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JESUS WAS A MAN OF SORROWS
EDITED BY GLENN PEASE
Isaiah53:3 3He was despisedand rejected by
mankind, a man of suffering, and familiarwith pain.
Like one from whom peoplehide their faces he was
despised, and we held him in low esteem.
BIBLEHUB RESOURCES
Pulpit Commentary Homiletics
The RejectedSaviour
Isaiah53:3
W.M. Statham
He is desvisedand rejectedof men; a Man of sorrows, andacquainted with
grief. He! Who? The incarnate Lord, who has grown up in childhood as a
"tender plant;" who is the one "living root," while all others are the dry soil
of a decrepit and degenerate humanity.
I. THIS REVEALS TO US WHAT THE HEBREW CHURCH WAS. Christ
was the "touchstone" ofthat Church. Its conduct to him made manifest to
what a condition they had come. Think of the contrast. Pharisaismwas
triumphant - Christ was despised. The outward, the formal, the ritual, was
preferred before the holy, the inward, and the spiritual. Christ was
"rejected." Theyhad the first opportunity of welcoming the "Lord from
heaven." "To the Jew first." How learned men may be in tradition! how well
acquainted with the 'Mishna' and the 'Gemara,'and yet know ail of ancient
revelation exceptits meaning! The greatgates ofprophecy open wide to lot
the true King through; and then treat him as a Pretender, and crownhim
with thorns.
II. THIS REVEALS TO US WHAT CHRIST WAS ON THE HUMAN SIDE.
"A Man of sorrows."Think of his exquisite moral sensitivenessin a world of
sin. Think of his tender human sympathies in a world of sorrow. "Acquainted
with grief." Not in one specialform, but in all its spheres, that he might be a
Brother born for adversity. Acquainted with it. So that he had daily
fellowship with it; not passing through its transient experiences, but familiar
with it as the companion of his life. - W.M.S.
Biblical Illustrator
He is despisedand rejectedof men.
Isaiah53:3-7
The mean appearance ofthe Redeemerforetold
T. Sherlock, D.D.
I. THE WISDOM AND GOODNESSOF GOD IN DETERMININGTO
SEND HIS SON INTO THE WORLD IN A STATE OF POVERTYAND
AFFLICTION.
1. With regardto His being a teacher, His sufferings set Him above the reach
of suspicions. What ends could He have to serve by His doctrine, who met
with nothing but misery and affliction, as the rewardof His labour?
2. With regardto our Lord's being an example of holiness and obedience set
before us for our instruction and imitation. His sufferings render the pattern
perfect, and show His virtues in their truest lustre, and at the same time
silence the pleas which laziness or self-love would otherwise have suggested.
3. With regardto His Divine mission. His sufferings were an evident token
that the hand of God was with Him. He only can produce strength out of
weakness,and knows how to confound the mighty things of the world by
things which are of no account. Add to this the evidence of prophecy, which is
so much the strongerby how much the weakerChrist was:so admirably has
the wisdomof God displayed itself in this mystery of faith.
II. THE EVIDENCE OF PROPHECYCONCERNING THE MEAN
APPEARANCE OUR LORD WAS TO MAKE.
III. THE HISTORICAL EVIDENCE WE HAVE FOR THE COMPLETION
OF THESE PROPHECIES.
(T. Sherlock, D.D.)
Christ despisedand rejectedof men
R. Walker.
I. IN WHAT RESPECTSIT MAY STILL BE SAID THAT CHRIST IS
DESPISEDAND REJECTED OF MEN.
1. Men may be said to despise Christ when they do not receive Him as their
alone Saviour, the true and only way to the Father.
2. When they practically deny His authority by breaking His Commandments.
3. When they do not give Him the chief room in their hearts, nor prefer Him
in their choice to everything else.
4. When they do not publicly, confess Him before men.
II. THE CAUSES OF THIS CONTEMPT.
1. The main cause is a secretunbelief.
2. Love of this would.
3. Ignorance oftheir owncondition.
4. An opinion that they may obtain His aid at what time soeverthey shall
choose to ask it.
III. THE MALIGNITY OF THIS SIN.
1. To despise and rejectsuch a Saviour, is the blackestingratitude that can
possibly be imagined.
