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The Polar Express
Isaiah 9:
Week 2
Text:
Movie: The Polar Express
Topic: Promise, Light, Peace
Big Idea of the Message: Jesus came not only for our individual salvation, but as light and peace to a dark and violent world.
Application Point: Approach Christmas celebrations as opportunities to “re enchant” the world and remember the ways God is working behind the scenes.
Sermon Ideas and Talking Points:
1. “A light has dawned” (v.
2)—this is the story of Christmas.
is a favorite text to read during Advent because of how beautifully it describes a truth that we now understand even more fully than when the prophecy was given.
“The people walking in darkness have seen a great light” (v. 2) is a hope we are all clinging to, believing that, even in the midst of great evil and despair, there is a light that has broken through and will only continue to win against the darkness.
The beauty of this passage is that what begins as a picture of cosmic victory then shrinks down into something seemingly small and quaint: “to us a child is born, to us a son is given” (v. 6) who will have outsized influence—“and the government will be on his shoulders” (v. 6).
The incarnation is pictured as the breaking of light into darkness and a child who will upend unjust government and bring peace.
2. The picture in is one that animated the imaginations of the Jewish people for centuries before the actual incarnation.
One of the greatest cultural changes for us today is that we live in a world where the supernatural is no longer assumed.
We’ve lost the sense that there is something happening that we can’t always see or touch.
Whereas many cultures across history have had some sense (whatever that may have looked like) of the enchantment of the world, of some kind of magic or power operating at the same time as we lived our everyday lives, this sense is often lost today.
3.
One of the beautiful things about the film The Polar Express is the way it captures that very sense of losing belief and then the beauty of the world becoming reenchanted.
A young boy begins to lose hope that Santa will visit him and questions his prior belief when he learns that the North Pole is too cold to be a viable place for human life.
When a larger-than-life train arrives in front of his house to take him there, the world becomes magical again.
When we gather together as the church and read words like , we are participating in a reenchantment, a reminder that God is up to something, operating in our world in ways we don’t always see.
4. Verses 3–5 give a powerful picture of one key aspect of what Jesus came to accomplish: peace on earth.
“The end of war depends on the coming of a person—a royal person—yet one never explicitly called a ‘king’ here
; ; ).
He would appear as a child (emphatic in the Hebrew text); He would not only be God come to earth, but God born on earth, i.e., both human and divine.
The ‘child born’ points to His humanity and the ‘son given’ to His deity” (Thomas Constable, Notes on Isaiah [Sonic Light, 2017], 62).
We talk a lot about Jesus coming for our individual salvation, but this passage reminds us of the cosmic battle going on all around us, and the decisive victory that Jesus would accomplish.
Matthew ; ).
He would appear as a child (emphatic in the Hebrew text); He would not only be God come to earth, but God born on earth, i.e., both human and divine.
The ‘child born’ points to His humanity and the ‘son given’ to His deity” (Thomas Constable, Notes on Isaiah [Sonic Light, 2017], 62).
We talk a lot about Jesus coming for our individual salvation, but this passage reminds us of the cosmic battle going on all around us, and the decisive victory that Jesus would accomplish.
He would appear as a child (emphatic in the Hebrew text); He would not only be God come to earth, but God born on earth, i.e., both human and divine.
The ‘child born’ points to His humanity and the ‘son given’ to His deity” (Thomas Constable, Notes on Isaiah [Sonic Light, 2017], 62).
We talk a lot about Jesus coming for our individual salvation, but this passage reminds us of the cosmic battle going on all around us, and the decisive victory that Jesus would accomplish.
He would appear as a child (emphatic in the Hebrew text); He would not only be God come to earth, but God born on earth, i.e., both human and divine.
The ‘child born’ points to His humanity and the ‘son given’ to His deity” (Thomas Constable, Notes on Isaiah [Sonic Light, 2017], 62).
We talk a lot about Jesus coming for our individual salvation, but this passage reminds us of the cosmic battle going on all around us, and the decisive victory that Jesus would accomplish.
5.
This passage reminds us of the many-faceted implications of the incarnation.
“Look at Jesus.
As the Wonderful Counselor, he has the best ideas and strategies.
Let's follow him.
As the Mighty God, he defeats his enemies easily.
Let's hide behind him.
As the Everlasting Father, he loves us endlessly.
Let's enjoy him.
As the Prince of Peace, he reconciles us while we are still his enemies.
Let's welcome his dominion” (Raymond C. Ortlund, Isaiah: God Saves Sinners [Wheaton, IL: Crossway, 2005], 99).
6.
While The Polar Express reenchants the world and points and hints toward a deeper meaning to the holiday, it doesn’t acknowledge the real power behind the “magic.”
At one point, a character comments with supposed sagacity, “One thing about trains.
It doesn't matter where they're going.
What matters is deciding to get on.”
But “it does matter which train we climb aboard, which dream we adhere to, and what we choose to believe in” (Jeffrey Overstreet, “The Polar Express,” Christianity Today, November 10, 2004, https://www.christianitytoday.com/ct/2004/novemberweb-only/polarexpress.html).
This passage doesn’t just remind us of the ways that God is working at all times or the power of Christ coming to earth; it shows us that there is an answer to a broken world: Jesus.
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