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Name above All Names

Truth for Life / Alistair Begg
The Truth Network Radio
December 19, 2023 3:00 am

Name above All Names

Truth for Life / Alistair Begg

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December 19, 2023 3:00 am

At Christmastime, we see heartwarming manger scene displays and hear songs about a “holy infant so tender and mild.” But learn about the powerful roles that same baby fulfilled and how each role impacts us today. Listen to Truth For Life with Alistair Begg.



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This listener-funded program features the clear, relevant Bible teaching of Alistair Begg. Today’s program and nearly 3,000 messages can be streamed and shared for free at tfl.org thanks to the generous giving from monthly donors called Truthpartners. Learn more about this Gospel-sharing team or become one today. Thanks for listening to Truth For Life!





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This is a time of year when we see displays of the main your scene and we hear songs about the holy infant so tender and mild. But today on Truth for Life, Alistair Begg shows us how that same baby fulfilled some very powerful roles.

We'll find out how each of the roles he fulfilled makes a difference in our lives today. Last time, as we looked at the beginning of chapter 9 and verse 6, 6a, we considered the identity of this child and the authority of this child. And now, this morning, we look together at the activity of this child, as it is conveyed by way of these four names. Most of us, if we have any knowledge of the Bible at all, will, if we've been around at Christmastime, have been familiar with the rehearsing of this statement, and some of us have enjoyed it when we've enjoyed the music of Handel.

But our familiarity with the terminology may not necessarily be as synonymous with a grasp and understanding of what is here for us to know. So, we work our way through them, noticing, first of all, that this child, then, is wonderful counselor. Wonderful counselor. He is a counselor who is wonderful. Or he is a counselor who is supernatural. Or he is a counselor who is an unparalleled counselor. Earthly kings, earthly presidents, and rulers of countries all are surrounded by advisers and by counselors. They are honest enough to recognize that the vastness of that which they are confronted with is such that they cannot possibly know everything about everything, and therefore they need people to give them advice. The great distinction between those folk and this individual is that he is in himself the embodiment of wisdom.

If you turn forward just a page in your Bible to verse 2 of chapter 11, you will notice there that, speaking of this same individual, Isaiah says, And the Spirit of the LORD shall rest upon him, The Spirit of wisdom and understanding, The Spirit of counsel and might, The Spirit of knowledge and the fear of the LORD. So, in other words, he is wonderful because he defines wonder in himself. One of the difficulties that we have with language is that it changes on us all the time.

And often it is devalued by the way in which we use it. So, for example, the word like awesome is no longer possessive of the distinctions of what would be awesome anymore, because it is used of just about everything. Oh, look at your shoes. They're awesome. I got news for you.

They may be nice shoes, but they ain't awesome. And in the same way, the word wonder or the word wonderful is possessed of a particular purpose in language. As an adjective, certainly in the Hebrew, it means that which requires God as an explanation. That which requires God as an explanation. So Isaiah, when he writes and continues in his prophecy, he eventually gets to Isaiah 40, and he says, Who has understood the mind of the LORD or instructed him that he should be his counselor?

And the answer is, of course, nobody. And the mystery of it all is that now here we have God contracted to a span, incomprehensibly made man. And we discover that the Lord Jesus, then, embodies all of this—all of this and more besides. They found him, Luke says, as a twelve-year-old boy in the temple, sitting among the teachers, listening to them and asking them questions, and then look with his eye for detail as a physician says, and all who heard him were amazed at his understanding and his answers. They were amazed, because he was a wonder.

He was a wonder like no other wonder, has ever been or ever will be. Now, the people in Isaiah's day knew that they needed counsel. The problem was that they went the wrong place for it. You go back and read Isaiah chapter 8, and you discover that in the darkness, in the oppression, in the disruption of their lives, in the prospect of war, in the reality of being separated as family members and so on, they know they need help. They know they need answers.

The trouble is that they go to mediums. And Isaiah calls out to them, and he says, Should not a people inquire of their God? Should they inquire of the dead on behalf of the living? People going to ask questions in the darkness and deadness and emptiness of things in the hope that they might find that which would make sense of the living of their lives.

