God Sings
Main passage Zephaniah 3:16-17
📖 Read the Scripture passage (ESV)
Zephaniah 3:16-17 (ESV)
16
On that day it shall be said to Jerusalem:
“Fear not, O Zion;
let not your hands grow weak.
17
The Lord your God is in your midst,
a mighty one who will save;
he will rejoice over you with gladness;
he will quiet you by his love;
he will exult over you with loud singing.
Transcript
Can I say to you that I'm excited to preach today without you thinking that I'm glad that Andrew is sick? As he and I texted one another this morning, it's like he's really bummed that he can't preach. He says, well, that's probably rooted in my pride. I don't think so. I think he loves to minister the Word of God to you, as do I. You know, one of the things that we've noted as Andrew has preached through Ephesians is Ephesians chapter 5, where it talks about sexual immorality.
And it talks about the fact, you ever notice it says, have thanksgiving? In the midst of that whole section on sexual immorality, it talks about having thanksgiving. And you wonder, why is that? They used to wonder that. Well, it's there because when you're not thankful for the position God has given you, you're going to be led into sin. Your ingratitude will lead you to sin.
And someone who's involved in sexual immorality is not thankful for being single or is not thankful for the spouse that God has given them. And that's why that's there. And so I want to talk about Thanksgiving this morning. I want to talk about where our Thanksgiving can be rooted. So if we're going to be thankful in order to avoid and be pure, then let's find out a route for that Thanksgiving.
And that's what I want to do this morning. So before we look into the text of God's Word, let's just pray and ask Him to open His Word for us. Father, thank You again for the opportunity of looking into Your Word. We're thankful, Lord, that we can be thankful. We can be thankful. And our thankfulness can grow out of rich soil. so that we are not covetous.
We don't covet, and thus we don't become involved in impure activities. We're thankful that our praise and worship and thanksgiving can grow out of your character. Help us to see that this morning. And we'll give you thanks because of it. In Jesus' name, amen. many of you have had experiences with different coaches when you were in high school when you're involved in any kind of athletics or maybe you had coaches in some other endeavor like debate or the quiz team or something along those lines jeremy treat a pastor in los angeles writes about a coach he had when he was in high school and he wrote this my basketball coach was a classic old school screamer who motivated with fear and shame.
His voice was powerful, but I heard it only when I did something wrong. If I turned the ball over on offense or blew my assignment on defense, practice would stop and the shaming would begin. Red in the cheeks and foaming at the mouth, he would scream until I had to wipe the spit off the side of my face. I never really knew him outside of basketball practice, but I know he was an angry man.
Now, many people think of God that way. He's an angry old man who demands that things go his way, and when they don't, he will shame and guilt and scare people to line things up. He's the God who's just waiting for me to mess up, and then he's going to lower the boom. Now, if that's the way you think of God, then you'll have a difficult time in worshiping and praising and giving thanksgiving.
In fact, your thanksgiving won't be very long-lasting, if that's the view of God that you have. You'll find your thanksgiving rather shallow and not able to stand against the hardships and sorrows that life inevitably brings in a fallen world. It will last only as long as the good times. you see your ability to give thanks depends on your view of god how do you see god and if we're going to praise we're going to worship if we're going to give him thanks we need to have the right view of who god is so i would ask you this morning to open your bible to the prophet zephaniah i'll wait a few minutes by the way there's a there's an HZ HZ in the minor prophets Habakkuk Zephaniah Haggai Zechariah so there's there's a little bit of a clue if all else fails look at your table of contents Zephaniah minor prophet three chapters long I want I'm going to put our attention on Zephaniah chapter 3 verses 16 and 17 on that day it shall be said in Jerusalem fear not O Zion let not your hands grow weak the Lord your God is in your midst a mighty one who will save he will rejoice over you with gladness he will quiet you by his love he will exalt over you with loud singing i know already the objections creeping into some of your minds this moment okay here we go again God loves everyone so God never gets angry yeah yeah yeah I've heard it you're going to make us all feel good by telling not to worry about it God's nothing but love well if you think that this verse describes this kind of God then you'd be absolutely wrong this is not a hallmark card from God with nice handwriting and doves in the margins and he jazzing up the thing It not like that at all Reading this verse as an inspirational pick cheapens it and obscures its meaning.
If that's all you think this verse is about, it will produce a shallow view of God and the resulting thanksgiving and praise will be shallow as well. And it will not last in the difficulties and sorrows of life. But if we understand this passage in its Old Testament context and the context in which it is given, you will find a rich message from God that produces deep, rich thanksgiving and praise that lasts.
