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Tom Harding

Fear Not

Isaiah 43:1-7
Tom Harding • December, 28 2008 • Audio
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Isaiah 43:1-7 But now thus saith the LORD that created thee, O Jacob, and he that formed thee, O Israel, Fear not: for I have redeemed thee, I have called thee by thy name; thou art mine. (2) When thou passest through the waters, I will be with thee; and through the rivers, they shall not overflow thee: when thou walkest through the fire, thou shalt not be burned; neither shall the flame kindle upon thee. (3) For I am the LORD thy God, the Holy One of Israel, thy Savior: I gave Egypt for thy ransom, Ethiopia and Seba for thee. (4) Since thou wast precious in my sight, thou hast been honorable, and I have loved thee: therefore will I give men for thee, and people for thy life. (5) Fear not: for I am with thee: I will bring thy seed from the east, and gather thee from the west; (6) I will say to the north, Give up; and to the south, Keep not back: bring my sons from far, and my daughters from the ends of the earth; (7) Even every one that is called by my name: for I have created him for my glory, I have formed him; yea, I have made him.
What does the Bible say about redemption?

The Bible teaches that redemption is a costly and complete work done by Christ for His people.

Redemption, according to the Bible, is primarily a work of God through Jesus Christ. It is described as a costly redemption, bought with the precious blood of Christ, which cleanses us from all sin (1 John 1:7). This work is complete, as it fully pays the sin debt of God's covenant people, meaning that their sins are remembered no more (Hebrews 9:12). The nature of this redemption is particular, as Christ died specifically for His elect, ensuring that all for whom He died will be saved (Matthew 1:21). Therefore, redemption is a comprehensive act of grace and a manifestation of God's love for His chosen people.

Isaiah 43:1-7, Matthew 1:21, Hebrews 9:12, 1 John 1:7

Why is it important to fear not in Isaiah 43?

It is essential to fear not because God promises His presence and redemption to His people.

In Isaiah 43, the command to 'fear not' serves as a powerful reminder of God's unwavering presence and His redemptive work in the lives of His people. This assurance comes from God's promise that He has redeemed His people and called them by name, signifying a personal relationship. The phrase 'fear not' emphasizes that, regardless of the tribulations believers may face, God is with them, and they will not be overwhelmed (Isaiah 43:2). This promise reassures Christians of God's active involvement in their lives, underscoring that His salvation is not only everlasting but also personal and particular, which eradicates the basis for fear.

Isaiah 43:1-7

How do we know God loves His people?

God demonstrates His love for His people through His eternal and sovereign choice of them.

The love of God is vividly manifested in Scripture, particularly in His covenant relationship with His people. God's love is described as eternal, as He states in Jeremiah 31:3 that He has loved His people with an everlasting love. This love is sovereign, meaning that God chooses whom He loves and saves according to His divine will (Romans 9:15). Moreover, God shows His love through the sacrifice of Jesus Christ, who laid down His life for His sheep (John 10:11). This unchangeable and free love reassures believers that their standing before God is secure, not based on their merit, but on Christ's finished work. Therefore, the basis of God's love is not only profound but also foundational for the identity and security of believers.

Jeremiah 31:3, Romans 9:15, John 10:11

How do we understand the effectual call of God?

The effectual call of God is an irresistible invitation to salvation that draws His people to Him.

The effectual call refers to God's sovereign and effective way of drawing His elect to salvation through the gospel. It is described as a powerful, personal call whereby God invites His chosen ones to come to Christ in faith. This call is irresistible, meaning that when God calls, those whom He has elected will come to Him (John 10:27). In Isaiah 43:1, God emphasizes that He has called His people by name, indicating both personal attention and divine authority. This call is not merely general but specific and transformative, resulting in true faith and repentance in those who hear it. Hence, the effectual call highlights God's initiative in salvation and His sovereignty in ensuring that His plans for His people will come to fruition.