2. Your ingratitude is heightened by the most insolent contempt both of the
wisdom and goodnessofGod.
3. By despising and rejecting Christ, you openly proclaim war againstthe
MostHigh, and bid Him defiance.
(R. Walker.)
Designedand rejected
J. Higgins.
I. CHRIST WAS AN OBJECTOF SCORN AND CONTEMPT.
1. He was despisedas an impostor.
2. Despisedin His teachings.
3. In his work.
4. In His claims to a righteous judgment at the national tribunal.
II. NOT ONLY WAS JESUS AN OBJECT OF CONTEMPTAND SCORN
BUT OF ABSOLUTE REJECTION. If the word had read "neglected," —
deserted, coldly passedby — this would have revealedan indifference that
would have coveredHis nation and age with reproach, and would have stood
out a lasting monument of their base ingratitude. But here is a word
conveying the idea of the most inveterate and active hatred. But why this
active hostility to Christ?
(J. Higgins.)
Despisedand rejectedof men
S. H. Tindall.
In the Gospelwe see this rejectionin actualoccurrence.
I. HE WAS DESPISED AND REJECTEDBY THE WORLDLY-MINDED
(John 6). Following Christ for the sake of bread may lead to much
enthusiastic and self-denying exertion. Here, the very meanestview of Christ
is preferred to those lofty and spiritual truths by which He tried to allure and
save their souls. In his presence, before His face, while listening to His voice,
and with the splendour of the miracle before them — all are passedby for the
bread. Is not this the essenceofworldly-mindedness? Christianity is the
religion of many, not for the sake ofthe Lord Himself, nor His gracious
words, nor even His miracles, but for the bread, for reputation's sake, and
socialcharacterandrespectability.
II. HE WAS DESPISEDAND REJECTED BYTHE RATIONALIST
(Matthew 13:54-57). It was in "His own country." There men thought they
knew Him; His family had long dwelt there. Parents, brothers, sisters were all
familiarly known— all, down to their very trade: "Is not this the carpenter?"
The facts of the case,as the rationalist is so fond of saying, were all clearly
apprehended, and stoodforth in their true dimensions. "Whence hath this
man this wisdom and these mighty works?" Is it real? is it not on the face of it
absurd, this mere carpenter's son? This is the inmost spirit of rationalism. It
rejects everything above the level of visible and tangible fact, everything that
cannot be weighedand measured, everything spiritual in Scripture doctrine
and supernatural in Scripture history.
III. HE IS DESPISEDAND REJECTED BYTHE ECCLESIASTIC
(Matthew 21:15-23). The ecclesiasticaltemperis not found solely or chiefly
amongstthose who are ecclesiasticsby profession. The religious spirit may be
crushed — indeed, has often been; rigid and severe forms may take the place
of the easyand gracefulmotions of vital Christianity. "This" is "the rejection
of Christ in the freedom by which His Holy Spirit "distributes to every man
severallyas He will."
IV. HE IS DESPISEDAND REJECTED BYMEN OF BRUTE FORCE
(Luke 23:11). To some the tenderness of the Gospelreligion is an offence.
Humanity is a peculiarly Christian virtue, and meeknessand resignation. The
calm tranquillity of meditation, the tearful eye of compassion, the sublime
courage ofpatience, the dating heroism of forgiveness, excite no sympathy or
admiration in some breasts. Theirs is the rejectionof Christ; through a false
manliness.
V. CHRIST IS DESPISED AND REJECTEDBYHIS OWN (John 1:11).
Some, from a natural sweetness andamiability of disposition, seemin a
certain degree adaptedto be Christians. The restraining effects ofhome
discipline and generous educationhave restrained them from open
transgression. Yet their rejectionof Christ as a Saviour from sin is often most
decided and even disdainful. They think the charge of sin inappropriate, for
they have no consciousnessofit, and no felt need of a Saviour. The sinfulness
of rejecting Christ is seenin its being a rejectionof the Father(Luke 10:16). It
is not possible to rejectChrist, and be right with God.
(S. H. Tindall.)
Failure
C. G. Lang.
In a life that is lived with the thoughts of eternity, in one aspectfailure is
inevitable: in another aspectfailure is impossible.