First of all, you need to understand what you're saved from. If you want deep, lasting thanksgiving, the kind of thanksgiving that will keep you from impurity, the kind of thanksgiving that will move you towards holiness, then you must understand what you're saved from. Now our text here in Zephaniah 3, this text of God's joy comes at the end of a book that speaks almost exclusively of God's justice, his righteousness, his judgment, and his wrath. the book opens with a declaration of god's anger at all of creation look at chapter one verses two and three i will utterly sweep away everything from the face of the earth declares the lord i will sweep away man and beast i will sweep away the birds of the heavens and the fish of the sea and the rubble with the wicked.
I will cut off mankind from the face of the earth, declares the Lord. Look down at verses 17 and 18. I will bring distress on mankind so that they shall walk like the blind because they have sinned against the Lord. Their blood shall be poured out like dust and their flesh like dung. Neither their silver nor their gold shall be able to deliver them on the day of the wrath of the Lord.
In the fire of his jealousy all the earth shall be consumed for a full and sudden end he will make of all the inhabitants of the earth. That is the judgment of God. Now on the whole earth will escape this unbelievable judgment. But it moves on to his covenant people. In verse 4 he says, I will stretch out my hand against Judah and against all the inhabitants of Jerusalem.
It's even going to come against his covenant people. Look at chapter 1 verses 10 through 13. On that day declares the Lord a cry will be heard from the fish gate. That's in Jerusalem. A wall from the second quarter, a loud crash from the hills. Wail, O inhabitants of the mortar, for all the traders are no more.
All who weigh out silver are cut off. At that time I will search Jerusalem with lamps, and I will punish the men who are complacent, those who say in their hearts, the Lord will not do good, nor will he do ill. Their goods shall be plundered, and their houses laid waste. Though they build houses, they shall not inhabit them. Though they plant vineyards, they shall not drink wine from them.
Do you see what he says here? Do you ever notice that in these places in the world where there's conflict, right? What do we see? We see people going about their normal ways of life. Even in the small quarters where they are, they still go to the shop. They still do these things.
They get along. But here God says, it's not going to happen he says even those of you who are apathetic and indifferent god does god doesn't do good and he doesn't do ill you're apathetic you don't care the least bit about god it's just not in your thinking he says all of you i'll be like someone going through the streets i will bring judgment on my covenant people zephaniah goes on to describe that day of judgment as a day that is bitter where impressive mighty men will scream in anguish. Distress and anguish will overtake people in their comfort.
Ruin and devastation will be visited upon. All that's familiar. Their cities, their homes, their farms, their places of business, even the temple. Darkness and gloom, clouds and thick darkness is what he says about his judgment. and if that's not enough he in this book he says this devastating judgment will sweep like a tidal wave over the nations that have been against his people and thus have defied god the philistines he says will be destroyed so that no inhabitants remain the proud taunting ammonites will be judged like sodom and gomorrah and their land become a wasteland a wasteland of nettles and salt pits The Cushites will drown in their blood.
And the Assyrians, whose mighty cities have conquered the world, will be nothing but desert where only owls and hedgehogs live. And their buildings become nothing more than the lairs for wild beasts. That's the kind of judgment he describes. Look at chapter 3, verse 8. therefore wait for me declares the Lord for the day when I rise up to seize the prey for my decision is to gather nations to assemble kingdoms to pour out upon them my indignation all my burning anger for in the fire of my jealousy all the earth shall be consumed the righteousness that is the very person of God demands justice It is not like God is this ticked off old man who says I done I going to wipe everything out It is a God who is absolutely incorruptibly righteous and when He sees evil He will deal with it Because He's righteous.
He's angry. Because His righteousness, the righteousness, justice, has been perverted. That's the reason why. He's not just ticked off. but justice has been perverted that's the issue he is so righteous that people continually over and over sin against him and so judgment and justice must be served now god's justice and consequent anger should not embarrass us or make us uncomfortable Everyone knows deep down that justice is a good thing.
That's why we cry out for justice when the weak and the oppressed are hurting. And when someone is wronged, when someone who is weak but he's oppressed, he can't stand up for himself. Right? We're angry. We get angry about that. And we bristle when the guilty go free.
We hate that. And we grieve when wrongs are ignored. When wrongs are just ignored, we grieve. And all of us know this. You know this at your work. This guy gets special preferential treatment and this guy does not.
