Fear not, though you are a worm

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Sermon for Midweek of Sexagesima

Isaiah 41:14-29  +  Mark 4:26-32

Fear not! I am the One who helps you. Those were the words of the LORD to Israel and to His whole Church that we ended with last week. We begin with similar words this evening.

Fear not, you worm Jacob,
you men of Israel!
I am the one who helps you, declares the Lord;
your Redeemer is the Holy One of Israel.

When God calls His people here, “you worm Jacob,” He doesn’t mean it as an insult. It’s a simple (though metaphorical) statement of fact. The Jews in exile in Babylon, to whom Isaiah’s words were prophetically directed, had been reduced in strength and stature to that of a worm. Tiny. Powerless. Despised. Utterly insignificant on the world stage. Not unlike the true Christian Church today. Tiny. Powerless. Despised. Utterly insignificant on the world stage. But what does God say to His powerless, insignificant Church? Fear not! I am the one who helps you! I am your Redeemer.

How would God help powerless Israel? He would turn them into His weapon of vengeance against His enemies.

Behold, I make of you a threshing sledge,
new, sharp, and having teeth;
you shall thresh the mountains and crush them,
and you shall make the hills like chaff;
you shall winnow them, and the wind shall carry them away,
and the tempest shall scatter them.
And you shall rejoice in the Lord;
in the Holy One of Israel you shall glory.

God had often used His Old Testament people of Israel to make war against His enemies and theirs. They fought against and defeated the Canaanites at God’s command. They fought against the Philistines. They wouldn’t have to fight against the Babylonians, since God would send Cyrus to defeat the Babylonians for them. But, at the time of Esther, they would fight against their enemies in the Persian provinces who tried to destroy them. And God made them victorious. They would fight against the Greek invaders, and God made them victorious. He preserved them as a nation, in their homeland of Judea and in their capital of Jerusalem, all the way up until the birth of His Son. None of that seemed possible to the Jews in exile, but God would step in to help them.

He steps in to help His Church today, too, not by turning us into warriors against flesh and blood enemies, but into warriors and soldiers who are to “put on the full armor of God” and stand “against principalities, against powers, against the rulers of the darkness of this age, against spiritual hosts of wickedness in the heavenly places,” as Paul writes to the Ephesians. We fight with God’s power against sin, so that it can’t have the victory over us. We fight with God’s power against the world, not with swords made of metal, but with the sword of the Spirit, the Word of God. And God will make us victorious. After all, He is the One who helps us.

Isaiah continues:

When the poor and needy seek water,
and there is none,
and their tongue is parched with thirst,
I the Lord will answer them;
I the God of Israel will not forsake them.
I will open rivers on the bare heights,
and fountains in the midst of the valleys.
I will make the wilderness a pool of water,
and the dry land springs of water.
I will put in the wilderness the cedar,
the acacia, the myrtle, and the olive.
I will set in the desert the cypress,
the plane and the pine together,
that they may see and know,
may consider and understand together,
that the hand of the Lord has done this,
the Holy One of Israel has created it.

Here the Lord goes back to comfort the “worm Jacob” again. He speaks to the “poor and needy” who “seek water.” The Jews in exile didn’t have any lack of literal water. The Babylonians provided them with food and drink and decent homes to live in. What they lacked was spiritual water, the Word of God and the comfort of His forgiveness, His acceptance, His guidance. Here God promises to provide all that in abundance. He does it through Isaiah’s words, through Jeremiah’s words, through Ezekiel’s words and Daniel’s words. He would do it later through the words of the post-exile prophets. But most of all, He would provide these abundant waters of life for His people when He sent His very own Son into the world, who said, Whoever drinks of the water that I shall give him will never thirst. But the water that I shall give him will become in him a fountain of water springing up into everlasting life.

Isaiah then turns toward the false gods again, to mock them:

Set forth your case, says the Lord;
bring your proofs, says the King of Jacob.
Let them bring them, and tell us
what is to happen.
Tell us the former things, what they are,
that we may consider them,
that we may know their outcome;
or declare to us the things to come.
Tell us what is to come hereafter,
that we may know that you are gods;
do good, or do harm,
that we may be dismayed and terrified.
Behold, you are nothing,
and your work is less than nothing;
an abomination is he who chooses you.

The false gods, worshiped by the Gentiles and all too often by Israel before the exile, were worthless. They weren’t real, so they couldn’t offer any real help. They couldn’t even predict the future, much less cause anything to happen in the future. So God mocks them. “You are nothing, and your work is less than nothing.” But the real targets of His mockery weren’t the false gods. It was the foolish people who worshiped them. “He who chooses you” (“you” being the false gods) “is an abomination.”

The worship of false gods is just as much as problem today as it was in Old Testament times. Whether it’s seeking help from the saints or seeking help from “science,” or from “the experts,” or from their own twisted belief systems, people still end up fearing, loving, and trusting in others instead of fearing, loving, and trusting in God above all things. It’s foolish, because God, the Lord, the One described in the Bible, is the One who has helped us by sending His Son to be our Savior, and God is still the One who would help us and forgive us and comfort us and guide us, but only through faith in His Son, Jesus Christ.

Finally, Isaiah makes another reference to Cyrus the Great, though not yet by name:

I stirred up one from the north, and he has come,
from the rising of the sun, and he shall call upon my name;
he shall trample on rulers as on mortar,
as the potter treads clay.
Who declared it from the beginning, that we might know,
and beforehand, that we might say, “He is right”?
There was none who declared it, none who proclaimed,
none who heard your words.
I was the first to say to Zion, “Behold, here they are!”
and I give to Jerusalem a herald of good news.
But when I look, there is no one;
among these there is no counselor
who, when I ask, gives an answer.
Behold, they are all a delusion;
their works are nothing;
their metal images are empty wind.

The false gods and idols weren’t the ones who predicted the coming of Cyrus and the deliverance of Israel from Babylon. God alone did that. He told His people Israel about it and wanted them to rejoice, because their God was the true God—the One who had promised to help them, and who then fulfilled His promise. And just as He fulfilled His word to send Israel a deliverer from Babylon, so He would fulfill His word to send them—and us—a Deliverer from sin, death, and the devil.

So, even if you’re just a worm—tiny, powerless, despised, unimportant—it’ll be all right. The Lord is the One who helps you. Even though the kingdom of heaven is like the tiniest, most insignificant-looking mustard seed, God will cause it to grow so that it fills the earth, and no one will be able to stop it. Amen.

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