1. Failure is inevitable. If I acceptfor myself an ideal which is beyond the
limits of here and now, then manifestly it is impossible that I can here and
now realize it. There must be always with me, so long as I am faithful to that
ideal, a sense ofincompleteness, a ceaselessaspiration, an effort that only the
grave can close. He knows if he is faithful that he has before him an eternal
career, that the end to which he is moving is likeness to Jesus Christ; that he
has to pass into the unveiled presence of God and hold communion with Him.
If that be the end, can it be otherwise than that, in the meanwhile, there
should be failure, humiliation, penitence, and ceaselessand unwearied
discipline of self?
2. Failure, in another aspect, is impossible. Only be sure that deep down at the
root of life there is loyalty to God, and then begin where we are placed — in
the effort to find Him He will fulfil the search. The miracle of the failure of
Calvary is our assurance ofthat truth. It is this living for the Eternal, as a
venture of faith, which has always appealedto the eternalGod, which His own
nature is pledged to meet. Do we stumble? It is only that we may realize His
readiness to help. Are we bewildered? It is only in order that we may find how
sure He guides. Are we humiliated by our confessions?It is only that we may
realize the readiness of His pardon. Are we conscious andstrickenwith the
sense ofour weakness?It is only that we may find His strength perfected
within us. If we have only takensides with Him in the greatissues of human
life, then He will justify our choice.
(C. G. Lang.)
Failure may be welcomed
C. G. Lang.
Our failure in the light of the Cross, our spiritual failures, are things to be
welcomed;they prevent the torpor of dull assurancecreeping overus like a
poison; they prevent our falling under imperfect standards of life, they prove,
so long as their are constantwith us, that the energyof the Spirit of God has
not left us to ourselves;they witness to us that we recognize the truth that our
souls can find their restand satisfactiononly in God.
(C. G. Lang.)
The despisedSaviour
R. C. Ford, M.A.
To all God grants some dim vision of what He intends man to be. The holiest
men have had the clearestglimpses ofthat character. One nation was
separatedto keepthe ideal before the world. The majority corrupted the
representation, but some prophets saw it clearly.
I. GOD'S IDEAL FOR MAN, AND ITS REALIZATION IN CHRIST. The
majority thought He would be another Solomon, David's greaterson. The
prophet saw that He would be a Sinless Sufferer; what it had been intended
that the nation should be, that the Suffering Servant would be. The voice of
God, which setforth the ideal by the lips of prophets, now speaks throughour
own highest desires.
II. THE WORLD'S RECEPTION OF THE REVEALED IDEAL. Pilate has
brought Him forth that His suffering may excite their pity, but His pure and
loving life has made them relentless in their hate. There is no beauty that they
should desire Him. Barabbas, the bold and reckless, is the people's choice.
While boon companions crowdround him, cold looks and scornful smiles are
reservedfor Christ. Christ had headed no revolt againstthe powers that be,
and therefore He was not popular. Politicalemancipationis more popular
than spiritual. The path of righteousness ends on Calvary; its crown is one of
thorns, its throne a cross.
III. THE MEANING OF THE REVELATION OF THIS IDEAL. The world
says, Blessedare the wealthy, the powerful, the great, and the wise. Christ
says, Blessedare the poor in spirit, the pure in heart, the meek, the mourners,
the persecuted. At first we pity Christ, and reserve our indignation for His
persecutors. ButHe was the leastpitiable of all that group. Pilate was a
pitiable victim, the people were pitiable because carriedawayby passion, and
the priests by desire for revenge. The greatnessofapparent weaknessis here
revealed. Yet we despise weakness. Here is a dramatic representationof
weighty decisions made every day in human hearts. When we choose easeand
worldly glory in preference to holiness and self-denial, we despise and reject
Christ. Here our choice is seenworkedout to the bitter end. This is a
revelation of the meaning of sin.
IV. THE EFFECT OF THIS REVELATION. The world cannever forget that
spiracle. In the dark ages,whenthe Bible was a hidden book, a representation
of this scene was to be found in every church. Though obscuredby
superstition, the ideal was still held up, and was still moulding the minds and
stimulating the holy endeavours of men. In an open Bible we have the ideal
more truthfully setforth. The love there revealedhas been the constraining
motive which moved apostles to preach, martyrs to suffer, missionaries to
forgo the joys of home, and humble men and women to labour in countless
ways to advance the interests of Christ. His patience shames our murmuring:
His burning love to us kindles our love to Him.