Isaiah 43:1, John 10:27

Sermon Transcript

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Today for our Bible study, let's
turn in our Bible to Isaiah chapter 43. Isaiah chapter 43. And let me read these first four
or five verses of Isaiah 43. But now thus saith the Lord that
created thee, O Jacob, and he that formed thee, O Israel, fear
not, for I have redeemed thee. God said, I have redeemed thee,
Jacob. Fear not, I have called thee
by thy name." God said, you're mine. I chose you. You're mine. When you pass through the waters,
I'll be with you. And through the rivers, they
shall not overflow you. God said, when you're in trouble,
I'm with you. When you walk through the fire,
you'll not be burned, not be consumed. The flames shall not
kindle upon thee. God said, I'll never leave you,
I'll never forsake you. Now, Isaiah 43 verse 3, For I
am the Lord thy God. the Holy One of Israel, thy Savior,
knower of the name under heaven, given among men, whereby we must
be saved." Just one Savior, that's Jesus Christ, the Holy One of
Israel. He said, I gave Egypt for your
ransom, and He did. He destroyed a nation to save
His national people, Israel. I gave Egypt for a ransom. Ethiopian Siva for thee, since
thou was precious in my sight. Thou hast been honorable, I have
loved thee, therefore will I give men for thee and people for thy
life. Fear not, for I am with thee. I'll bring thy seed from the
east and gather thee from the west. I'll say to the north,
give up, and to the south, keep not back. Bring my son from far,
my daughter from the ends of the earth. Everyone that is called
by my name Now listen, for I have created him for my glory, I have
formed him, yea, I have made him. Now every believer, every
believer, those who have been called by the grace of God, who
trust the Lord Jesus Christ alone for all his salvation, every
believer is a creation and a formation of God God's almighty grace. We are His workmanship created
in Christ Jesus. The Apostle Paul put it this
way, by the grace of God, I am what I am. If you believe and
trust God and look to Christ alone for all your salvation,
it is the Lord that worketh in you. This is God's doing and
it's marvelous in our eyes. God created Jacob so he could
make him into Israel. You read the record back in Genesis
32. God gave Jacob. Oh, can I even
cheat Jacob? God transformed him and made
him into Israel. Prince of God. And God did this
on purpose and God did this by his grace because of Christ. Even so, God created all men
in Adam, that He might take out of Adam, form and transform a
people into the very image of Christ. The Apostle, when he
wrote to the Colossians, Paul said, we give thanks to God,
He has made us fit to be partakers of the inheritance of the saints
in Christ. He transformed us out of the
kingdom of darkness, translated us out of the kingdom of darkness
into the kingdom of God's dear Son. What I'm saying is salvation,
as I've said over the years on this broadcast, salvation is
a work of God, God's purpose and God's grace given us in Christ
before the foundation of the world. Now all this God has done
for us and in us for one reason, that He might be glorified. That's
the bottom line in salvation. And the Grand Design, one of
the greatest preachers that ever lived in this country, Jonathan
Edwards, who was one time president of Princeton University, back
in the early 1700s, wrote a book called The History of Redemption.
And one of the lines I remember in that book was he made the
statement that the Grand Design of Redemption is a glory of the
Lord Jesus Christ. And that is true. The Word of
God bears this out clearly. In our text, verse 7, he said,
I have created him for my glory. I have formed him, yea, I have
made him. Salvation is a work of God. It's
His glorious work. It's God's enduring work. That is, God saves His people
not with a temporary salvation. God saves His people with an
everlasting salvation. He says that. several places,
but in Isaiah 45 verse 17, he said, I saved you with an everlasting
salvation. And God's salvation is a perfect
work. You see, it's the work of God.
It's not the work of men. Salvation is not what we do for
God. Salvation is what God has done
for us. And my friend, He never does
an incomplete work. It's a perfect work. It's an
enduring work. It's a glorious work. And my
friend, it is a complete work. Colossians 2 verse 9 and 10 says,
In Him dwells all the fullness of a Godhead bodily, and we are
complete in Him. Now, the word of encouragement
