Long
ago God's prophet Isaiah spoke and wrote about a certain time, the awaited time
of Promise when Messiah would come to Israel. The deserts would rejoice and
bloom abundantly as streams of water burst forth, even the wilderness will be
watered; springs of water will flow throughout the thirsty land, bringing lush
vegetation as far as the eye can see! God goes so far as to tell Isaiah that the
glory of Lebanon shall be given to it. Lebanon's glory was its forests of
cedars, and He promises such forests for Israel's deserts. Can it be? Can
it really happen? Can such a promise be kept? Look at verses 3 and 4 of
Isaiah chapter 35. How kind our Father is: how compassionate. He
understands how difficult it can be for His people to trust Him when opposition
forces surround us spiritually; forces that are expert at manipulating our
emotions, reason and will so easily and so often. Father speaks with Isaiah
and then has him teach the way we can overcome bewildering doubts and fears - we
are to help one another. “Strengthen the weak,
sinking hands. Make firm the feeble knees. Say to those who are afraid and
fearful-hearted, ‘Be strong, do not fear! Behold, your God will come with
vengeance, with the recompense of God, He will come and save you.’” Then the promise expands
to include healing for the body, plus such a place of holiness with Himself,
such a high road, that we shall no longer have to fear the activities of fools,
or the physical danger of wild beasts. He guarantees the eradication of
fear, sorrow and sighing; all the negatives that drain true vitality out of
life. Wow! We are encouraged to have such a hope that it lifts the heart
of man out of the prisons of helpless unbelief, to dare to really trust God
again. But the years and the decades and the centuries pass by: the promise of
spiritual emancipation stands yet unfulfilled. But God finds for Himself
a believing remnant of people. What is a remnant? Well, those of us who
have sewed clothes for our families or self, know that the sellers of fabric
dispense cheaply of the small pieces of material at the end of the roll because
they are no longer the required quantity or the desired designs. God had His
remnant, believers in Him throughout Israel: devout men and women who still held
fast to the Promise in faith and trust. These few, outside the mainstream
of unbelief, and overlooked by the opposition forces, were seemingly an
invaluable percentage of the population. To this remnant comes the unfolding of
the awaited Promise. In Luke Chapter One,
we read of supernatural breakthroughs, of one fast after the other.
Gabriel, herald of the Messiah, breaks through the invisible barrier firstly to
the elderly Priest Zachariah as he served his two-week course of duty in the
temple, revealing to him God's plan to set in motion the fulfilment of the
Promise. “You say my elderly wife Elisabeth will have a son named
John who will be the forerunner of the Promised One! This can't
come to pass through us, never! We are too old!” Luke
tells us that this unbelief caused Gabriel to declare a sign to Zachariah. “You
will be mute until all these things take place,” in
other words, until the eighth day of the child's life when he is named and
circumcised. Instantly Zachariah begins almost ten speechless months! Imagine
his homecoming to Hebron, the shock of “writing” the revelation down for his
wife Elisabeth, followed by the overwhelming joy of being chosen to bear the
forerunner. Consider the silent thoughts of Zachariah as his wife bloomed in
pregnancy. There is no more doubt concerning God's divine intervention. No
more fear that the Promise will not come; only a steadily rising power of love
and faith in the One who says that nothing is impossible with God. There it is, WITHOUT FEAR,
because we have been delivered out of the hand of our enemies and those who hate
us. We can all agree from personal experience that fear does indeed have
torment. Many of us have been deeply troubled by varieties of fear for
days, maybe weeks, or months, or years. The outstanding brightness of
Isaiah 35 and Luke 1:67-79 is that the glory of God breaks through, overcoming
the captors of men, defeating them absolutely, then subjugating them to their
former captives, who have been endowed with joy unspeakable, full of glory. All
this, Zachariah declared, has been accomplished by the Promised One; the
Messiah; Jesus the beloved Son of God. We will never fully fathom
the compassion of Father's heart, or the depth of love that flows from Father,
Son and Holy Spirit towards us as we move valiantly forward through testings and
temptations. But we must know, in the midst of our trials and besetting
temptations, particularly while the opposer threatens to ruin our faith in
Father's promise and provision, that he (the opposer) will fail. No matter how
difficult the battle of faith becomes, the opposer cannot win unless we yield to
fear, and surrender our emotions and will to his lies. Never refuse the
encouragement of brethren at such times because
it is the plan
of the opposition to cut you off from the For further Bible Studies, books, manuals, tapes, and information, please contact us at the following:
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