(R. C. Ford, M.A.)
The world's regardfor the outward
H. Allen, D.D.
The greatcause assignedby the prophet for the astonishment of men at the
Messiahand for their rejection of Him is, that His real glory is hidden beneath
humiliation and sorrow. The world, that is, which always looks atthe outward
appearance ofthings, judges them according to their material splendours;
having a carnaleye, it can but dimly discern moral beauty. It renders homage
to thrones and crowns, and wealth and power, and does not care to see the
moral iniquity and the spiritual repulsiveness there may be behind them; it
feels pity and contempt for suffering and poverty and obloquy, and does not
care to see the moral grandeur that these may coveror indicate. There are few
of us so reverent to a poor, godly man, as to a rich godless one. We may not
refuse to utter words commending the one and condemning the other, but we
utter them very tenderly; the goodness ofa rich man causes us to exhaust our
expletives, and almostourselves, in admiring praise; the wickedness ofa poor
man is denounced by us without mercy; but when the conditions are reversed
we have a great dealmore reserve. Our praise is a concessionthat we cannot
withhold. We blame "with bated breath, and whispering humbleness." The
raggedgarments of poverty have a wonderful transparencywhen vice lies
behind them; while riches usurp the powers of charity, and "hide the
multitude of sins."
(H. Allen, D.D.)
The art of seeing the spiritual
H. Allon, D.D.
The Jews did not look for spiritual meaning in their dispensation, but simply
at material and mechanicalordinances, and they became Pharisees —
regarding religionas a thing of phylacteries and tithes and streetprayers:
they did not look for spiritual glory in their expectedMessiah, orfor spiritual
blessings in His coming, and they became absorbedin the conceptionof a
temporal prince, and were incapable of seeing anything else in Him; and,
because He was not this, in their astonishment and anger, they rejectedand
crucified Him. The lessonis a universal one; it affects the spiritual education
of every soul, our own daily habits of interpreting things. We may look at
God's world until we see nothing of God's presence in it; nothing but
mechanicalforces. A scientific or philosophicaleye may sooneducate itself to
see nothing but science and philosophy; a material eye, to see nothing but
materialism. We may look upon creation, and see no Creator;upon
providence, and see no Benefactor. So we may read the Bible, and see nothing
but sacredhistory, or scientific philosophy — the letter and not the spirit. So
we may look at Christian things on their material rather than their spiritual
side. We may speculate upon a millennium coming of Christ, until we forget
His spiritual presence — even upon heaven itself, until we forget the inward
grace, and holiness and Divine communion that chiefly make it heaven. Let us
carefully cultivate the Divine art of seeing spiritual aspects andmeanings in
all things, of judging of all things by their spiritual importance, of valuing
them for their spiritual influence, of applying them to spiritual uses. "The
pure in heart see God;" spiritual things are spiritually discerned."
(H. Allon, D.D.)
Christ rejected
H. Allon, D.D.
I. The first reasonassignedforthe rejectionof the Messiahby the Jews was
THE GRADUAL AND UNOSTENTATIOUS MANNEROF HIS
MANIFESTATION."He shall grow up before Him as a tender plant, and as a
root out of a dry ground," etc. The generalreference is, no doubt, to His
parentage, and His manner of entering the world — so contrastedwith the
probable expectations of the Jews. Notlike a cedar of Lebanon did the world s
Messiahappear;not as a scionof a noble and wealthy house; not as the son of
a Herod or a Caiaphas — but "as a "tender plant," as "a root, out of a dry
ground." It is a repetition of the figure in the eleventh chapter, "There shall
come forth a Shoot out of the stem of Jesse;and a Scion shall spring forth
from his roots." Justas the descendants of the Plantagenets are to be found
amongstour English peasantry, the glory of the family had departed. Nothing
could be farther from the thought of the carnalJews than that Messiahthe
Prince should be a scion of such a forgottenhouse. How wonderful in its
obscurity and helplessness wasHis childhood; not hastening towards His
manifestation, not hastening even towards His ministry to the perishing, but
waiting until "the fulness of time was come;" growing into the child, the
youth, the man; for more than thirty years giving scarcelya sign that He was
other than an ordinary sonof humanity; at first helplessly dependent upon
His parents for support and direction, then obediently "subjectto them,"
fulfilling all the conditions and duties of childhood, a child with children as
well as a man with men; then a youth labouring as an artisan, fulfilling His
greatmission to the world in a carpenter's shop. And then fulfilling His
ministry, not amongstthe rich, but amongstthe poor; not in acts of rule and
conquest, but in deeds of beneficence and words of spiritual life; and
consummating it by a death on a cross.
