Intro
Sarah is an old woman, almost 90 years old.  Her hair is a tired gray, lacking 
in luster.  Her skin is leathery from years of desert sun.  Many memories of 
joy fill her, but she still aches inside, empty and hollow, the promise of what 
could be, which never came.

Her husband is a good man, providing more than she needs in home and hearth.  
She and Abraham had much, beyond need, almost beyond want.  But she remains 
without a child.  She dreams of only a bleak future, empty of the joys she 
anticipated. 

Main Body
Sarah remembers when the hope for a child burned bright, intense in its fervor. 
 Abraham burst into their tent, beaming with joy, an almost crazy look in his 
eyes.  “God is going to make of us a great nation, Sarah!  Not only children, 
Sarah, but a nation, a nation God will use the bless the entire world!”

Year passed.  How many?  Sarah stopped counting, for each year became more 
painful, as the promised joy now turned bitter.  24 years of waiting, 24 years 
of empty promises!  The burning hope within her grew dim.  Will the flame soon 
die, without even a wisp of smoke, replaced with resentment at God, who speaks 
but does little?

Today will be no different.  Sarah fills the void, keeping busy when three 
visitors arrive.  Abraham, wanting to be a gracious host, asks her to make a 
meal.  The meal, now prepared, Sarah waits.  She’s good at waiting, for she’s 
been doing it for so long!  

The sun blazes, and Sarah stands out of view, behind the tent flap, shading 
herself from the sun.  Beads of sweat roll down her neck as she listens to the 
men talk.

Here we are today, sitting in our Lord’s tent.  Like Sarah, why are you 
waiting, and what do you expect?  If you are young, do you await the privileges 
to come with being older?  Are you alone, waiting for a friend?  Are you 
struggling to make your money last through the month, waiting for a raise?  Are 
you sick, waiting to be well?

Sarah’s ears now quiver, for the men are talking about her!  “Where is your 
wife, Sarah?” one of the strangers asks.  “In the tent,” Abraham answers.  
“This time next year, I will come back,” he tells her husband.  

The conversation stops.  Is this some pregnant pause?  A moment later, the 
conversation continues: “Your wife, Sarah, will bear a son.”  Behind the tent 
flap, Sarah’s eyes grow wide.  The promise, which Abraham spoke to her so many 
years ago, comes to her once more.  

This time, however, the promise is different, no longer blurry, but 
focused—next year!  Gone is the ambiguity, something to take place in some 
distant time, still hidden to Abraham and Sarah.  Next year!  She now has a 
date!

You, too, received your share of promises, right?  Some pill to melt off the 
pounds.  You take it, but your weight stays the same.  Lied to once more.  The 
preacher on TV modulates his voice: “God will heal you, but only if your faith 
is strong enough.”

Such promises sound like good news.  We hunger to believe them, for we, you and 
me, all need some good news.  Here most of all, here in this house of God, 
where we bring our deepest hunger and yearning, we need the best news of all.  
We need real promises we can believe!  

Sarah almost falls for it, but she stops: “I’m a wrinkled, old prune.”  Her 
time of the month is now more of a stranger to her than the strangers now 
visiting with Abraham.  Her breasts are too dried up to nurse a child.  She 
thought about her husband of many years.  Abraham can’t even do the deed 
anymore.  How are we to have a child?  She can’t help herself, and she laughs.

A laugh of disbelief leaves her lips.  Years ago, hope burned within, but not 
now.  She spent way too many years drawing water from the well to suffer such 
foolishness!  She can’t explain it, but her gut tells her this is a con job.

The salesperson talks you into buying the vacuum cleaner, and your money is 
gone.  The miracle diet is a scam, for all the pounds return.  The healing we 
prayed for suffers a setback, and our faith in God wavers, not receiving what 
we expect from Him.

Does that describe you, as it does Sarah?  Have you stopped hoping and quit 
believing, even though God still speaks His promises to you in the way He said 
He would?  Are you embittered?  “Oh, I used to have faith, but now I can’t even 
pray.”