in this text is Isaiah 43 verse 1, Fear not. Fear not, for I
have redeemed thee. I have called thee by your name. God said, You are mine. If God
be for us, who? can be against us. Now let's
look at these particulars in these verses here, verses 1,
2, 3, and 4. I would encourage you to get
your Bible and turn over to Isaiah 43 and let's read these verses
together. Now, here's a word of encouragement to you who believe.
God Almighty says, Thus saith the Lord that created thee and
that formed thee. He said, I have redeemed thee.
I have redeemed thee. Now instead of God justly leaving
us to pay the debt of our sin, The Lord Jesus Christ stepped
in. In the fullness of time, God
sent forth His Son, made of a woman, made under the law to redeem
them that were under the law. Instead of God leaving us to
justly pay our sin debt, in which we are unable to do, the Lord
Jesus Christ stepped in and paid all the sin debt for God's covenant
people. He appeared once in the end of
the age to put away sin by the sacrifice of Himself." Hebrews
9.26. He obtained eternal redemption
for His covenant people. Hebrews 9.12. Now several things
we know about this redemption when He said, I have redeemed
thee. The first thing we know, it was a costly redemption. We're
not redeemed by corruptible things. We're not redeemed or delivered
by our works. God bought us with His own blood. Peter put it this way in his
epistle. He said, you're redeemed with the precious blood of Christ. It's costly. It's precious, isn't
it? That's what redeems us from sin.
It's the blood sacrifice of Christ. And this blood sacrifice of Christ
is complete. That is, he completely put away
the sin of God's sheep. He said, I'm the good shepherd.
The good shepherd lays down his life for the sheep. In John chapter
1, first John chapter 1 verse 7, We read the blood of Christ
cleanses us from all sin. Matter of fact, the blood of
atonement and we're redeemed so completely in Christ and so
fully and so totally that God Almighty said their sin and their
iniquity will I remember no more. So it's a costly redemption bought
with the blood of Christ. It's complete redemption. He
redeemed us from the curse of the law. And my friend, it's
a particular redemption, a particular He said in the text here, I have
redeemed thee. In Matthew 1.21, the angel messenger
from heaven said, call his name Jesus, which means Savior. He shall save his people from
their sin. Now the blood atonement of Christ
is not something that's scattered and miscellaneous. God doesn't
work that way. He shed his blood for God's people. or God's sheep. He said, for
the transgression of my people was I stricken. It's particular.
The atonement of Christ was given to save God's covenant elect
people that He chose from the foundation of the world and they
shall be saved. Not only that, but this redemption
is satisfying. Satisfying to God. Isaiah 53
says, He shall see the travail of His soul, the sacrifice of
His soul, and shall be satisfied. We are redeemed with the precious
blood of Christ. You see what I'm saying? These
are words of encouragement. God said, I have redeemed thee.
And that gives me comfort and hope because I know I'm unable
to put away my sin. I'm unable to redeem myself.
He redeemed us. And then he says in this text,
for I have redeemed thee, then he said, I've called thee. I've
called thee by thy name. Now, the Lord Jesus Christ has
called us unto Himself. All those bought with His precious
blood shall be brought to Christ in saving faith. God calls His
people with the gospel of the Lord Jesus Christ, the good news
of the gospel. Now, we didn't call upon Him
first, nor did we choose Him first, nor did we love Him first. We love Him because He first
loved us. We've chosen Him because God
in that covenant of grace first chose us. He called us with the
gospel. That's what He said here. Matter
of fact, in this same text it says, you got called upon Me.
Isaiah 43 verse 22. He said, you didn't call upon
Me. God called upon us. And He does this with the gospel.
When Paul wrote to the Corinthians, he said, it pleased God through
the preaching of the gospel to call you. Now this call of God,
This call of God with the gospel is a personal call. He said,
I redeemed you therefore because I bought you with my blood, I've
called you by your name. It's a personal call. In John
10, we read the good shepherd knows his sheep and he calls
them by name. Something else about this call
of the gospel, it's an effectual call. It's an effectual call. In the same chapter, Isaiah 43,
