Advent Midweek III: “From This
Day On I Will Bless You”
December 18, 2024
Text:
Haggai 2:10-23
Building projects are hard. Frankly, just searching for suitable and
affordable property is hard, as we know all too well. It’s a roller coaster ride of ups and downs,
highs and lows, hope and anticipation, followed by disappointment and
disillusionment. Then, when you least
expect it, things are looking up again.
What’s hard about this is, once you get on the coaster, you no longer
have control. You just have to go for
the ride, trusting that our God does have control, that He will
bring us safely through, and that, in the end, the destination will have been
worth all the twists and turns. And what
is that end? A place, a home,
in which we can receive our Lord’s Gospel gifts often and routinely, Word and
Sacrament, the forgiveness of sins, life, and salvation. And from which we can speak forth Christ
to others, and be His merciful presence in this place by loving and
serving our neighbors.
The Jewish remnant in our text knew
the roller coaster ride well. Down in
the depths of Babylonian captivity, up on the heights of return from exile,
plunging down again under Samaritan slander and threat of violence. They actually tried to get off the ride
mid-descent. This is where we met them
at the beginning of Haggai’s book, attempting to derail the whole thing,
irrationally expecting that their endeavor to sabotage would end in anything
other than disaster. That is why God
sends them His man. “Don’t unbuckle your
harness! Don’t throw impediments in
front of the wheels to knock the cars off the track! You can’t get off this ride, now, without
personal and corporate catastrophe!”
Remember, with high hopes the Jewish remnant began the project, laying
the Temple’s foundation and constructing the altar. But when things got hard, when the Samaritans
opposed the work, the people decided to abandon the whole venture, neglect
God’s House, and make their own houses comfortable and luxurious
instead.
Well, that was then. Now God, by the preaching of His prophet,
reviews the state of affairs with His people.
“Do you remember how it was? How
were things going, then, when you abandoned My House? Is it not true that everything always came up
short? The grain? The wine?
Is it not true that the product of all your labor I struck with blight
and mildew and hail? Why was that?” It was a call to repentance. God was calling His people to return to
Him, to the LORD their God. The
evidence of their return would be their getting back to work on His House. See, their idolatrous fear of people and
things that are not God had not only stopped the work, it had made the people
unclean. Their apathy and self-interest
had made the people unclean. And as a
result, nothing was holy to them.
Because there wasn’t a Temple to make them holy. Instead, they spread their uncleanness to
everything they touched, right down to the very food they ate. Nothing was blessed. God does not bless idolatrous fear. God does not bless selfishness. God does not bless apathy.
But He does bless the call to
repent. God gives the perilous
plunge into the depths of the dark valley as occasion for the Jewish remnant,
for us, to repent, to turn once again, away from fear and selfishness and
apathy, to Him, and to Him alone. God gives
us nosedives into shadow and shade to exercise our faith, that we abandon,
not Him, but our delusion of control, and thus cling to Him alone. The amazing thing is, the Prophet Haggai
came and preached that… and the people repented. And responded in faith. They took up their tools once again, and got
to work.
That is always amazing to a
preacher. What made the difference? It wasn’t only the preaching of the Law. It was God’s Gospel Promise. We heard it the last two weeks. And it applies to us, as much as to them. “I am with you, declares the LORD… Be strong… Work, for I am with you… according
to the covenant that I made with you…
My Spirit remains in your midst.
Fear not” (Hag. 1:13; 2:4-5; ESV).
And so, three months after the work began again, God says to the people,
whatever may have been the chastisement in the past, “from this day on I
will bless you" (2:19).
Note, it’s not that He will bless
them because now they are doing the work by which they have earned His
blessing. No, He will bless them
because they are with Him once again.
They have returned to Him.
They are no longer going their own way. To go your own way (to abandon the roller
coaster, to stick with the image) is to remove yourself from the
blessing of the LORD. It is never that He
is unfaithful in blessing. That is not
why the blessing ceased. It is that we
are unfaithful in remaining in His blessing. Where the LORD is, there is blessing. Even in the valley of the shadow. He is with us in the darkness. He is with us in death. And if He is with us (Emmanuel), who
is there to harm us? If He is with us
(Emmanuel), what is there to fear? We
can take up our tools, now, and get to work in faith. Because His Spirit remains in our
midst. He is in control. It is true, we can wreck the roller
coaster and abandon it, but He never will. He does not abandon us. He will never leave us or forsake
us. He does not perpetrate evil against
us. Beloved, we have these Promises in
our efforts at procuring a building of our own.