And you get angry about that, rightfully so. We get angry when some murderer is set free on some technicality. See, where is justice? We look around us and we're hearing people say this now. We have a two-tiered justice system in this nation now. If you've got money and influence, you'll get off with a slap on the wrist.
But if you don't have the money, if you're just like us, it's going to be harder on you. Right? We bristle at that. We get angry at that. So we should understand then when pure righteousness without a hint of corruption brings perfect justice to mankind, sets all the wrongs right and meets out judgment in perfect measure for every sin and injustice. This isn't an old man losing his temper.
This is the kind of justice that perversion requires, that sin requires, that infractions must have. And so you bow before God's just majesty, expecting to receive the just payment for your corruption and evil. Here's our problem. we say where is justice God see that justice is done but somehow we think we'll escape it those people are evil those people God deal with them but but don't use that same standard of justice on me you see that's the problem that's why we get embarrassed God's justice is such that everyone gets what they deserve you see you can imagine hearing this for the first time and thinking there is no hope there is no hope God's going to wipe out everybody and rightfully so but as you're near the end of the book you find hope you see that God will save he will remove his judgment against sinners look at chat verses 14 and 15 in chapter 3.
Now watch what happens here. Sing aloud, O daughter of Zion. Shout, O Israel. It's like, what? What are you talking about here? You just said you're going to wipe everybody out.
Sing aloud, O daughter of Zion. Shout, O Israel. Rejoice and exalt with all your heart, O daughter of Jerusalem. The Lord has taken away the judgments against you. He has cleared away your enemies. The King of Israel, the Lord, is in your midst, you shall never again fear evil.
If God, the very embodiment of perfect justice, requires that every infraction receive exactly what justice requires, is there any hope? And the answer is, yes. What does he say? He says, I've come. I'm in your midst now. You know there is rescue.
In fact, you know more than Zephaniah did. You know how God's going to accomplish that. Because of the Savior that God himself sent to rescue us from his judgment. I love what the Apostle Paul says in 1 Thessalonians chapter 5 when he writes, For God has not destined us for wrath, but to salvation through our Lord Jesus Christ. Do you hear that? All this wrath.
I'm going to wipe out all the inhabitants of the earth. God hasn't destined you for wrath, but salvation through the Lord Jesus Christ, who died for us so that whether we are awake or asleep, we might live with him. Isn't that wonderful news? That's the wonderful news of the gospel. Even though God says, I'm going to wipe out all evildoers, my justice demands judgment, he says.
But for you, a justice is met in a Savior, Jesus. His justice is satisfied in the death of Jesus for you. And so when you embrace Him by faith, God then is just and still can save you from wrath. And so we are saved from judgment. If you want deep, lasting thanksgiving, the powerful kind of thanksgiving that will change you, then you need to see God as the one who has saved you from his wrath.
You need to understand you are saved from this judgment and this wrath. However if all you see is your rescue from God just wrath you may still have an inaccurate view of God Intellectually we know that God loves us yet we believe in our hearts God is still disappointed, maybe irritated, maybe just indifferent to us, right? We know that we're forgiven, but we think of our standing before God only in negative terms.
I'm not guilty, so at least he accepts me. I'm forgiven, so he's not mad at me. Right? Maybe that's as far as it goes. Imagine if someone asked me, how do you feel about your children and your grandchildren? And I responded with, well, I don't hate them.
Would that be true? Yeah, it'd be true. But it's not enough. It's not enough. Do you love your grandchildren and your children? Yeah, I don't hate them.
No, no. I love them. I take delight in them most of the time. Right? I take delight in them. It's fun to have the grandkids over.
I have a picture of all my adult children sitting around the table in the places they sat at when they were growing up. They all sat in the same place. I love that picture, right? I delight in when my adult children are around and we get to talking, right? And my grandchildren, I delight in them. That's a more accurate picture than, well, I don't hate them, right?
And we have that perception of God because we overemphasize what we're saved from. That's how it is with God, though. Here's how God is. Our text says that he delights in us. Our text says, you notice, God sings over us. Is that the view of God that you have?
Is that how you think of God? Isn't that marvelous? So if we're going to have that deep-seated kind of thanksgiving that transforms us, then we have to understand what you're saved for. Not just what you're saved from, but what you're saved for. And Zephaniah chapter 3 verse 17 declares that God is mighty to save, and he tells us what he saves us for. Let's look at it.