Now, nothing much has changed, despite all the passage of time. The high streets of our towns and cities here in America are filled with opportunities and signs for you to go and inquire among the dead and with the mediums to see if you can make sense of your life. It will only take you into deeper darkness. But people know they need a counselor, because so much contemporary life is marked by feelings of indecision and anxiety. No, you see, men and women know, either disappointed about what life has brought or anxious about what life will bring and in need of a counselor.

Well, let me say to you, this is what you need to say to your friends if you're a believer. Say, I was studying the Bible the other day, and I came across this phrase about Jesus, that he is a wonderful counselor, and I wonder if you've ever gone to him for counsel. And people will ask you, they say, Do you know anyone I can talk to? They may say, May I talk to you? You say, Well, you can talk to me, but I need someone to talk to as well. Well, who do you talk to? Well, I actually talk to Jesus every day. And no secretary ever tells me he's been called away.

Oh, you do? Yes, you could talk to him about life. In him, you can have it in all of its fullness. You can talk to him about stuff, materialism, and he'll point out to you that it is an absolutely profitless exercise to try and gain the whole world and lose your own soul.

And you can talk to him about rest and security, and you will discover that he says it is found in him that if you take his yoke upon you and rest in him and learn from him, you'll find rest for your souls. All of this because he is a mighty counselor. Secondly, a wonderful counselor.

And secondly, a mighty God. As a wonderful counselor, he has a perfect plan. As mighty God, he has the power to execute the plan.

That's very important, isn't it? Because a plan in and of itself is no good unless you can execute. So he says, Here is my plan, and who are you? I am mighty God. He is the one, as we've seen, who releases the captives from the burden that is on their shoulders, because on his shoulder represents all authority.

His authority will never come to an end. Now, again, you see, when you take this and you fast-forward into the New Testament and you take the gospel records, you realize that what the writers are doing there is recording for us the life and the death and the resurrection of Jesus. They're not simply writing history, although it is historical.

They're not simply writing biography, although it is biographical. What they're actually doing is writing a gospel. In other words, they are presenting Jesus as they had discovered him in all of the fact and reality of his personhood. And they discovered him to be a mighty God.

That's why we read the gospels and we discover that he is walking on water, that he is healing sick. What is this? A kind of first-century David Copperfield?

A magic show? No, it's not. It is the declaration of his majesty. He is establishing the fact that he is powerful over all the forces of nature, that he is not only the agent of creation, as John says in his prologue, without him nothing was made that has been made, but he is also the Lord of creation. I wonder, have you thought about this? Or have you been tempted to dismiss Jesus as just another figure in history?

I mean, if you think about it, there is a certain logic to it, isn't there? Who would you expect to feed the five thousand with five loaves and two fish? Only he who declared himself to be the bread of life. Who would you anticipate could open the eyes of a blind man called Bartimaeus, except he who said, I am the light of the world, he who follows me will never walk in darkness? Who else could stand at the grave of his friend Lazarus and call him out of the tomb, except he who said, I am the resurrection and the life? And the wonder of wonders, miracle of miracles, is that this God has entered into our circumstances, that the Creator assumes the frailty of the creatures, that the eternal enters into time, that the powerful embraces weakness, that the immortal dies.

Who can explore this strange design? And because he is mighty God, he is able to save, says the Bible to the uttermost, all who call upon God through him. So he has a plan, and he has the power to work it out. And then thirdly, he's Everlasting Father. So you move from his plan to his power to his paternity. Now, Everlasting Father here is not a reference to the first person of the Trinity. You know, some people read their Bibles, and they get all confused at this point. Well, I thought the first person was the Father and the second person was the Son.

How can the second person who is the Son be the Father and so on? Well, it's not a reference to the first person of the Trinity. What it is saying is this—that Jesus as Messiah is like a Father to his people.

He is like a Father to his people. So you have the verse in the hymn, the hymn that begins, "'Praise my soul, the King of heaven.'" And then you have the verse, Father-like, he tends and spares us.

