Listening to Isaiah: A Shoot from a Stump




Isaiah 11:1-5
December 18, 2011

A shoot shall come out from the stump of Jesse, and a branch shall grow out of his roots. The spirit of the Lord shall rest on him, the spirit of wisdom and understanding, the spirit of counsel and might, the spirit of knowledge and the fear of the Lord. His delight shall be in the fear of the Lord. He shall not judge by what his eyes see, or decide by what his ears hear; but with righteousness he shall judge the poor, and decide with equity for the meek of the earth; he shall strike the earth with the rod of his mouth, and with the breath of his lips he shall kill the wicked. Righteousness shall be the belt around his waist, and faithfulness the belt around his loins.

2500 years ago, the prophet Isaiah set a tone for the Jewish, and later the Christian, faith that ever since has been foundational to our beliefs.  He used a poetic image to describe the nature of our faith.  He said, “A shoot shall come out from the stump of Jesse, and a branch shall grow out of his roots.”

Quiz time.  What did he mean by this?  Who was Jesse, and why would a shoot come out of his stump?  You may not know it, but you do remember Jesse.  Jesse was King David’s father.  And if you remember the story of the prophet Samuel in the Old Testament, Samuel was led to Jesse in Bethlehem to find the next king, and he found David among Jesse’s sons.  Isaiah was speaking to Jews after the kingdom of Judea had been conquered by the Babylonians, and all the artisans, scholars, and anyone with a skill, had been transported 700 miles to serve as slaves in Babylon.  Everything was dark and seemed hopeless. Isaiah was saying that even though the lineage of David, and therefore Jesse, had seemed to have been wiped out, there was still hope.

He was comparing Israel to a mighty tree that had been cut down, but had the potential for new life will grow out of it.  Israel had been a mighty tree, much like an oak, that had been cut down by the Babylonians.  But new life was already emerging.  It was small, and barely perceptible by the Israelites, but it was growing.  They needed to have faith and hope. 

Christian scholars have debated for centuries what Isaiah meant by our passage.  Was he actually prophesying Jesus’ coming?  Was he simply telling the Jews something about their fate after their exile to Babylon?  Was it something else?  Regardless of what he was referring to back then, one thing is undeniable.  He was describing the nature of Jewish and Christian faith then and now, which is that with God nothing is ever dead.  God is always working to renew life, and to resurrect out of death something new.  With any death begins the process of new life.

Ultimately he was saying that our faith, and the Jewish faith that it is built upon, is a Cinderella faith.  Embedded in our faith is the idea that no matter how bad things get, no matter how desperate they seem, God is always there to redeem us, restore us, renew us, and resurrect us. 

Christianity, at its core, is always looking for something new to come out of even the worst situations.  The post-World War II pastor, Dietrich, understood this facet of Christian faith.  At the end of World War II, he helped many devastated and hopeless Germans deal with the terrible things they had done during the war.  Pastor Dietrich was instrumental in helping them heal their wounds.  He was one of them.  He had done terrible things himself, and like them he was complicit in all the terrible things the Nazis had done prior to and during the war.  Yet after the war he preached a consistent message of God’s grace, love, and forgiveness, all of which he had experienced during the war.  God had transformed him from a Nazi animal to a man of love.  How did he become such a caring presence?  It all started in the early years of the war when he had been part of the infantry in the German army as they battled the Russians. 

It was the winter of 1941.  Terrible battles were being waged as the Germans penetrated further and further into Russia.  If you know anything about the German army’s attack against the Russians, you know that they were incredibly naïve in how they did it.  They attacked in mid-summer, giving themselves little time before winter, and the Russian winter was one of Russia’s greatest defenses.  Winter came and the German army became bogged down. 

Also, the Russian army had a particular defensive strategy that worked perfectly against the Germans, albeit a defense that was grounded on a massive disregard for Russian casualties.  The Germans had perfected the blitzkrieg strategy in which they would mobilize their air force, infantry, and tank cavalry to quickly break through enemy lines, thus taking over lands before the defenders knew what was happening.  The Russian army didn’t react the way other armies did, by putting up a massive wall of resistance, forcing the Germans to break through, and then caving quickly once the Russians did break through.  Instead, they deployed their army into successive wide and narrow defensive lines that could be easily broken through, each line about ½ a mile apart, forming ten or twelve lines. 

The Germans would easily break through the first line, and then attack the following line.  But each time the line that had been broken through would fall back and fortify the line behind them.  As the Germans penetrated further, they not only found each line becoming stronger with the support of the previous lines, but the previous lines falling back could also attack the sides and back of the German army, thus surrounding them and cutting them off.  Typically the Germans would penetrate through to the fifth or sixth line and then find themselves bogged down and encircled.  What seemed like a successful thrust towards victory could easily leave German troops caught behind enemy lines with little hope for support as the Russian Army surged forward. 

During one particular battle the Russian army fell back time and time again, and suddenly they surged forward in a massive counterattack.  As a result, a Nazi soldier, Dietrich, found himself stranded behind enemy lines.  He was confused, frozen, and terrified.  He knew that the Russians treated their prisoners horribly.  So he scrambled through the forest, anxiously trying to make it back to the German lines.  Exhausted and cold, he eventually came across a small hut with a wisp of smoke escaping from its chimney. 

He burst through the door only to find a tiny, poor, old Russian woman eating her dinner.  He angrily pushed her aside as he ransacked the house, looking for hidden dangers.  As he turned back toward the woman, he was surprised to find her holding out a dish of food for him.  Dietrich grabbed the plate out of her hands and greedily slurped down the food.  Much to his surprise, the old woman gave him more, and she took care of him for the next three days.  No matter how harshly he treated her, she responded with warmth and love.  Why was she doing this?  What made it even more puzzling was that if caught, she was certain to be shot for hiding a German soldier.  Why would she do this for an enemy?

Finally, Dietrich decided that it was time to try and reach the German lines.  Before he left, though, he had to know why she treated him so well when he had treated her so badly.  Though they did not understand a word of each other’s language, he finally was able to communicate his question:  “Why have you taken care of me when I have treated you so poorly?”  Her answer was simple and direct.  She pointed to a crucifix on the wall.  She had treated him this way because she loved God, and she knew that God loved Dietrich.  Her vision was so God-bathed that she did not see in Dietrich as an enemy.  She saw in him a child of God who was scared, hungry, and helpless.  And it was God’s love in her that called her to treat Dietrich with love, forgiveness, and compassion.

This woman’s love for God had a profound effect on Dietrich.  For the rest of the war, he reflected on the woman’s kindness and her faith.  He wanted something like that in his life.  How could he get it?  He decided that turning his life over to Christ was the only answer.  Her love for God allowed him to love God also.  And so after the war he pursued God, and eventually became a Lutheran pastor so that he could serve God in providing the German people with the same kind of love, forgiveness, and compassion that the Russian woman had given him.  Dietrich had been resurrected and renewed, and he helped the German people become resurrected and renewed, too. 

We are a resurrection people in more ways than one.  We follow a faith that says that nothing is ever hopeless, nothing is ever a lost cause, if we have faith in God.  This is a stump faith, a faith that says that no matter how dead things seem to be, God can always bring new life. 

Do you have a stump faith?  A faith that believes in God no matter what, that hopes no matter what, and that is prepared for new life no matter what?  Through Death? Divorce? Unemployment?  Illness?  Depression?  Struggle?  The thing you need to hold onto is that a shoot can grow out of the stump of your life, but you have believe.  Amen.