He Shall Be Calledનમૂનો
Mighty God
Dimitri sat in his prison cell with his head in his hands. His jailers and tormentors had finally broken him, and he was ready to recant. The emotional torture of not knowing if his wife and two sons had survived without him was worse than all the physical abuse he had endured. All that stood between him and his freedom was his willingness to sign a confession that he was not a believer in Jesus Christ.
For seventeen years, Dimitri endured persecution and remained steadfast in his faith. Every day, he’d rise before dawn, face the east, and with his arms raised, sing a Heart Song to the Lord. His fellow inmates would bang their metal cups across their bars, curse, and even throw feces at him to get him to stop singing, but Dimitri never did.
When his jailers told him that his wife had been murdered, it was the last straw and he knew he couldn’t go on. Devastated, he told his jailers he’d sign the next morning. That night, while despairing that he had given up, his family sensed his desperation and gathered in his living room and prayed.
Hundreds of miles away in his lonely prison cell, Dimitri started hearing voices.
He lifted his head, opened his eyes, and wondered if he was hallucinating. There was no one there, but the voices sounded familiar. He leaned in as if to hear them better and realized he was hearing his wife and sons praying for him. Miraculously, God allowed Dimitri to know his family was alive and well, and still in the faith. He knew there was no way he could sign the paper.
We love miraculous stories like Dimitri’s because they show God’s power to intervene in the lives of his children. God breaks through all kinds of prison bars, both the physical and the spiritual kind to bring about salvation.
Isaiah told us the child born would carry the weight of government upon his shoulder. He would have the wisdom to counsel, and the muscle and might to carry out his righteous rule. His might is so integral to his character; it’s one of his names.
We learn more about him by looking at the Hebrew form of his name, Mighty God, which is El Gibbor. El is the singular form of the word Elohim, which is used in the Old Testament to refer to the one true God. Gibbor means “strength, power, and hero.”
In other words, the “Mighty God” Isaiah foretold would be our true God and divine Warrior. He would conquer every foe, including our three mortal enemies: sin, Satan, and death. (Rom 6:10-11, 1 Cor 15:55-57, Heb 2:14, 15).
But maybe as you meditate on the character of the Mighty God this Advent, you feel less like a victorious soldier marching behind your Commander in Chief, and more like a beaten and bruised casualty of war. Don’t let the name El Gibbor pass you by. The name Mighty God prompts us to answer the question, “Is anything too difficult for the Lord?”
Fear may threaten to undo us as we look to the future, but we need to keep our eyes not on the wind and the waves, but on the Savior who can calm them. He may not always calm the storms that rage outside of our boats, but he always calms the ones that rage in our hearts.
With the storm stilled in Dimitri’s heart, the next morning when the guards brought the confession for him to sign, he refused. He told them of how God had revealed to him that his wife and sons were alive and well and still in the faith.
Incensed by Dimitri’s defiance, his captors continued to torment and beat him until one day the guards reached their limit. They found a sheet of paper in Dimitri’s cell where he had copied as much Scripture as he could remember. They grabbed him from his cell and dragged him off to be executed.
As they drug him through the main corridor of the prison to the execution site, the most miraculous thing happened. Fifteen hundred hardened criminals raised their arms and began to sing Dimitri’s Heart Song. It was the same song he had sung every day to their mockery and insults for the last seventeen years. Dimitri recalled that it was like listening to the greatest choir in all of human history.
The guards immediately released their hold on Dimitri and stepped away in terror. One of them demanded, “Who are you?”
*Dimitri responded, “I am the son of the Living and Mighty God, and Jesus is his name.” He was later released and reunited with his family.
So this Advent, as you meditate on the defenseless babe veiled in human flesh, remember he is and always has been Mighty God. There’s nothing too hard for him. He breaks through all kinds of prison bars, both the physical and the spiritual, and saves to the uttermost. He is mighty to save and El Gibbon is his name.
*You can read Dimitri's story and many others like it in Nik Ripken's book The Insanity of God.
Let's Pray
Dear Lord who is mighty to save,
I thank you that you are not only a wonderful counselor, but you are also a Mighty God! Even though your ways are often mysterious, they are always perfect, and you act in accordance with your will. Thank you that I can confidently proclaim, with all the saints, that there is nothing too hard for you! Where I am weak, you are strong. Where I feel like a failure, you are victorious. You are mighty in your power to save, and your ways are good. Thank you for being my Mighty God!
In the strong name of Jesus. Amen.
About this Plan
Seven hundred years before Christ was born, Isaiah prophesied the Messiah would be called a Wonderful Counselor, Mighty God, Everlasting Father, and Prince of Peace. Only in the divine foreknowledge of God could all of these titles be perfectly fulfilled in the person and work of Jesus Christ. This Advent, be awed and amazed at the Wonderful Counselor who’s a wonder of a counselor. Oh, come, let us adore him!
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