Well our feeble frame he knows. In his arms he gently bears us and rescues us from all our foes. In other words, having adopted us into his family, he's not going to abandon us. He hasn't gone to the extent of seeking us out and winning us and forgiving us and embracing us and then taking us to himself in order that he might just leave us at the side of the street. If we, being earthly, know how to give good gifts to our children, how much more will he who is the everlasting Father give good things to them than ask him? And I wrote in my notes, just for my own encouragement, and it may be of help to you, I wrote, he forgives us completely.

He forgives us completely. You see, everlasting is not a reference to his eternal being. It is a reference to the never-ending dimension of his care.

You understand the distinction? He's not an everlasting Father, because he comes from everlasting and lives to everlasting. But it is his fatherly care that never comes to an end. He never says, Oh, get out of here. He never says, Oh, go up into the bedroom and play by yourself. He never says, I'm going away, and I'm probably never coming back. He doesn't do that, because he is everlasting Father. And when he says he forgives you, he forgives you. He forgives us completely. Completely. We have a hard time believing that.

A very hard time believing that. And that's why we need to affirm it again. God forgives us completely. In Psalm 103, it says that he puts our sins out of his recollection.

He chooses not to remember. In Micah chapter 7, it says, You will cast our sins into the depths of the sea. It's a wonderful picture, isn't it? You ever try to look for anything in the sea? You ever drop your snorkel? You ever dropped a bracelet in the ocean?

How much fun was that? Virtually impossible. They are apparently buried forever, the way your sins are buried if you are in Christ. You need not spend a nanosecond to go and dig in there and look, because you will never find them. He has buried them in the depths of the sea. As a boy in Scotland, I learned to sing a song that went, You ask me why I'm happy, so I'll just tell you why, because my sins are gone. And when I look at others who ask me where they are, I say, My sins are gone. They're underneath the blood on the cross of Calvary, as far removed as darkness is from dawn. In the sea of God's forgetfulness, that's good enough for me. Praise God. My sins are gone. Some of you are here this morning, and you are absolutely trapped by guilt.

You go to counselors. They are able to ameliorate in some fashion the elements that you face, but they will not be able to assuage you of guilt. There is only one place that it can be found, and it is found at the cross of Christ. It is secured in the work of Christ, and it is conveyed by the love of Christ.

All you need to do is tell him. He forgives us completely. He knows us thoroughly. He knows our frame. You're not the last four digits of your social security number to God. You're not worthless. You're not plankton soup.

You're not molecules held in suspension. He knows you thoroughly, and he loves you endlessly, from everlasting to everlasting. The Lord's love is with those who fear him—a love that takes the initiative.

And he who is so vastly different from us comes and joins us, not just as a stranger on the bus but as a friend and as a Savior. So when you think about him, wonderful counselor with a plan that is absolutely perfect, mighty God with a power that may execute the plan, his paternity as a forever father, you want to deal with your guilt? Deal with it here. You want to deal with your sense of identity? Deal with it here. You want to deal with your unfulfilled longings?

Deal with them here. And finally, he is the Prince of Peace. He is the Prince of Peace. Every generation in history that has confronted strife and disharmony, decay, futility, legitimately necessary looks for and longs for peace. And we are no different. Despite all the advances of science and technology, despite the increases in our understanding of so much in our universe, despite our interest in health and safety, we still live with a sense of frustration and with alienation. My friend David Wells, in an amazing metaphor, says that our culture is sagging beneath the burden of emptiness.

Sagging beneath the burden of emptiness. So what are we to do? Well, let's take a leaf from the book of Lennon and McCartney. Here are two options for us. Option number one, we can work it out. Think of what I'm saying.

Do I have to keep on talking until I can go on? We can work it out. In other words, life is just a do-it-yourself project.

And particularly spiritual life is your own project. We can work it out. Let me ask you, how's it going? Let's just be dead honest about stuff.

Do you think we're working it out culturally? Individually? Now, I suggest you don't go with that song.

Go with the 1965 song. Help. I need somebody.

Not just anybody. Now, you see, the one we need is the one who has come to us, the one who is described for us here in the second half of verse 6. A peace that is found in him alone. For he is the only one who is able to mediate between our lostness and God's holiness. He is the only one who is able to take the place that we deserve to take because of our mess. Sin spoils things.