Verse 16, on that day it shall be said to Jerusalem, Fear not, O Zion, let not your hands grow weak, the Lord your God is in your midst a mighty one who will save first of all he saves us for our joy he saves us for our joy he says don't fear and don't lose heart fear not O Zion let not your hands grow weak he's talking about the pictures of hands that are just drooping drooping because we're hopeless you will fear and lose heart when you see god only as a relentless agent of justice who does not overlook sin he is the mighty warrior and this is one of those prophetic books this is a picture of god that's often used in the prophets god is a mighty warrior who in this book has revealed himself as the one who executes God's judgment, God's sentence on the nations, even on the entire world. But now that mighty warrior is in our very midst. That mighty warrior has come into not execute judgment, but he arrives to save you.
This mighty warrior who will wipe out the whole earth is now in your midst to save you. To use His might not against you, but to use His might for you. He's arrived in your midst to bring salvation from that judgment. You can almost hear the echoes of Emmanuel here. God with us in this text. He's in your midst.
He's going to use His might to save you. but it's fascinating to me to see how this mighty warrior arrived he arrived as a baby as a weak baby in a stable he ministered as a meek and gentle teacher he won the battle against sin while appearing weak and powerless don't miss that this mighty warrior arrives in a way that doesn't appear mighty at all, but accomplishes what God's might can only accomplish. By the way, that's how you need to read your Bible. God accomplishes things just the opposite of the way we would.
Always. He always is turning the world upside down. He's always taking our understanding and just going, turn it upside down and ramming it in the ground. He just doesn't operate the way we would. This mighty warrior, this warrior who's mighty to save comes in a way that we would never expect, yet accomplishing by His might our very salvation. And He will yet finish that salvation from sin when He appears again on a white horse, striking down the nations with the sword of His mouth and ruling them with a rod of iron, smashing them to pieces, as Revelation 19 says.
He's going to accomplish our deliverance from sin and judgment. He will do it. He's already begun to do it. He will finish the job on that day. So He saves us for our joy. But most importantly, He saves us for His joy.
He saves us for His joy. He will rejoice over you with gladness. He will quiet you by His love. He will exalt over you with loud. This description of God's delight sparkles with the emotion of love. In fact, it says, He loves us, does it not?
He loves us. He will quiet you by His love. He actually says He loves us. Now, this is not the word normally used for God's love in the Old Testament. There's a Hebrew word. It's the word chesed.
All right? Now, you won't see that in your Bible, but here's how you will see it. Almost always, it's translated as steadfast love. That's the Hebrew word. That's what it means, steadfast love. And what it means is God's covenant love.
That is to say, God's love is committed to his people by covenant. that unfailing love that God expresses it because he promises it in the covenant this is the love as one has written this is the love that issues in commitment the fidelity of love love that lives in the will as much as in the heart so this is not the word for steadfast love. Rather, it's the word that's used, for example, of Jacob's passionate love for Rachel. That's the word that he uses here.
It's a passionate love. So in marriage, on the day in 1977, when Beck and I stood together, we both promised before God that we would abandon all others, be committed to this one, right? And how am I going to show my love? I'm going to show my love by staying faithful. Even when I'm tempted to be unfaithful. If I really love my wife, even when temptation is to be unfaithful, I will shut that down.
Because I made a promise. And I will love her by being committed to her. Love is that commitment, right? But you know what? You know what? That's not the only thing, is it?
There's still that passionate love that enjoys one another. And here, here, that's the kind of love that God has for us. This is a love that rejoices over you with gladness. God actually delights in us. He rejoices with a glad heart. Okay, come on.
Get it in your head. can you see God doing this? He's rejoicing over you. He's glad that you belong to him. Can you see that? He's glad that you're his. All of you here who've had children, before the baby arrives, you're going, I don't know, do I have enough love for this?
You know, I've got love for my wife, but we're going to add somebody here. I don't know if that's going to work. And when the baby arrives what And you more than glad I mean you just overjoyed You have this new person and especially you dads you know you beaming You going like wow Well I mean you know you women, they're wiping the sweat off your brow now and helping you recover while dad's just sitting there.
It's like, wow, this is amazing. I love this, right? That's the kind of gladness that he's talking about here. You see, God doesn't see you, his people, he doesn't see you as someone he's committed to and now he's stuck with you. You see? That's not what he's...
I'm committed to you. I'm stuck with you. I made a promise. No! He's glad that you belong to him. He's not a reluctant giver with a limited amount of grace that he gives sparingly, but he's abounding in love and faithfulness.
He overflows with love for us. God does not tolerate his people. God delights in them. Okay? Do you hear that? Now, I'm almost tempted to say, raise your hand if you think God tolerates you.