Such people fill the world: people who used to belong, who sang and laughed 
with joy in God’s house.  But no more!  Somebody sold them a bill of goods.  
Put more money in the plate and God will bless you with material wealth.  You 
only need more faith, and God will heal you.  So, you give and give, you pray 
and pray, but nothing happens.

Will you wind up like one of them?  Listen now as Sarah picks up more 
conversation through the tent door.  “Why did Sarah laugh?”  The stranger 
points out her unbelief!  But then she understands: “Is anything too hard for 
the Lord?”  This stranger is no stranger, but God Himself!

Even Sarah’s heart is no mystery to God.  She hides behind the tent door, 
unseen to the mortal eye, but not to God.  He even glimpses the stifling 
sadness in her heart, even while her disbelieving laughter enters His ears.  
God knows what Sarah is doing.

He rebukes her with a gentle word if only to teach.  “Sarah you aren’t a 
stranger to me, but am I a stranger to you?  I know your sadness.  Do you 
realize my power to help?”

Some news may be too unreal to be true—for us.  But what God brings is only too 
much to be true for Sarah, not Him.  For God is the one who brings it, and 
nothing is too hard for Him.   Sarah’s picture of God is too small.  Is yours, 
as well?

We often live with a weak faith in weak God.  In our adult sensibilities, we’ve 
shrunk Him down.  God is no longer all-powerful enough to account for life, too 
small to command respect.  What’s your picture of God?   Is He an absentee 
landlord?  Does He mind us from afar, uninterested and uncaring?  

Learn what Sarah learned!  God is here in this world in the ways He chooses to 
reveal Himself.  God comes in His grace, to bring help, unlooked for and 
unsought.  We understand this even better than Sarah, for we know Jesus came 
into our world at Bethlehem.  To the startled young virgin who would bring this 
God into the world, the angel told her, “Nothing is impossible for God” (Luke 
1:37). 

Unbelievable?  For us, yes—but not for God.  So, what do you hope for as you 
sit here this morning?  Do you want an old hatred inside you to die and 
germinate into love?  Do you want your marriage to turn around?  Is it too hard 
for God to turn enemies into friends?  

God did as much with Saul, who wrote our Epistle reading for today.  Is God too 
weak to lift the burden of sin and guilt you carry, which keeps your heart from 
being free?  Unbelievable?  For us, yes—but not for God.

Why?  God will take your sin and pay for it with His life before our eyes.  He 
did that on the wood of the cross.  His cross of death opened the way to the 
heart of God.  Our Lord’s Word came to Saul: “Why are you persecuting me?”  The 
seismic love of Jesus came to him, changing his entire life—bitter enemies no 
more.

The unexpected love, which changed Saul, can change us, as well.  What do you 
think, Sarah?  What if I told you death could be defeated?  What if I said you 
will again see those dear ones you buried, with tears of joy in your eyes?  
Would you say that can’t be true, that even God can’t do that? 

Dear sister and brother: That happened at our Lord’s grave on the first Easter 
morning.  There, Jesus rose to life and met His astonished followers.  They 
lived the truth that nothing is too hard for the Lord.

We will not always understand His mysterious ways, any more than we can 
understand the workings of our everyday world.  Even now, so much in this world 
eludes us in how it works.  The more we learn, the more we find out how much we 
don’t understand.  Each mystery reveals several others beneath it.  Such 
mystery in this creation, fallen though it is, testifies to the mystery of God.

You can go to the doctor to get some medicine, but we are powerless to heal 
sickness into eternity.  Not so for God.  He forgives your sin and will raise 
your body from death, which, for you, seems all too much to be true.  Yes, but 
not for God.

We now leave Sarah, but not as we found her.  One more year she waited.  This 
time, however, is different.  For she lives in hope!  She met, in person, the 
God big enough to keep His promise.  And when the baby arrived a year later, no 
name was found more fitting than Isaac.  Isaac, which means “laughter”!  Who’s 
laughing now?  

Conclusion
God in His mercy gave Sarah a new and beautiful laughter.  So, how are you 
doing as you wait?  In Christ, your waiting becomes one filled with hope and 
joy, just like Sarah’s.  God promises that you and He will laugh at the last.  
For the promises He makes to you are both real and right: eternal life and 
salvation.  Amen.
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