Overcome by life in Babylon, the exiles turned to the fleeting, the temporary, the quick fixes. They were so bold as to say in Isaiah 56:12: "Come, let me get wine! Let us drink our fill of beer!" In the agony of defeat, so often you and I get sucked into what is shallow, superficial, cheap, and dirty. Looking for quick revenge, spouses get tangled up in one-night stands. Students take shortcuts that can really only be called cheating. Parents neglect their children to pour everything into their own careers. The result? We find ourselves in the despair of exile: "My way is hidden from Yahweh; my cause is disregarded by my God."
Enter Yahweh’s Servant, who says, "He made my mouth like a sharp sword." Just one word will set right what is so wrong with our lives. To quote from the Ethiopian eunuch who speaks to Phillip about this same Servant, "Tell me, please, who is the prophet talking about, himself or someone else? Then Phillip told him the good news about Jesus." Jesus is the Servant of our text who needs only one word to accomplish his Father’s mission to bring order to a fallen and shattered world.
Anointed by the Holy Spirit at his baptism, Jesus is thrust into the wilderness to meet the enemy. He goes to battle with a thunderous gegraptai – one word in Greek, "It is written" in English. To "bruised reeds and smoldering wicks" like the man with leprosy his word was katharistheti – again, just one word in Greek; we translate it, "Be clean." He rebuked the chaotic wind and waves with siopa – "Be quiet." To the deaf and dumb man he cried out, ephatha – "Be opened." Luther put it this way: "One little word can fell him!" The centurion in Matthew 8:8 gets it right when he says to Jesus, "But just say the word, and my servant will be healed."
Climactically Jesus would marshal just one word. The third Servant Song sets the stage: "I offered my back to those who beat me, my cheeks to those who pulled out my beard; I did not hide my face from mocking and spitting." Arrested, bound, tried, slapped, beaten, stripped, scourged, abandoned, spiked, forsaken—he uttered one more word, tetelestia—in English, "It is finished."
Promised is now complete, done, finished. The serpent crushed, the Lamb slain, the atonement made, the Passover complete, the banquet ready. From the cross he speaks one-word descriptions over us—forgiven, washed, justified, loved!Meaning what? Meaning he still speaks order into our chaos! Hebrews 4:12: "For the word of God is living and active. Sharper than any double-edged sword." His Word, connected with water, bread, and wine—placed upon our foreheads and into our mouths—delivers restoration, healing, and forgiveness. We are bought in the blood, sealed with the Sacraments, and abounding in hope and joy!
But the final restoration is yet to come. At his second coming, the Servant will return as a rider on a white horse. His name will be called Faithful and True, King of kings and Lord of lords. On that day the ultimate one-word victory will be uttered and we will finally come home and there is no place like home. John records it in Revelation 21:6, gegonan—"It is done."
To the student who holds defeated dreams, he speaks. To the couple with a barren womb and fervent prayers, he speaks. To the Christian who daily fights with his flesh only to lose time after time, he speaks. To any person who has felt the sting of death, the power of the Law, the torment of guilt, he speaks. And he says, "I love you!"
"Lord, just say the word, and we will be healed." In the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.