
in the Old Testament. But of course, most of you are
familiar with Jesus' wonderful works on earth. What did Jesus
do? Well, he preached good news,
glad tidings of great joy. He cast out demons. He healed
the sick. He raised the dead. He walked
on water. He forgave sins. You think it's a big deal that
he could raise the lame man, but Jesus said the Son of Man
has authority to forgive sins. He suffered under Pontius Pilate
because He wasn't merely God. He was the God-man. And according
to his humanity, he suffered. He was crucified, dead, and buried. He descended into hell. The third
day, he rose again from the dead. He ascended into heaven and sits
at the right hand of God the Father in heaven. From there, he shall come to
judge the living and the dead. Jesus did wonderful works that
produced wonder in his witnesses. If you look through the gospel
accounts, Jesus does remarkable feats. And the response is almost
invariably one of wonder, awe, marveling, amazement. They wonder
at his wonderful works. There's a second way that Jesus
is wonderful. Not just his wonderful works,
but his wonderful person. Yes, Jesus was a wonder worker,
but he was also a wonder in himself. Jesus is wonder personified. He is God's only begotten Son,
our Lord. Think for a moment just about
the facts that before the world began, in eternity, God the Father,
eternally unbegotten, God the Son, eternally begotten of the
Father. The Father, always the Father. The Son, always the Son. The Spirit, always the Spirit,
proceeding eternally from Father and Son. He's marvelous. He's wonderful. Eternally God. God's only begotten Son, our
Lord. And then, in the fullness of time, who was conceived by
the Holy Spirit, born of the Virgin Mary. Jesus, wonderful
in his works, but wonderful in his character, wonderful in his
person, as the old gospel song puts it. Isn't he wonderful? Wonderful, wonderful. Isn't Jesus,
my Lord, wonderful? Eyes have seen, ears have heard,
it's recorded in God's word. Isn't Jesus, my Lord, wonderful? We could go to so many places
in the Bible to prove this, but think about John's gospel, the
seven I am statements where Jesus says, I am the bread of life. I am the light of the world.
I am the door. I am the good shepherd. I am
the resurrection of the life. I am the way, the truth, the
life. I am the true vine. I am who
I am. His name is wonderful. It's Jehovah. He's divine. He's God's. Or think of Psalm 45, where David
says, my heart is overflowing with a good theme. I recite my
composition concerning the king. My tongue is the pen of a ready
writer. We could say not just a good
theme, but the best theme is Jesus, because he's wonderful.
He's fairer than the sons of men. Grace is poured upon his
lips. He girds his sword upon his thigh
with his glory and with his majesty. And in his majesty, he rides
prosperously because of truth, humility, and righteousness.
His right hand teaches him awesome things. His arrows are sharp
in the hearts of the king's enemies. The peoples fall under him. His
throne. is forever and ever. The scepter
of his kingdom is a scepter of righteousness. He loves righteousness,
and he hates wickedness. Therefore, gods, your god, has
anointed you with the oil of gladness more than your companions. Ivory palaces, myrrh, cassia,
aloes, and at his right hand, the queen in gold from Ophir. The king in his beauty. We should,
recount the many deeds of Christ, his cross work, his resurrection,
his ascension, his session, his coming again, a future event
on the clouds of glory. But congregation, I urge you,
do not overlook the loveliness of Jesus Christ himself. The
wonderful qualities of Jesus' person. Because that's in whom
we're trusting. Yes, we look to the Christ who
was crucified. We look to the Christ who was
raised again. But we also look to Christ. We look to him and we trust in
his person. As Calvin said, Christ comes
to you clothed in his gospel. That's who you're trusting in.
That's the object of your affections. It's not a list of doctrines,
though we need doctrinal foundations. But our trust is in a living
person. It's the God-man mediator, the
surety of the covenant. It's Jesus Christ himself. Jesus Christ himself. I love
how Matthew Henry puts it. Justly is he called wonderful,
for he is both God and man. His love is the wonder of angels
and glorified saints. In his birth, life, death, resurrection,
and ascension, he was wonderful. A constant series of wonders
attended him. and without controversy, great
was the mystery of godliness concerning him. When you come
to Jesus, your reach exceeds your grasp. When you think about
the Trinity, when you think about the incarnation, when you think
about the glory of Christ, your reach exceeds your grasp, and
you're like Job and his friends, knowing but the edges of his
ways. The half has not been told it.
