THE REFORMED WITNESS
HOUR
"Immanuel"
Rev. Carl Haak
(e-mail: Rev. Carl Haak) |
In the last weeks of this
Christmas season we have sought to know our Savior, whom we believe through the revelation
of His names. That means that we have taken the words of the apostle Paul in
II Timothy 1:12
and said, We know whom we believe,
and we know Him especially as He tells us about Himself in the names that the Bible gives
to Him. In all, there are about 150
names attributed to Jesus Christ in the Scriptures to show us the majesty of His person
and the glory of His work. Then, by faith, we
look at those names and we say, I know whom I believed and am persuaded that He
(because of who He is as He makes Himself known to me in His names) shall keep that
which I have committed unto Him against that day.
In the last weeks we have seen
that He is called Jesus Savior; Christ Anointed;
Only Begotten Son of God and our Lord. Today
we conclude our series by looking at the name Immanuel, which means God
With Us. This is what we read in
Matthew 1:23,
Behold, a virgin shall be with child, and shall bring forth a son, and
they shall call his name Emmanuel, which being interpreted is, God with us. No name so comforts, so explains who He is and
what He came to do, as does the name Immanuel. It
is a wonder God with us! He came so
that God might forever be with us and we forever with God.
If you know Him as Immanuel, then no matter how lowly, how oppressed, how
miserable, how tempted you might be today, you have hope, you have joy, and you have
comfort in the name Immanuel. May the Spirit
of God give you to confess, He is my Immanuel God with us.
We should focus for just a
moment on that doctrine, because there are many things in the Christian faith which
converge at Immanuel. It is just like a major
interchange or expressway. For instance, as
in the city of Chicago, perhaps our Chicago listeners know about the Circle or
that place where various expressways come together the Kennedy, the Eisenhower, the
Dan-Ryan they all converge and they all come together at that intersection. So the name Immanuel is a convergence of Christian
doctrine. And the enemy (the devil) knows
this. Just as in World War II (or any war)
they sought to bomb the rail centers those strategic points where everything comes
together to destroy that, so also the enemy has sought to destroy this truth that
Jesus is Immanuel.
What truths converge here? First of all, very plainly, the truth of the
virgin birth. That Mary was a virgin is
extremely important. If you deny the virgin
birth, you have denied the entire Christian faith and salvation. For if Jesus is not the Son of God in the flesh,
if Jesus appears as but another man among men, if you deny the miracle of the virgin
birth, then He is no savior. He is just an
imposter. He is just a man with a bloated
opinion of Himself. He joins the list of
those who have failed to be saviors. You see,
the truth of the virgin birth is essential. He
is Immanuel. He is God with us.
But more. The wonderful truth of atonement, and even the
wonderful truth of the covenant these find their meaning in Immanuel. The truth of the covenant (and I do not have time
to talk about this glorious and wonderful truth) is that God is a God of fellowship, a God
of friendship. By grace He has willed to
bring His people to His own bosom, into His own arms, and to hug them eternally. And He does this through the Son of His love. We see all of this in Immanuel. He is God with us.
Let us look at that name
Immanuel. This is the most profound truth in
the Bible. This is not simply a
miracle, this is the miracle God united Himself to human flesh in the womb
of a virgin. It was done by virgin birth. Now that is difficult to grasp for children. That is difficult to grasp for all of us. Children, you have a father and a mother. Maybe you do not know your father or maybe you do
not know your mother. But every single human
child ever born has a human father and mother. Except
Jesus. He has a mother. He was born of a woman. He had a mother: Mary brought forth her firstborn son
(Luke 2:7).
Mary developed for nine months in her pregnancy. He was made of a woman
(Gal. 4:4-7).
But
Jesus did not have a father He had no human father. God told Mary through the angel Gabriel in
Luke 1,
You are going to have a
baby. And this baby is going to be Gods
Son. He is going to be the Son of the
highest. And she asked the angel,
How shall this be, seeing I know not a man I am not married Im
not living sexually with a man? And
Gabriel answered, The Holy Ghost shall come upon thee and the power of the highest
shall overshadow thee (or envelope thee), and, therefore, that holy child which shall be born of thee shall be called the Son of God
(Luke 1:35).
Mary had no sexual relationship with a man. God conceived in her womb her child. The Holy Spirit conceived Him. Jesus did not have a human father.
This was all confirmed by the
angel to Joseph, Marys betrothed, the man to whom she was promised in marriage. Joseph found out that his beloved Mary was going
to have a baby. He was not the father. He thought, Who is the father? Therefore, he was intending to put her away. Then we read in
Matthew 1:20
that
the angel said, Joseph, fear not to take unto thee Mary thy wife: for that which is conceived in her is of the Holy
Ghost. God had worked a miracle,
Joseph. The Infinite has joined Himself to
the finite; the Almighty has united Himself to the flesh and blood of a woman and is now
conceived and will be born as a dependent baby.