Whatever happens. Whatever our
perception of success, or lack thereof.
He is with us. He will prosper
us. Let us repent of all apathy. Let us repent of all fear. Let us trust in the Lord of the Church, that as
we go forward in His Name, He will bless.
Now, in our text, there is an
additional Promise. For the second time
that day, the twenty-fourth day of the ninth month, in the second year of
Darius, God sends His prophet, this time to the governor, Zerubbabel, son of
Shealtiel. Not only will the Temple
be rebuilt. From the stump of Jesse (to
borrow a phrase from the Prophet Isaiah [11:1])… from the House of David that
was cut down by siege and exile… shall come forth a shoot. David’s royal line shall be resurrected through
you, O Zerubbabel. Zerubbabel was a
son of David. No, Zerubbabel was not to
be king (He was just the vassal governor of Judea under the authority of
the Persian Empire). But through him,
God preserved the line. He is
right there in the genealogies recorded by Matthew and Luke, an ancestor of THE
Son of David, our Lord Jesus Christ.
This is a Promise of Christ!
It will shake the heavens and the
earth when this Promise is fulfilled. He
(The Promise Incarnate) will overthrow the kingdoms of the nations when He
comes, the chariots and their riders. He
will overthrow all evil. Zerubbabel is
the LORD’s signet ring in accomplishing this. God has chosen him to be the key. You know what a signet ring is, of course? In the ancient world, it is the seal of
authority. Pressed into the wax seal of
a letter, or on tablets of clay, it conveys the image effecting royal
authority. Zerubbabel is the seal of
God’s proclamation. He is the proof. He is the sign. The LORD will do this. It is as good as done. Our Advent anticipation will give way to
Christmas joy when a Child, God’s Son, is born to Mary.
He is the true Temple, of
which every Tabernacle or Temple that came before is but a type. The LORD Himself builds a House of
Prayer for all nations. And zeal
for this House consumes Him. “Destroy
this temple, and in three days I will raise it up” (John 2:19). He is speaking of the Temple of His Body (v.
21). The Body descended from
David. The Body descended from
Zerubbabel. The Body born of
Mary, nailed to a cross, raised again on the Third Day. The Body ascended to the right hand of
God the Father Almighty, the seat of all power and authority. The Body to which you are
joined, living stones to the Living Stone rejected by men, but in the sight of
God, chosen and precious, built up as a spiritual house, the Holy Church. The Body given you to eat, thus
rendering you, once and for all, clean, holy, and precious to God.
The Promise to Zerubbabel, and of
which he is the signet, is the reason we undertake a building
project. It is why we’re on this roller
coaster ride to begin with. Not so that
God will bless us. We must never think
that if we do this for God, He will respond by doing some things for us. That isn’t how things work in the
Kingdom. But because, with Him,
and in Him… in His presence… by His gifts… His Spirit
in our midst… we know our work will be blessed.
We can take up our God-given tools, and get to work with rejoicing. Because we know that the end of this ride is
a place and a home to be with our Father, and with His Son, Jesus
Christ, in the Spirit who proceeds from them both. To gather around the Christian Family
Table. To hear His Word, receive His
Wisdom, to treasure it and keep it. To
be cleansed of all sin. To be nourished
for eternal life. To be loved by God,
and to love one another. To be the Body
of Christ, and the Temple of God in this place.
Beloved, the Lord has put you on this ride. Don’t unbuckle your harness. Don’t attempt to knock the cars off the
tracks. Stay seated, stay calm, and
enjoy the ride. God is in control. He will bring us safely to our
destination. Remain in Him. Cling to Him.
Even when things are hard and scary.
Trust each other. Work with each
other. Love one another. “(F)rom this day on I will bless you,”
says the LORD. You have His Promise on
that. He will do it for Jesus’
sake. In the Name of the Father, and of
the Son X,
and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.