If we could write down all the stories of all the things Jesus
did, even while he was on earth for those 30 odd years, there
wouldn't be enough printing presses to write all the books that could
be told. And then when you have eternity
to think about, The glory that Christ had with the Father from
all eternity. Do we not say with the Apostle
Paul, oh, the depth of the riches, both of the wisdom and knowledge
of God, how unsearchable are his judgments and his ways past
finding out. He's wonderful. This might be
a good sequel to last week's sermon where we talked about
how he's worthy. Jesus is worthy for worship. He's worthy to receive
every good thing. He's worthy to unloose the scrolls. He's worthy to receive your entire
life of dedication and consecration. Well, congregation, He's worthy
because He's wonderful. He's worthy of your worship and
your service and your devotion because He is wonderful. There's no one else like Him
who walked the earth. He's wonderful, and my real,
my only application in some ways is to simply park and pause and
ponder the wonderfulness of Christ. I wonder, is he wonderful to
you? Is he wonderful to you? Or have you grown dull in your
affections for Jesus? One question that used to haunt
me, and does at times, is the question of, of love for Christ. Do I love Jesus? It's easy to
say I love Christ, but if you're honest with yourself and you
know that your affection waxes and wanes, that can be a hard
and soul-searching question. Do I love Jesus? Do I love God? And I've been helped time and
again by Thomas Watson in his book, All Things for Good, where
he deals with what do you do when you don't feel like you
love God very much? And we could substitute in, what
do I do when Jesus doesn't seem very wonderful to me anymore?
Perhaps when you were first converted, he was wonderful to you. You
know, marvelous grace of Jesus, reaching the most defiled, and
he was wonderful. It was a living reality in your
life. You were walking in step with
the Spirit, and somewhere along the line, he doesn't seem very
wonderful anymore. He doesn't seem very marvelous.
He doesn't seem very amazing anymore. It's lost its luster. What do you do? And Thomas Watson
says, first of all, he says, start by looking not at your
love for God, but look at God's love for you. And are we not
sometimes prone to get this the wrong way around, to confuse
things? As Isaiah says, later on in his
prophecy. In chapter 29, surely you have
things turned around. Surely you have things turned
around. You've forgotten you're the vessel and he's the potter. You're the creature and He's
the Creator. You're the sinner and He's the Savior. So, when
you're struggling with Christ doesn't seem wonderful to me
or I don't feel like I love Him, well, take your eyes off yourself
for a moment and focus your sights on Him. and His love for you,
and His wonderful qualities in Himself. Study the love of God. Study the grandeur of Christ. Enumerate all His blessings.
Go through and meditate and ponder on all His titles, all His graces,
His character, His attributes, His wonderful qualities. And then Watson says, You pray. And I tell you, don't be concerned
to pray over and over again for greater love for Christ. That's
a beautiful prayer. God doesn't grow tired of hearing
his children asking for more ability to love him. He loves
that prayer. God hears the prayers of his
people and he answers all sorts of requests But what better request
than to say, Lord, increase my capacity for love. Stir up my
desire for you. Give me a greater sight and savor
of King Jesus. Lord, I love Christ, but I want
to love him more. More love, O Christ, to Thee,
more love to Thee. Lord, stir up my affections. Lord, stoke the fire in my soul. Lord, give me a deeper loyalty,
a richer appreciation, more of Thee. Pray, ask God to open your
eyes to see the wonder of Christ, the wonder of his grace, the
majesty of his person. And I tell you, just as Christ
does not turn away anyone who comes to him, how can God not
answer the sincere cry of your heart to see and appreciate more
of the wonderfulness of his son? You think about, the scene of
Christ's baptism where the Holy Spirit comes upon him and there's
a voice from heaven, this is my beloved son with whom I am
well pleased. The Father is pleased when we
make much of Jesus. So let's study the wonderful
qualities of Christ and let's pray ardently for greater affection
for Christ so that he will be wonderful to us afresh We perhaps
need a revival in our hearts. Not just a reformation, but a
revival. Lord, revive my soul. Give me
eyes to see what is there. And if you've grown weary in
your Christian life and you think those days are over, realize
that not only can God restore the years the locusts have eaten,
but God can say, as he does in Haggai, the glories of this latter
house will be greater than the former house. Sometimes we think
that the best times have come and gone, but we are to pray
for greater achievements, greater works, greater glories, and even
our father's song. Let's pray that Jesus would be
wonderful to us. And so my only concluding application
is congregation, wonder at the wonder. Marvel at the marvelous,
stand in awe of the one who loved you and gave himself for you. Because at the end of the day,
wonder of wonders, miracle of miracles, it's Jesus Christ himself. Let us pray.
Wonderful
Series God's Messiah
| Sermon ID | 121242222264 |
| Duration | 38:36 |
| Date | |
| Category | Sunday - PM |
| Bible Text | Isaiah 9:6 |
| Language | English |
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