Out of Service

Isaiah 1-2:5

About the Sermon

The book of Isaiah is long, expansive in the timeline it covers, and filled with obscure names and places. It's also the book in our Bible from which we get our most familiar verses. In fact, it is that Old Testament book from which our New Testament authors and even Jesus himself derived their clearest grasp on the person of Christ and the meaning of his death. So it is to Isaiah that we turn, a book that begins with a vision of two cities, one in ruins and one in righteousness. How does the city in ruins become the city of righteousness?

About the Series

How did Jesus learn about who he was and what he came to do? How did those who wrote about Jesus in the New Testament Scriptures come to fully grasp the significance of his death and resurrection? From the Old Testament Scriptures and from the book of Isaiah in particular. In this short series we turn to what are often called the Songs of the Servant in the book of Isaiah. Many years before Christ came, Isaiah told us what our savior came to do and why: to grant us forgiveness and life. Or, put another way, to bring rebels from the wilderness of sin and death into the paradise of life with him.
How did Jesus learn about who he was and what he came to do? How did those who wrote about Jesus in the New Testament Scriptures come to fully grasp the significance of his death and resurrection? From the Old Testament Scriptures and from the book of Isaiah in particular. In this short series we turn to what are often called the Songs of the Servant in the book of Isaiah. Many years before Christ came, Isaiah told us what our savior came to do and why: to grant us forgiveness and life. Or, put another way, to bring rebels from the wilderness of sin and death into the paradise of life with him.

Sermons in the Series