Intro
150 years before his birth, the prophet Isaiah foretold of him, told us his 
name, and the tasks that God had chosen for him to do.  His name was Cyrus.  
Cyrus was the only Gentile whom God spoke of as “His anointed.”  Using a 
Hebraic expression, “the right hand,” God said that He had grasped Cyrus’ right 
hand, that is, gave him power.  Why?  God “anointed him … to subdue nations 
before him” (Isaiah 45:1).  

Main Body
But why would God anoint Cyrus to “to subdue nations before him”?  God was 
saying that, in the future, His people would return home from a captivity that 
had not yet begun.  God prophesied that He would free His people through a man 
called Cyrus. 

When Isaiah wrote about Cyrus, Cyrus wasn’t even alive, not even a gleam in his 
father’s eyes.  But this Cyrus turned out to be a real person, who ruled an 
empire a couple of centuries after Isaiah wrote of him.  In 539 BC, Cyrus 
defeated the Babylonian Empire, the empire that overpowered Israel for 70 
years.  Cyrus would allow the Jews to go home after being in captivity for so 
many years.  

That wasn’t by accident.  God was working through world events, through Cyrus, 
whom God “anointed” to save His people.  By saving Israel, God was making sure 
that, through them, the real anointed One, His Son, the Messiah, would be born 
centuries later.  God was working through world events for the long haul--even 
for eternity!

But what a way for God to show that He was still in charge!  After all, it 
looked to be just the opposite!  During Israel’s captivity, it would’ve been so 
easy to think that the Babylonian gods were more powerful than Yahweh, the one, 
true God.  That’s how people often thought in the ancient world.  And if God 
was all-powerful, then what were the Israelites doing, living as a defeated 
people far from their home?  

But don’t we also think that way?  When our sinful nature controls our minds, 
we think: “If God IS all-powerful, then why does He allow terrorists to kill, 
maim, and oppress others in this world.  If God IS all powerful, then why does 
He let a gruesome disease like Ebola inflict death in this world?” 

The one, true God--Father, Son, and Holy Spirit--is not the author of sin.  Sin 
is the cause of the evil we experience in this world, which we brought on 
ourselves.  We make this huge mess, and then we want to blame God.  Isn’t that 
so like us, wanting to blame others for our problems?  And who better to blame 
than God?

Although God is not the author of sin, He does work in and through the lives of 
sinful people.  And because our knowledge is still incomplete, and sin still 
corrupts us, we, usually, don’t know what God is doing through the events in 
our lives.  But we do know this: Isaiah, chapter 45, also tells us that God is 
“a God who hides himself” (Isaiah 45:15).  If we don’t get that point, then we 
misunderstand so much else about God.  God chooses to hide Himself to work His 
will in our lives. 

That means we can’t see God’s normal way of working in this world; it’s hidden 
behind something else.  But we do know this: He is working in and through world 
events for the eternal good of His people.  

From the New Testament, we learn: “Everything is yours … the world, life or 
death, the present or the future.  Everything belongs to you, and you belong to 
Christ, and Christ belongs to God” (1 Corinthians 3:21-23).  The New Testament 
also tells us: “We know that all things work together for the good of those who 
love God: those whom he has called according to His purpose” (Romans 8:28).  

We’re not able to figure out how that can be true, that “all things work 
together for the good of those who love God.”  But this we do know: We know IN 
WHOM “all things work together for the good”--it’s in the crucified, risen, and 
ascended Christ.  God has put “everything under his feet and appointed him as 
head over everything for the good of the Church” (Ephesians 1:22). 

So, what does all that mean?  It means this: Even in the worst of 
circumstances, Christ is ruling over everything for the good of His Church, 
those whom He has brought into His Church.  That means Christ is ruling over 
everything for your good, for the long haul, for eternity.  Indeed, God is 
still God, and He is still in control.  But most of that remains hidden from 
our eyes.  

Within the fallen ways of the world that are taking place, God hides Himself, 
as Isaiah puts it, to work your eternal good.  God toppled one world empire and 
raised another, to make sure the Messiah would be born in the proper way and 
time for your salvation.  What then is He doing behind the scenes to get those 
in His Church to live in His eternal presence, full of joy, as children of 
light?  He will stop short of nothing, even creating a new heaven and a new 
earth to make it so (Isaiah 65:17, Revelation 21:1-5). 

After all, God isn’t just the Creator; He’s also the Savior.  And there’s even 
more good stuff for us in Isaiah, chapter 45: “There is no other God except me, 
a righteous God and Savior….  Turn to me and be saved, all you ends of the 
earth” (Isaiah 45:21-22).  The Lord says He is the only God, who can save, for 
He alone is God. 