he said, there is none that can deliver out of my hand. I will
work and who shall prevent it? Who shall stop the work of God?
It's an effectual call. He said, my sheep, hear my voice.
I know them and they do follow me. It's a powerful call. Powerful call of the gospel.
Thy people shall be willing in the day of God's power. And my
friend, it's irresistible. It's irresistible. God irresistibly
calls. Can a sinner prevent the work
of God? Well, who do you think God is? My friend, He's Almighty. None
can stay His hand. None can stop Him. None can say
unto Him, Lord God Almighty, what are you doing? Salvation
is of the Lord. Salvation is all of grace. That's
why we call this broadcast the Sovereign Grace Broadcast. Because
the Scriptures teach that salvation is a work of God. God saves whom
He saves on purpose by the will of God. And then, let's read
on in Isaiah 43. In the next verse, he said, when
you pass through the waters, I'll be with you. God won't forsake
His people. They're redeemed, they're called,
they're a tribe people, but my friend, they'll never be, they
will never be forsaken. He said, I'll never leave you,
I'll never forsake you. When you go through the waters
and through the fire, they won't consume you. He said, my grace
is sufficient for thee. And then in verse 3 of our text,
he said, I am the holy God, I'm the Lord thy God. Now who can
make such a broad, far-reaching, wide-sweeping, comprehensive
promise? I am the Lord thy God, the Holy
One of Israel, thy Savior. Jesus Christ, my friend, is God
our Savior, and He will spare, and He did not spare any expense
to save His people. He said, with my own blood I
bought you, you're mine. He's the Savior of the people. He's God our Savior. And then
in verse 4 of our text, Isaiah 43 verse 4, He said, you were
precious in my sight, you're honorable, and He said, I've
loved thee. Now let's look at three words in verse 4. Precious,
God said we're precious in His sight. That is His elect, His
people, honorable. And God said, I've loved thee.
Three words of encouragement, precious in my sight. Now we're
not precious in our own sight. We say with Paul, wretched man
that I am. But my friend, every believer
is precious and valuable in God's sight. We're valuable to God
not because of what we've done for Him, but my friend, because
what He has done for us. in Christ. He's made us new creatures
in Christ, a new creation. And then He says, you're honorable.
Now, we're born in a dishonorable state. In Adam's sin and guilt,
we've dishonored God. We've dishonored God by our own
sin, but we've been made honorable by the sovereign grace of God,
by a new birth in Christ, by a new dress. He is the Lord,
our righteousness. By a new nature He has given
us, by the inheritance that we have in Christ. Heirs of God
and joint heirs with Christ. In His sight, because of Christ,
we are precious, honorable, and loved of God. Now, my friend,
this is the spring and source and fountain of all spiritual
blessings to us. The love of God which is manifested
in Christ Jesus. Let me tell you, give you five
things about the love of God we find in Scripture. It's eternal
love. God said, I've loved you with
an everlasting love. Sovereign love. Jacob have I
loved, Esau have I hated. God will love whom He will. God
doesn't love all men everywhere. The love of God is manifested
in Christ. It's eternal love. It's sovereign
love. It's unchangeable love. He said, I am the Lord, I change
not. And my friend, it's free love. Justified freely by His
grace through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus. He said,
fear not, I'm with you, I'll bring thy seed from the east
and gather thee from the west. What he's saying in these verses
here, 5, 6, and 7, God is saying those for whom I chose in eternity,
those for whom Christ died and redeemed, those for whom he perfected
righteousness, they shall be saved. None for whom the Lord
Jesus Christ died will ever perish. The covenant of grace and the
oath of God, the promise of God, will not permit such. He said,
All the Father hath given me will come to me, and those that
come to me I will in no wise cast out. Words of encouragement,
Isaiah 43.
Tom Harding
About Tom Harding
Tom Harding is pastor of Zebulon Grace Church located at 6088 Zebulon Highway, Pikeville, Kentucky 41501. You may also contact him by telephone at (606) 631-9053, or e-mail taharding@mikrotec.com. The website address is www.henrytmahan.com.

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