God's Presence
O Come Immanuel
Isaiah 7: 1-17 O Come Immanuel
Forgive me as I have been away from the keyboard for several months.
Today let’s consider what I perceive to be a misunderstood passage from the Old Testament. Rather, I think it is a passage that is under-understood; one of those rich opportunities for deep insight that we allow to breeze by with too little effort to rest quietly and linger long as we allow the Holy Spirit to whisper gently a truth much grander than the one we too quickly assume is intended. The seventh chapter of Isaiah opens with King Ahaz and the people of Judah shaking with fear like the “trees of a forest are shaken by the wind” (Isaiah 7: 4). The kings of Aram and Israel (Ephraim) have joined forces to invade and “tear apart” Judah and establish a king of their choosing. God encourages Ahaz to “not lose heart because of these two smoldering stubs of firewood.” The Lord instructs Ahaz to ask him for a sign but Ahaz refuses. So, God gives him one anyway. “The virgin will be with child and will give birth to a son, and will call him Immanuel” (Isaiah 7:14b). In the Hebrew language, the word translated into the Greek and later into English as “virgin” is alba , or young woman. And many of us already know that Immanuel means “God with us.” It seems that God is telling his people that he is present, that he will deliver them from these “smoldering stubs of firewood” in short order. And indeed he does as the Northern Kingdom (Ephraim) is captured just a few short years later by Assyria. God brought salvation to his children in the eighth century BCE.
Yet we have come to frequently interpret verse 14 as prophesy of the birth of Jesus to the Virgin Mary. And we should! Indeed, the God who delivered Judah from Aram and Ephraim 2600 years ago is the same God who again brought salvation to the world almost 2000 years ago by his presence in Jesus. God has been actively redeeming us through his presence since Adam. God has “been with us” through the ages and in Jesus he chose to become flesh and dwell with us. And through Jesus, God has brought salvation to the world in a miraculous way that requires from us only our belief. And wonder of wonders, God continues to be with us. O come Immanuel, come holy God and be with us always, even this very day. So let’s not be surprised by his presence. Rather, let’s embrace it and rejoice in it.
Joy to the world, Immanuel!!!