God did the work needed to save you.  He sent His only Son into this world to 
take into Himself the human nature that is common to us all.  The God of the 
entire universe humbled Himself for us, for you.  

Although he existed in the form of God, he did not consider equality with God 
as something to exploit.  Instead, he emptied himself by taking on the form of 
a servant … He humbled himself by becoming obedient to the point of death--even 
death on a cross!  That is why God exalted him to the highest place and gave 
him the name that is above every name, that at the name of Jesus every knee 
will bend … and every tongue confess that Jesus Christ is Lord. [Philippians 
2:7-11] 

That’s what God did to be your Savior.   Jesus let the world crush Him, only to 
take the world into His hands when God the Father exalted Him. 

In Isaiah, chapter 45, the Lord had said, “To me every knee will bend and every 
tongue will confess” (Isaiah 45:23).  As the New Testament clearly shows, this 
Lord, this God, before whom all will kneel on the Last Day, is none other than 
Jesus Christ.  

From the beginning, God’s plan all along was to bring His salvation to all, not 
just to His Old-Covenant people.  Now, in the Old Covenant, God did keep His 
people as separate and holy, for they were the people through whom the Messiah, 
the Savior, of the world would come.  But God’s plan was always to bust open 
salvation to all people.  Listen to what God said through the Prophet Malachi, 
in the Old Testament: 

“From where the sun rises to where it sets, my name will be great among the 
Gentiles.  In every place, incense and pure offerings will be brought to me, 
because my name will be great among the Gentiles,” says the Lord Almighty. 
[Malachi 1:11]  

Through Malachi, God prophesied, in part, about New-Covenant worship.  We know 
it's about New-Covenant worship because it would take place beyond the people 
of Israel, throughout the world, and include Gentiles.  It would also have in 
it the response of praise back to God through pure offerings and the burning of 
incense. 

And so, today, the Church declares God’s glory to all, His glory in the 
crucified and risen Christ.  The Church is why God works behind the scenes as 
“a God who hides himself,” putting “everything under his feet … for the good of 
the Church.”  Why?  So the Church can be the place where Jesus comes to grant 
us and strengthen faith.  

In the Old Covenant, God worked through peoples and empires for the benefit of 
the faithful.  In our Old-Testament reading, we learned that God even 
predicted, through the prophet Isaiah, what He was going to do even before He 
did it.  

We don’t know much about Cyrus, especially in matters of faith.  Nonetheless, 
God hid Himself behind that world leader to make sure that you would be saved 
for eternal life.  Today, we don’t know how the Lord is working through various 
events in this world for the benefit of His Church.  After all, as Isaiah said, 
God is “a God who hides himself” (Isaiah 45:15).  So, how He, usually, works is 
unknown to us--unless He tells us. 

But since God is “a God who hides himself,” it shouldn’t surprise us that He 
hides Himself, not just through world events, but even in His Church.  That’s 
why Jesus commanded baptism (Matthew 28:19-20) as a way to bring us into His 
Church (Colossians 2:11-13) and save us (1 Peter 3:21).  That’s why Jesus wants 
His pastors to preach “repentance into the forgiveness of sins” (Luke 24:47), 
so all may be brought into the forgiveness that only He brings.  That’s why 
Jesus told the Church’s first pastors, His Apostles, to forgive (and if needed, 
to retain) sins (John 20:23).  And that’s also why Jesus gives His Supper, “for 
the forgiveness of sins” (Matthew 26:26-28).  Jesus hides Himself in these ways 
to give us Himself and His salvation. 

Conclusion
But this “God who hides himself” doesn’t stop at God working through world 
events.  Neither does this God hiding himself stop with God hiding Himself in 
Word and Sacrament for your salvation.  No; this hiddenness of God continues 
through you after you leave the Divine Service.  How so?  In the ways that you 
faithfully serve others in your daily lives, God is at work in you and through 
you, working His will and meeting the needs of others.  That means your 
everyday tasks have now become sacred.  

Cooking for your husband or wife, comforting a friend who is grieving, taking 
out the trash--they are all now sacred tasks.  For God is at work in them and 
through them, for you are His hands and feet at work in this world.  Go then, 
and let your light shine!  Amen. 



--
Rich Futrell, Pastor
Shepherd of the Hills Lutheran Church, Kimberling City, MO
http://sothl.com 

Where we receive and confess the faith of the Church (in and with the Augsburg 
Confession): The faith once delivered to the saints, the faith of Christ Jesus, 
His Word of the Gospel, His full forgiveness of sins, His flesh and blood given 
and poured out for us, and His gracious gift of life for body, soul, and 
spirit.  

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