Wednesday, December 15, 2021

Sermon -- Advent Vespers: Yeshua Foreshadowed

This sermon was part of a series entitled "Yeshua Foreshadowed."  Yeshua is the Aramaic name for Jesus.  He is foreshadowed by the "Yeshuas" of the Old Testament -- Joshua as king (Joshua 3), Hosea as prophet (Hosea 3), and Joshua as priest (Zechariah 3).  The other parts of this series were preached by Rev. Geoff Kieta and Rev. Guy Purdue.


This sermon was preached at Good Shepherd Lutheran Church (goodshepherdnovi.org), Novi on December 1, at Peace Evangelical Lutheran Church, Livonia on December 8, and at Our Saviour Evangelical Lutheran Church, Westland on December 15.


JOSHUA 3:7-17

YESHUA FORETOLD
…Foretold as King

In the name + of Jesus.

     The angel Gabriel informed Mary, Behold, you will conceive in your womb and bear a son, and you shall call his name Jesus” (Luke 1:31).  A few months later, Gabriel also spoke to Joseph.  He not only repeated the name that would be given, but he also gave the reason why.  You shall call his name Jesus, for he will save his people from their sins.” (Matthew 1:21).  Jesus is the Greek version of his name.  The Aramaic name, the name by which he would have introduced himself, is Yeshua.  It means “The Lord saves.”  In the case of Jesus, it is not a name which merely confessed who God is, it identifies who he is and what he does.  He is the Lord who saves.

     We might get the idea that a little boy running around with the name Yeshua would have been considered blasphemous, or at least presumptuous.  But it was not.  It was a fairly common name.  We find it several times in the Old Testament.  Often when it is used in the Old Testament, we meet a man who foreshadows what Yeshua of Nazareth would be and do.  The first noteworthy Yeshua in the Bible is the man who succeeded Moses as the leader of Israel.  For all intents and purposes, he served as a king though he never invoked that title.  But Joshua, the commander and leader of Israel, foreshadowed Yeshua of Nazareth as king.

     Joshua was called by the Lord to be the leader over God’s people.  He was the logical choice since he served as Moses’ aid.  He was also a logical choice because he was one of only two elders who survived the 40 years in the wilderness.  Joshua and Caleb were among the twelve spies who had done reconnaissance in the Promised Land.  The majority report was that Israel stood no chance to overcome the people who lived in the Promised Land.  It seemed a reasonable report.  The people were large and powerful.  Their cities were well fortified.  But Joshua and Caleb insisted that Israel would certainly seize the Promised Land.  They believed it because God had sworn to give it to them. 

     The Israelites believed the majority report.  Not even God’s promises could convince them otherwise.  As a result, Israel was forced to wander in the wilderness for 40 years.  Those 20-years-old and older all died there.  Only Joshua and Caleb were preserved.  So, it is not a surprise that God would appoint Joshua as leader of Israel.

     When we read all that Moses had endured as the leader of God’s people—the complaints of the people, the questioning of Moses’ leadership, an attempted coup by Korah, Dathan, and Abiram, criticism of his wife by Miriam, and Moses’ intercessions for the people despite all of the grief he had to endure from them—you would think that Moses would have earned the right to bring Israel into the Promised Land.  But this was not a task to be earned; it was a privilege to be given.  God told Moses that he would not be the one to bring Israel into the Promised Land; for he had sinned against God.  When Moses brought forth water from a rock for the Israelites, he did not reveal the Lord as a gracious God who wanted to bless his people.  “Moses and Aaron gathered the assembly together before the rock, and he said to them, ‘Hear now, you rebels: shall we bring water for you out of this rock’” (Numbers 20:10)?  He held up the sins of the people before them and breathed out threats against them.  Since Moses revealed God as ruthless instead of gracious, angry instead of merciful, God told Moses that he would not be the one to lead Israel into the Promised Land.

     Moses was right, though.  The people were rebels.  So are we.  We are like the ten spies who have found reasons not to listen to God when he gave his word.  Our excuses sound good to us, too.  God’s way is too hard.  It is too costly.  People will mock me for holding to God’s word.  They will call me a prude, a homophobe, a hater, or a moron.  They will despise me because I do not join in their wicked ways or encourage them to continue.  They make me feel like I need to be ashamed of chaste and decent living.  They think it is strange that I am not obscene or vulgar.  They condemn me as judgmental.  I feel like a loner.

     Moses gave us God’s Commandments.  God’s Law reveals what a good life is supposed to be, but the Law shows us that we are not good.  We do not deserve a place of everlasting rest in Paradise.  Moses will not get us there.  The Law of Moses thunders that we are sinners.  Moses convicts us with God’s threats, and we rightly shake under it.  Moses accuses us, and we cannot escape his judgments.

