A Path Through the Wilderness

An Advent reading for November 28.

Stephen Crotts

The infant wrapped in swaddling clothes and laid in a manger is the glorious Creator and sustainer of all things. We hear of his power and might in the teachings of John the Baptist. We anticipate his promised return and his ultimate reign. Jesus is the Mighty God.

Advent Week 1: The Mighty God

Read Isaiah 40:1–5 and Malachi 3:1–4; 4:5–6

In Isaiah 40, we find the Israelites deported to a strange land—exiled and captive in ancient Babylon. The city was located about an hour south of modern-day Baghdad, Iraq, and was considered the center of Mesopotamian civilization, a cosmopolitan desert city of hanging gardens that was famous for Hammurabi and his code. But God’s people didn’t want to remain stranded here. They wanted to go home, back to Jerusalem. Yet they were far, far away from home with no hope of return.

In this no-hope-possible context, they experienced an inbreaking of God’s grace. “Comfort,” the prophet cried—a Hebrew word with connotations of courage and strength. His message was something akin to “Be comforted, have hope! This is not the end. You are going to see and experience something you could never have imagined in your wilderness life.” Like their ancient ancestors who had experienced miraculous provision and deliverance in the Egyptian wilderness, they too would see God make a path through the wilderness for them.

Pairing Isaiah 40:1–5 with Malachi 3:1–4 and 4:5–6, we see God’s promise to send a messenger to prepare the hearts of his people for deliverance. They would be cleansed as through fire so that they might see God, themselves, and the world more clearly. In this deliverance, that which had been torn apart through exile, like familial relationships, would one day be stitched back together (Mal. 4:5–6).

God kept his word; eventually the Israelites returned to Jerusalem. Yet this return was not the end of the prophecy. Centuries later, another prophet, John the Baptist, would clear the path for the Mighty God, our Lord Jesus Christ, to save his people from their exilic existence—exiled from God and one another due to sin. John would soften people’s hearts for Christ’s arrival.

And there is another layer of fulfillment of Malachi’s prophecy (3:1–4): It points toward Jesus’ second coming when we will be refined—made pure—as all things are made new (see Rev. 21:5).

Fantastic deliverances in hopeless situations are not relegated to ancient history. Almighty God pulls off spectacular feats of deliverance daily. Indeed, God appears when all hope seems lost. We can trust in the mightiness of God. And, during Advent, we’re reminded to trust the Promised One who came to us as a newborn babe yet held all the power and might of the universe and beyond in his tiny hands!

Are you in the wilderness in need of deliverance—in need of God in his might to intervene? We may not know how or when deliverance may come, but it will come. God always comes. Ask God to prepare your heart for his arrival and the deliverance that always comes with it.

Marlena Graves is assistant professor of spiritual formation at Northeastern Seminary. She is the author of several books, including The Way Up Is Down.

Contemplate Isaiah 40:1–5 and Malachi 3:1–4; 4:5–6.


How do you see God’s might in these promises? In their layers of fulfillment? How do these passages resonate with your own longings and desires?

Also in this issue

As we worship at the manger, may we marvel that this very child is the Mighty God, he is the Prince of Peace, and he is the Light of the World. He is the one who came to die. He is the one who rose triumphant, who ascended, and who will keep his promise to come again in glory. He will enact justice and bring to culmination his kingdom of peace. He is Immanuel, God with us.

The Beautiful Paradox

Kelly M. Kapic

Jesus Is Our Peace

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Born to Be Bruised

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Our Jubilean Hope

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The Healing Peace of Jesus

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Peaceful Rest

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The Prince of Shalom

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A Vision of Peace

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The Greatest Hope of All

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The Judge Who Is Faithful & True

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Jesus Will Reign

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