11 December 2024
St. Athanasius
Lutheran Church
Advent 2 Midweek Vienna, VA
“Once He Came in Blessing:
Now He Gently Leads Us”
Text:
Isaiah 11:1-10; John 6:25-35a
In the Name of the Father and of the (+) Son and of
the Holy Spirit. Amen.
Once He Came in Blessing, All our sins redressing (LSB #333 v. 1).
That was the Good News we considered last week in
the first verse of our hymn. The most holy Son of God came in likeness lowly,
that we who were created in the image and likeness of God be restored in that
gift. Restored as this most holy God bore the cross for us, giving us hope and
freedom. Freedom from bondage to sin and death to live a new life.
Tonight, then, the story continues. Now He
Gently Leads Us (v.
2). Now, He
who died and rose from the dead to save us, does not leave us on our own, but now
He gently leads us.
There are many different kinds of leaders in this
world. Some good, some not so good. Some effective, some weak and feckless.
Israel had the whole gamut of leaders. Judges who performed mighty and heroic
deeds, and faithful kings. But also kings who led the people astray into
idolatry and wickedness. Kings who relied on military might and political
alliances instead of the might of God who is greater than all that. And that
ultimately led to Israel’s downfall. The kingdom that during David and Solomon’s
reign was so great and glorious, chopped down and reduced to a stump. The
stump of Jesse, Isaiah called it.
But as we heard from Isaiah tonight, though that
stump looked dead and lifeless, it was not. There shall come forth a
shoot from the stump of Jesse, and a branch from his roots shall bear fruit. Another
Son of David would be born and grow, who, Isaiah said, would be faithful,
filled with the Spirit of God, rule righteously, and bring peace. Isaiah’s
words sound like Paradise restored, Paradise before sin, which is exactly what
this Son of David would do. And He would do it, Isaiah says, as a little
child.
At Christmas, we sing What Child Is This (LSB #370)? Who is Isaiah’s little
child who will lead us to Paradise again? Isaiah tells us more, that He
is not only a shoot, a branch, from the stump of Jesse, but also the root
of Jesse. Both root and branch - how can this be? It is a
prophecy that this child would be both God and man; the author and source of
life, born into this life. He will stand as a signal for the peoples,
even after His death. And His resting place shall be glorious,
for the place, the grave, where His body lay is gloriously empty. And
with that, with His death and resurrection, Paradise is restored and open
again.
So what kind of leader is this Jesus, who Now
Gently Leads Us? He leads not as a taskmaster, driving us on. Or one who
races out ahead of us and urges us to catch up. But a Good Shepherd, walking
with us, going before us. For He went before us into death, that rising from
the dead we, too, may pass through death to life. That’s what happens in
Baptism, as we are joined to Jesus in His death and resurrection. We die and
rise with Him. And now with this new life, He gently leads us through
the wilderness of this world - this wilderness of our own making - and back to
Him in Paradise.
This again recalls Old Testament Israel, after God
brought them from death to life, rescuing them from slavery in Egypt, and
passing through the waters of the Red Sea on their way to the Land God promised
to give them. He gently led them, leading the way in a pillar of cloud
by day and a pillar of fire by night. And feeding them. Precious food from
heaven. Manna that nourished them. Faithfully. Everyday. So that they would
flourish not only in body but also in soul.
And so it is with us, God’s new Israel, still
today. Although we live in a world of plenty, a world that can boast of doing
things unimaginable just a few years ago . . . while great progress has
been made for physical life and comfort, we live in a spiritual wilderness.
Where knowledge of God is little and wickedness is great. Where souls are not
flourishing, sin is. Sin and false teaching leading precious souls away from
the truth and away from God. Many laboring for the food that perishes,
instead of the food that endures to eternal life.
The Good News we heard tonight, though, is that the
one who gently leads us, is also feeding us in this wilderness. With
Himself He feeds us. Precious food from heaven. Manna that will nourish, Souls
that they may flourish.
Manna, or in Hebrew man hu, meaning what
is it? To which Moses replied, It is the bread that the Lord has given
you to eat.
So do we also ask, man hu? What is it, this
bread that the Lord has given us to eat? To which Jesus replied, I
am the bread of life. He is the bread of God . . . who comes down
from heaven and gives life to the world.
Our Small Catechism expanded that answer a bit . .
. Man hu? It is the true Body and Blood of our Lord Jesus Christ,
under the bread and wine, given us Christians to eat and to drink. And what
is the benefit of this eating and drinking? That our souls may flourish
with forgiveness, life, and salvation.
That our souls may flourish.
God doesn’t want anemic, scrawny, timid Christians, but Christians strong and
bold in confidence and faith. But for this He doesn’t just yell at us to get
stronger, try harder, work ourselves out more, and do better! No. He gently
leads us. He is not a coach or personal trainer barking out orders, but the
great physician of body and soul, giving us the medicine and food we need for
health and life and strength.
So when you find yourself weak or fearful or timid,
the answer is not to rely on yourself to get over these things, but to eat
your manna! To feast at the Table of the Lord. For what you need is not
within yourself; it comes to you, advents to you.
Now He gently lead us; With Himself He feeds us
Precious food from heaven, Pledge of peace here
given,
Manna that will nourish Souls that they may
flourish (LSB #333 v. 2).
Although they were contemporaries, I don’t know if
Johann Horn, who wrote this hymn, knew Martin Luther. But Luther would have
approved of this hymn, both because Luther was an Old Testament scholar and
would have appreciated the Horn’s Old Testament Christology, and
because we find several very similar phrases in Luther’s own catechetical hymn
on the Lord’s Supper, where he writes that Thou with Thy body and Thy blood
didst nourish our weak souls that they may flourish (LSB #617 v. 1).
And that is what this season of Advent is all
about. And when I say this season of Advent, I do not mean this season of the
Church year, but this season in which we are now living. For we are living in
the time, the season, of Christ’s adventing to us in
His Word and Sacraments. The time of his advent in the flesh is past, and the
time of His advent in glory is still to come. Now, He gently leads us,
and with Himself He feeds us. So that we can await His final and
glorious advent in peace and joy. Knowing that the child born in Bethlehem is
Isaiah’s little child leading us and feeding us, until He comes to take us to
Paradise. And so until that day we sing . . .
Come, then, O Lord Jesus, From our sins release us,
Keep our hearts believing, That we grace receiving,
Ever may confess You Till in heaven we bless You (LSB #333 v. 4).
In the Name of the Father, and of the (+) Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.