Immanuel, God with us. It means that Jesus is the God-man. I say that is hard to understand. But it is so.
If you had met Jesus, He would have looked to you like an ordinary man. There are no descriptions, of course, given of Him
in the Bible He was an ordinary man. But
He is also God. He is God incarnate. The word incarnate means in the
flesh. He is God in the flesh. He is the Son of God in the flesh. Not the triune God, not the first person (the
Father), not the third (the Spirit), but God the Son (second person of the holy Trinity)
is now united in human flesh. He is,
therefore, really God and completely man.
Today, too, He has a complete and real human nature.
Hebrews 2:14-17
explains this to us. It tells us that in all
things He was made like unto His brethren. He
took part of flesh and blood. He did not take
to Himself the nature of an angel, says that passage, but the nature of the children. Jesus did not have a special human nature. It is not true that He could not get a cold. He could. He
was subject to all of these things. He was in
need of food and in need of rest. He was just
like us except that He was without sin. He developed as a child; He grew (
Luke 2
tells us) in wisdom and in stature and in favor with
God and man. You could touch Him. When He worked for His father, learning the
carpentry trade, He would cut His hand and He would bleed.
He had a human brain. He had lungs and
heart and kidneys. He probably even had the
resemblance of His mother Mary.
But there was one thing
though He was completely like us there was one thing that was different. He was sinless.
He could say, He that hath seen Me hath seen the Father. He was without sin.
He had a human soul. He could say in
the Garden of Gethsemane, Now is my soul troubled even unto death. He had a human mind. And, according to that human mind, He was limited
in the knowledge of His human nature. He had
to learn things the same way that we have to learn them.
He had a human will. He had human
emotions. He could experience and did
experience anger, joy, sorrow, weeping, sighing. He
was made like us in all things, yet without sin.
He is Immanuel God, truly
God, with us, truly man two natures: a
divine nature and a human nature united in the person of God the Son. Human nature, divine nature united in the one
person, God the Son. That is our confession. That is what we believe. That is the miracle. That is what we are saying in
Immanuel.
Is that important? The most important thing you will ever know
that is how important it is. I pray that the
Holy Spirit who conceived Him in the virgin Mary may also create in our hearts
understanding and wonder and worship. You
say, Why is that so important that great and eternal mystery? Because only as Immanuel, God with us, can He
cover in the sight of God my sins in which I was conceived and born.
You were conceived and born in
sin. You are, no matter who you are, you are
in yourself a corrupt, filthy, lost sinner who deserves to be eternally damned in hell for
your sins. You may not appreciate hearing
that. But that is not my verdict. That is Gods verdict of you and me. I know that the unbelieving world is going to
scoff at that with contempt. And underneath
the scoffing is deep offense and wounded pride to be told that we are by nature corrupt,
vile sinners. I know that you and I do not
like to think of ourselves that way, for we all imagine that we are not that bad. Certainly we can find somebody worse than
ourselves. We are all, by nature, that Pharisee in
Luke 18
who can stand before God and say, I thank Thee that I am not as
other men are. Nevertheless, the truth
of God has declared it. For all have sinned and come short of the glory of God (
Rom. 3).
All
the world is guilty before God there is none good, no not one.
Psalm 51,
in sin did my mother conceive me.
If you do not like the diagnosis
that I bring to you, that you are personally a corrupt sinner worthy of damnation, you
will have to talk to God about that. For it
is the verdict and the diagnosis and the judgment of the Almighty in His Word.
But He is called Immanuel. The whole blessed gospel begins to shine in that
name in its glory and power. He is a man. He can take our place. He can be our substitute, the substitute for all
who are given to Him of the Father. Since by man came death, by man came also the resurrection
(I Cor. 15).
Man must bring the payment. He is a man.
He is just like us only He has no sin, remember.
But He is more. He is God. Only
God can bear Gods wrath against sin. If
He had a human father, if He is not very God of God, conceived by the Holy Spirit in the
womb of a virgin, if that is not true, then Jesus will crumble and He will end up in the
grave and dust like the rest of us. He will
be crushed and consumed under the blows of the holy wrath of God.
No, He is God. Listen to
Isaiah 59:16,
speaking of God: And he saw that there was no man, and
wondered that there was no intercessor: therefore
his arm brought salvation unto him; and his righteousness, it sustained him. He gave His Son to take upon Himself our flesh so
that He could finish our sins, bearing the wrath of God against the sins of the
innumerable host that God had chosen, suffering the death that they deserved, and bringing
to them the life that they could not earn.