It spreads like weeds in a garden. It separates us from one another and from God. And God was in Christ reconciling the world to himself.

And you know what I love best about this story—and with this I'm going to stop—what I really love best about this story is that the more I study it, the more I think about it, the more I read it, the more I have the chance to tell others about it, I'm able to say, Listen, this is not about personal achievement. This is not about us fixing ourselves. It is rather about our personal acceptance of what God in Christ has achieved. You see, to quote Calvin, all that Christ has done for us—in his coming, in his living, in his dying, in his rising, in his ascending—all that Christ has done for us is of no value to us, so long as we remain outside of Christ. In other words, simple intellectual awareness of facts do not in themselves transform. Education in itself does not bring about change. We need to then enter into the reality of it.

Some of you are engineers, and those formulae that you use are simply scribbles on a page until you apply them to the circumstance that you face. And the truth that is conveyed here about the same Lord Jesus Christ is in order that we might then accept what he has achieved. So we end where we began.

God often brings his people to the place where we don't know what to do so that we might discover what he can do or what he has done. Even a superficial reading of history reveals the bankruptcy of our states and our nations and our kingdoms. Look at us this morning. We tell ourselves all the time, it's the greatest nation on the earth! Okay, fine, whatever you want to say, it's fine. You know, I'm good with that. Gotta choose something that we are.

We might as well hit high, you know. The greatest nation on the earth—bankrupt. The greatest nation on the earth with a bunch of well-meaning people sitting around now with pencils and erasers and scribbling around, and determining whether we just go right off the cliff together.

Whatever that cliff is. But listen, read your Bible and figure it out, and what will you discover? The incurable sickness of our world. The incurable sickness of our world is not about economic incompetence, nor is it even about economic inequity. The incurable sickness of our world, the Bible says, is about the fact that we have ignored the Maker's plan, we have rebelled against his power, we have rejected and denied his paternity, and we have distanced ourselves from his peace. And we are like the individuals described in one of C. S. Lewis's books, where we're so stuck on ourselves and so foolish that he says we are like children who are making mudpies in the rain-sodden streets of England, unaware of the fact that their father has prepared for them a wonderful holiday at the ocean. So it is not that we've overreached, it is that we have underreached and settled down in the mudpies, when God looks down and says, But I have a place for you at the ocean.

So peaceful, so restful. And as Isaiah looks forward here in Isaiah 9 to the coming of the Savior, so we look forward to the coming of Christ, triumphant as King and Lord. And God's desire for his people is that we might be contented in his Son. Without Jesus, possessing everything, we really have nothing.

And with Jesus, possessing nothing, we really have everything. You're listening to Truth for Life with Alistair Begg. Alistair has titled today's message, Name Above All Names. If you're a regular listener to Truth for Life, you know that as you listen to each day's program, you have your fellow listeners to thank. People just like you who give so that Alistair's teaching can be produced and distributed. Truth for Life is 100% funded by your donations. So if you've benefited from this program, but you've never reached out to give so others can benefit as you have, why not pay it forward? Make a donation before the end of the year.

You can do that easily, securely online at truthforlife.org slash donate or call us at 888-588-7884. But if you call, do so before this Friday. Our offices will be closed next week for the Christmas holiday.

We won't reopen until January 2nd. When you give a year-end donation to Truth for Life today, we want to say thank you by inviting you to request a three-pack of the Gospel of John. This is a bundle of three small pocket-sized booklets, and they're designed for you to pass out to a friend or a neighbor as a way of introducing them to Jesus. These booklets include a brief introduction, and at the end of the Gospels there's an explanation of what it means to be a Christian. There's a prayer readers can pray to acknowledge Jesus as Lord of their lives. This is an English Standard Version booklet. The text is formatted so it's easy for those new to God's Word to read it and to comprehend it. I'm Bob Lapine. Throughout history there have been mighty empires and powerful leaders who have come and gone, but tomorrow we'll hear about the perfect King who has an everlasting kingdom. The Bible teaching of Alistair Begg is furnished by Truth for Life, where the Learning is for Living.
Whisper: medium.en / 2023-12-19 06:48:37 / 2023-12-19 06:57:28 / 9

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