But we thank God that his presence is not a
passive presence. It’s an active
presence. And in addition to promising
his presence he now promises his power.
He says, “Fear thou not for I am with thee. Be not dismayed for I am thy God. I will strengthen thee”. He promises them power, power to strengthen
them.
Now remember that the people to whom this
prophecy was aimed were people that had been in captivity. Obviously 70 years of captivity had
considerably weakened them. They didn’t
feel like a fighting force at all. But
that didn’t matter because the Lord was able to strengthen them in their
weakness. You remember the words we read
at the end of Chapter 40, in verse 29, concerning our God; ‘He giveth power to
the faint and to them that have no might he increaseth strength.’
You see, there is no shortage of strength
on God’s part. He is the everlasting
God, creator of the ends of the earth.
He fainteth not, neither is weary.
Therefore he is able to give power
to the faint and to them that have no might he increaseth strength.
Now it goes without saying that for many of
us here we do not have the strength that we had just a few years ago. We recognise that our physical strength has
been declining. Well, if we’re honest,
we wonder what we shall be like in December 2013, in a year’s time. We feel weaker now than a year ago, what will
we feel like after another year? Perhaps
that fills us with just a little bit of dread and wonder. Well, it need not do because although we may
decline in our physical strength and feel our increasing physical weakness, we
can hear our God saying he gives power to
the faint and to them that have no might he increaseth strength.
The apostle Paul experienced this
personally, didn’t he? Remember the
verses we read in the beginning of our worship.
Paul had been suffering with a thorn in the flesh. We don’t quite know what that was but it was
evidently some kind of spiritual weakness and Paul was so distressed by this
that he besought the Lord to remove it.
Three times he prayed that the Lord would take it away, but the Lord
didn’t. Instead he answered Paul with
those words, “My grace is sufficient for
thee; my strength is made perfect in weakness.” Therefore Paul was able to rejoice and go on
to say, “When I am weak, then am I strong”. He knew that though he was weak outwardly, he
could be strong inwardly, filled with might by God’s Spirit in the inner man.
That can be our experience, dear friends,
in 2013. We may, and will probably, feel
our increasing physical weaknesses but we need not become spiritually weak. As we keep
close to the Lord, as we trust in him and believe his Word, he will empower us
by the indwelling Holy Spirit so that we shall be empowered inwardly though we
are weakened physically and outwardly.
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