If Mary were not a virgin when
she gave birth to Jesus (later on she married and had children with her husband), you have
no salvation. For it was through the virgin
birth that He is without sin. Not because
Mary had no sin. Mary was a sinner. Mary needed salvation just as the rest of us. But Jesus had no sin because He was conceived by
the Holy Spirit in the womb of the virgin Mary. Therefore,
He is the One who can cover and wash away all the sin in which I was born and conceived.
Is this how you know Him? Immanuel, the perfect, sinless Son of God in our
human flesh and, therefore, the One who is mighty to save and to cleanse and to set us
free, the One who is able to make me alive with God, to make me know God and to know that
God is for me, and to make me be with God and God to be with me.
What a comfort it is to confess
that He is Immanuel. This shows us the love
of God. The love of God, to put our sins and
judgment upon His own Son in our flesh! Just
think about that! God, perfect, eternal,
almighty, without any lack, possessor of all things, self-sufficient, holy and glorious
for us! Who are we? We are men. We
are dust and frail and dependent and creatures of time. And we are ungodly
(Rom. 5:6).
Gods Son was
given to take upon Himself our flesh in order that we might have our sins removed, that
His Son might bear our sins and wash us in His own blood from all of our sins. This is the love of God! Herein is the love of God
(I John 4:10),
that God
gave His only begotten Son to be the propitiation (that word means covering) for our sins.
Now, maybe you sometimes ask,
Where is the proof of the love of God for me?
You should not say that. Sometimes in
our life we say, Does God love me? Look
at all these difficult things that are happening to me.
I can hardly bear another day. This
problem is consuming me. It is going to
destroy me. Where is God? Does God love me? Do you say that?
Then you should repeat, right now, to your soul, the name Immanuel. For He is the One that God gave Gods
own Son for us.
Immanuel, God with us, is our
Savior. He is the One who is able to save us
and to preserve us. Our sins pile up high on
our conscience. And Satan comes to accuse us
of those sins. But then you should say one
word to Satan: Immanuel. Say it the next time Satan comes to tempt you and
to tell you that you are a wretched sinner and you cannot possibly be forgiven. Then you say to him, Immanuel. And he falls backward and he is confounded. For in the name Immanuel I know God loves me and
is for me and will preserve me.
What a wonderful compassion and
comfort that we have the compassion of our Lord.
Now we go to God as the almighty. But
will He hear us? Will He know? Yes, He knows.
Does He know how it feels to be flesh on the earth and to sigh and to sorrow? Yes. Does
He know loneliness? Yes. Does He know when everything is dark? Oh, yes, He knows that, too. He knows everything. He is Immanuel.
He is God with us. He knows all of
these things far deeper than you ever could. He
is God in the flesh. But He is God in the flesh. He is able to succor us (
Heb. 2).
He is able to give us grace sufficient for all of
our needs. Oh, the compassion of our Savior
knows no end. And what comfort!
This is what matters. Is God with you?
It does not matter, first of all, what you have to endure. It is not first the road that matters. It is the One who is with you on the road. I remind you that you could be in a palace, but if
you are there alone, what do you have? You
have nothing. I remind you that a smooth path
can be darkness if your companion is not with you or if your companion is not true. The thing that matters is: Who is with you on lifes pathway? Who is with you in sorrow? Who is with you in trial? Who is with you at deaths door? Who is with you when you are burdened? Who is with you?
Immanuel, God with us. Does He know you?
Does He know your earthly way? Yes, He
was God in the flesh. Does He love you? Oh, yes. He
gave Himself for you. Does He know the way
that the Father leads? Yes, He came from
Gods right hand. He knows the way. Is He a stranger to anything that will come to you
on the pathway of life? Oh, no. He has experienced it all. Will He be faithful? Yes, nothing can turn Him away! Nothing can take Him from me. Is He faithful?
Why, He confessed my name upon the cross. Of
course He is faithful. Then, why are you
afraid? Will He ever fail you? Here is the answer, the answer to everything: Immanuel, God with us. That is everything!
That is heavens
Hallelujah! That is the angels wonder
and praise. And that is our praise today,
too. He is Immanuel.
Let us pray.
Father, thanks, thanks for Thy
Word. Thanks for that gift of grace, faith
whereby we say, For I know whom I have believed. He is Jesus Christ, Only Begotten Son, Lord,
Immanuel. Therefore I am persuaded that He is
able to keep that which I have committed unto Him until that day. God, bless this Word to our hearts. We pray in Jesus name, Amen.