     Moses does not deliver people into the Promised Land.  Yeshua does.  The Lord appointed Joshua as the leader, in essence a king, who would bring the people of God into the Land he promised them.  They did not deserve this place, but God graciously gave it to them based on his promise.  God did not do this for the sake of their worthiness, but for the sake of his name.  For he is Yeshua, “the Lord saves.”

     Jesus is foreshadowed by Joshua as king of God’s people.  Yeshua ushers us into a greater land, the home of righteousness.  It is not because we deserve it.  The Lord delivers all his blessings to you based on his promises.  “For the law was given through Moses; grace and truth came through Jesus Christ” (John 1:17).  Jesus came in the name of the Lord to confirm every promise made in the name of the Lord.  Jesus does not overlook the excuses we have made for our sins.  Instead, he provides forgiveness for our sins, for our excuses, and for all rebellion. 

     Jesus was foreshadowed as a king, but kings don’t go out to die for their people.  They send their people out to die for them.  But not your king.  Not Jesus.  Yeshua of Nazareth is the king who has gone forth to fight your battle for you.  He marched forth to face your enemies—sin, death, and the devil—on your behalf.  He has taken into himself all the slings and arrows that your enemies can launch.  He has accepted every stinging accusation.  All guilt was pinned on him as he was pinned to the cross.  God the Father branded him a rebel and sentenced him to a rebel’s death.  Jesus did not do this for the sake of your worthiness, but for the sake of his name.  He is Yeshua, the Lord who saves. 

     Jesus gave himself into death only to conquer it.  He entered the grave only to burst forth from it.  Now Jesus is exalted as King of kings; you are the spoils of war.  He has delivered you into his kingdom which is ruled by mercy and grace.  The enemies cannot torment you or harm you anymore.  Your sins do not condemn you.  The grave cannot keep you.  The devil, who had seized mankind by Adam’s sin, has had his work destroyed.  You are no longer under a curse; you live under God’s gracious rule, and your king promises you a place in the heavenly land.

     Yeshua is foreshadowed by Joshua whom the Lord raised up to bring Israel into the Promised Land.  The Jordan River was at flood stage, making it difficult, if not impossible, to cross for the hundreds of thousands of Israel, their children, and their flocks.  Joshua said to the people of Israel, ‘Come here and listen to the words of the Lord your God.  …Behold, the ark of the covenant of the Lord of all the earth is passing over before you into the Jordan.  …When the soles of the feet of the priests bearing the ark of the Lord, the Lord of all the earth, shall rest in the waters of the Jordan, the waters of the Jordan shall be cut off from flowing, and the waters coming down from above shall stand in one heap.’”  Under Moses, the Lord had provided passage through the waters of the Red Sea into the wilderness.  Now under Joshua, the Lord provided passage through the waters of the Jordan River.  In this way, Joshua brought Israel into the Promised Land.  Joshua foreshadows your king, Yeshua.

     How does Jesus bring you passage into the Promised Land?  Through water.  It is through your baptism that the Lord applies the saving work of Jesus to you.  Hear the word of the Lord: “Repent and be baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ for the forgiveness of your sins” (Acts 2:38).  Forgiveness of sins is what baptism is for.  It washes you clean of every smudge of guilt.  Again, hear the word of the Lord: We were buried therefore with him by baptism into death, in order that, just as Christ was raised from the dead by the glory of the Father, we too might walk in newness of life” (Romans 6:4).  You were dead in your sins, but now you are alive in Christ.  You have been made a new creation in your baptism—saved by water and promise.  In this way, you have entered the kingdom of God.  In this way, you are promised the land of eternal peace and rest.

     For as long as Joshua was alive, the people of Israel remained faithful to their Lord.  Of course, no earthly king endures forever.  Once Joshua died, the people of Israel began to forget the Lord.  Joshua’s influence lasted only as long as his reign.  Your king, Jesus, however, lives and reigns forever.  He continually serves you with his promises.  He assures you that the threats you face in this world are never stronger than his promises—not peer pressure, not financial stress, not bodily harm, not even death.  

     Your King Yeshua strengthens and keeps you in the one true, saving faith.  He teaches you to return to your baptism every day—putting to death both your sins and the excuses you make for them.  Then the Lord raises you up anew by his gracious words of forgiveness—not for the sake of your worthiness, but for the sake of his name.  He is Jesus, the Lord who saves.  He is the way into the Promised Land of Paradise.  Whoever belongs to Jesus will pass through death into the new heavens and earth he has promised. 

     Give thanks to Yeshua, the Lord who saves; for his kingdom is an everlasting kingdom, and he reigns for your eternal good.

In the name of the Father and of the Son + and of the Holy Spirit.  Amen.

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