
Isaiah 43:1-3 “But now, this is what the Lord says–he who created you, O Jacob, he who formed you, O Israel: ‘Fear not, for I have redeemed you; I have summoned you by name; you are mine. When you pass through the waters, I will be with you; and when you pass through the rivers, they will not sweep over you. When you walk through the fire, you will not be burned; the flames will not set you ablaze. For I am the Lord, your God the Holy One of Israel, your Savior…’”
Notice that the Lord doesn’t say you aren’t going to have any crisis. Even people who follow him faithfully live in a fallen world. It is broken beyond anyone’s ability to repair. That’s why utopian schemes to create a perfect society will always fail. About the best we can do is try to keep the evil in check. Racism, injustice, violent crime, war, corrupt government and institutions, exploitation: these things are all like the poor. Remember what Jesus said about them? “They will always be with you.”
We are broken people, too. We don’t just suffer crisis. We cause it. Pastor Curtis believed the gospel he preached. He really did. But he got into a compromising position with a woman he wasn’t married to. He had ordinary male desires. He stumbled into an affair. It blew his ministry and his family apart. He had to resign. His wife left him. His children resented him.
Gerry was a genuine Christian woman, and it showed in her generosity and her service to others. But the stress of a large family and certain childhood demons led her to drink too much. Then she didn’t handle relationships so well. Her marriage survived, but some of her children were scarred. They fought with each other and struggled in their own marriages.
So whether the crisis comes from the world around us or is the product of our own sinful stupidity, we are going to “pass through the waters.” We will “walk through the fire.” It is not a matter of “if” but “when.” Sometimes we find ourselves waiting for it to happen. We are afraid, because we have had it too good for too long.
Then comes God’s promise. When the crisis comes, “I will be with you.” The rivers “will not sweep over you.” The flames “will not set you ablaze.” That doesn’t mean you won’t be gasping for air, coughing and sputtering and convinced that you are about to drown in it. The Lord is not suggesting that you will feel cool and comfortable in that fire, ready to pull out a bag of marshmallows and make some s’mores.
But he is going to jump into the water with you. He walks through the fire right beside you. You may not perceive him. A lot of flotsam and jetsom bump into a person swirling around in a flooded river. You may not perceive his hand pulling you toward shore. Smoke and heat make it hard to see in the fire. You may be passed out when he carries you to safety. But the Redeemed don’t have to be afraid, because the Lord sees them through the crisis.
Did you notice why he does it? He bookends his promise with expressions of his value and regard. He “created you” and “formed you.” You take pride in the things you have made, don’t you? When you were in school, did you ever have something you made in school, maybe a picture you drew, that had an honored place on a shelf in your room or on your bedroom wall for years to come? You are that thing God made, that picture he drew, in his own image no less, that he wants to keep and display and show off.
Even more “I have redeemed you, I have summoned you by name; you are mine.” Even though he made us, the Lord paid a second time for us to belong to him. Who buys what is already his? But that is what he does. In Old Testament history he had redeemed Israel out of Egypt. They were already his, but he bought them out of their slavery to Pharaoh with the power he poured into the miraculous plagues and the parting of the Red Sea.
All of that foreshadowed our Redemption, when he bought us out of our slavery to sin and death by pouring out the blood of his Son, and traded the life of Jesus for our own. So doubly he can say, “You are mine.” This is what you are to me.
Then he turns that around. He concludes, “This is what I am to you:” “I am the Lord, your God, the Holy one of Israel, your Savior.” He is not ashamed to be the God associated with us. He is proud to be the God who rescues and saves us. Don’t be afraid. The Lord will see you through every crisis.