I would guess that if you're honest, all of you would do that. Yeah, God tolerates us. I mean, he gave his son for us, and he saved us, and he tolerates us now. No, he actually has gladness that you belong to him. He delights in you. And he says, this is a love that is quiet.
This is a love that is quiet. He will quiet you by his love. Matthew Henry says, he will rest in his love. He'll be silent in his love. The New International Version says, in his love, he will no longer rebuke you. You may say, well, that can't be true.
God still rebukes us. That's what the New Testament says. God still rebukes us. Well, that's not exactly what he's saying. What he's saying is that like a husband who truly loves his wife, he's not a nagging and pushing and demanding perfection in order to gain, in order to gain his affection. He's not pushing you.
He's not nagging you in order for you to gain his affection. That's not the way he operates. He's not like the husband who comes home in the evening is surly for the rest of the night because you didn't have the house. The kitchen is still a mess. And, you know, the supper just isn't what it should be. And you don't look real good either.
And so he kind of nags you and says, how long is it going to take to do the dishes? Come on. and you know what how hard is it to fry bologna okay it's cold and you know and and the next day you're complaining again and pretty soon she has the idea like well if only i get it together you know maybe he'll love me like he should or like i want that's not god that's not the way he does it right? Zephaniah does not say that God character has changed by the way his character hasn changed but your status has Your status has And so he loves you because of what he done for you See this is an emotion rooted not in shifting emotions, but in the unchanging, lasting covenant he makes to us through Jesus.
Listen, he has that kind of passionate love for us because of his steadfast love i want you to think about this i have more affection if i can put it that way more emotional attachment to becca after oh man after 40 plus years after 40 just shy of 50 here just shy of 50 okay our affection for one another is much deeper than when we were young you know why because this passion this kind of affection grows out of the soil of commitment you know what i'm talking about and god's passionate glad love for us grows out of his covenant. He's promised to remain faithful to us. And so we are no longer under his judgment, but we are under his care.
We are under his care, not judgment. He's like the husband who still loves you in all your imperfections. Instead of getting on you about not washing the dishes, he steps in and starts doing the dishes when he comes home. and he's still going to help you become what you need to be, but he's not going to be nagging, he's not going to lower the boom, he's not going to just browbeat you into the woman that you ought to be.
No. God loves in a quiet, deeply affectionate way. And then lastly, this love exalts with loud songs. This is the part of it that just blows my mind. first of all imagine God singing then imagine God singing over you it says he sings over you have you ever noticed that most of the songs you listen to are love songs so you know every once in a while when I want to I get nostalgic which is quite a bit I go to YouTube and I go to you know 1967, top 100 Billboard hits.
Yeah, that's nostalgia for me, folks. 67. Okay? And so all these songs, the top 100 start playing, right? All those songs are about what? Love.
Right? This is about all the songs that are popular about loving someone or, you know, Whether it's, whatever, it's about love or losing love or something, right? And whenever you in love it seems that the normal ways of expression aren adequate enough and so song comes out What a unique view of God He not a God who merely tolerates you as if you a pesky dirty poor child who he just cleaned up.
Right? It's as if words are not enough to express his feeling, so he puts his feelings to music. The God of the Bible sings, and he sings over his people. If you would have Thanksgiving that lasts, think about what God has saved you for. He saved you for your joy and he saved you for his joy. Now, if you see God as a cosmic police officer, then you live in fear of punishment.
Thanksgiving will be rare. if you see him as a heavenly firefighter and you talk to him only when you're in trouble then there's very little thanksgiving then if you see him as a universal candy man that gives you everything that you expect and you expect every good thing that comes your way there's definitely not going to be thanksgiving but if you see God as an unerring, incorruptible, all-knowing, righteous judge who has every right to punish you, but who declares you righteous through the work of his Son, the Lord Jesus, and now delights in you and sings over you, then there will be thanksgiving. A deep-rooted kind of thanksgiving. A thanksgiving that can last even in the difficult times.
You see, true, transforming thanksgiving comes from the miracle of grace that God can be just and joyful. Father thank you for this word of this unbelievable word that you delight in us you rejoice in us you're glad in us Lord God we confess this sin the fact that we see you as tolerating us oh God help us to see the glory of your grace and that you are just and joyful Lord help us to lay hold of that truth so that we will be a thankful praising worshiping people. Thank You for this marvelous revelation of Your character.
In Jesus' name, Amen.
Also referenced in this sermon
Other passages mentioned, beyond the main text.