II. The secondreasonforthe rejectionof the Messiahby the Jews, whichthe
prophet assigns, is HIS UNATTRACTIVE APPEARANCE WHEN
MANIFESTED.This he puts both negatively and positively.
1. Negatively, He was destitute of all attractions;He had "no form nor
comeliness;" He was without "beauty" to make men "desire Him".
2. But there were positive repulsions; everything to offend men who had such
prepossessionsas they had. A Messiahin the guise of a peasantbabe — the
Divine in the form of a servantand a sufferer. Chiefly, however, we are
arrestedby the phrase, which, because of its touching beauty, has almost
become one of the personaldesignations of the Messiah — "A Man of
sorrows" — literally, a Man of sufferings, or of many sufferings — One who
possesses sufferings as othermen possessintelligence, orphysical faculty —
One who was "acquaintedwith grief," not in the casual, transient wayin
which most men are, but with an intimacy as of companionship; the utmost
bodily and mental sorrow was endured by Him. The emphasis of the
description lies not in the fact that one who came to be a Prophet and
Reformerwas subjected to martyr treatment, for such men have ever been
rejectedand persecutedby the ignorance, envy and madness of their
generation. It is that He who was the Creatorand Lord of all things should
have submitted to this condition, borne this obloquy, endured this suffering;
that the Lord of life and blessednessshould appearin our world, not only as a
Man, but as so suffering a Man, as that He should be known amongstother
suffering men as pre-eminently "a Man of sorrows"— a Man whose sorrows
were greaterthan other men's sorrows. Now, we cannotthink that this
designationis given to Him merely because ofthe bodily sufferings, or social
provocations, that were inflicted upon Him. We shall touch but very distantly
the true heart of the Redeemer's sorrows,if we limit the cause of them to the
mere stubbornness of His generation, orto the mere physical agonies ofHis
death. It is doing no wrong to the pre-eminence of the Saviour's agonies to
say, that many teachers of truth have been opposedand persecutedmore than
He was, and that many martyrs have endured deaths of more terrible physical
agony. If this were all, we should be compelled, I think, to admit that the
prophetic description is somewhatexaggerated. How, then, is it to be
accountedfor? Only by the factof His having also endured transcendent
inward sorrow;sorrow of mind, sorrow of heart, of which ordinary men have
no experience;only by His own strange expressionin His agony, when no
human hand touched Him — "My soul is exceedinglysorrowful, even unto
death." Then comes the mystery of such a pure and perfect soul experiencing
such a sorrow. If He were only a prophet and martyr for the truth of God,
why, as distinguished from all other prophets and martyrs, should He have
endured so much inward anguish? Here we touch the greatmystery of
atonement, and we are bold to say that this alone interprets Christ's peculiar
sorrow.
(H. Allon, D.D.)
Lessons from the manner of Christ's appearing
H. Allon, D.D.
1. Greatthings may be found in very lowly forms. We judge of things by
material magnitudes; the spiritual God judges them by moral qualities. The
greatforces that have ruled the world have mostly been born in lowly places;
they have been moulded to greatness in the schoolofnecessity;trained to
greatness in the schoolof endurance. He who has not to endure cannever be
great. Let us cultivate the spiritual eye, that canrecognize spiritual qualities,
everywhere, and neither in others nor in "ourselves disparage" the day of
small things, the germs of virtue and strength; for we know not what they may
achieve. The acorn becomes anoak;the "solitarymonk shakes the world;"
the Babe of Bethlehem becomes the Christ of Christianity. Your solitary
scholarmay be the nucleus of a greatsystemof education;your solitary
convert may evangelize a nation (Matthew 13:31-32).
2. The power of Divine patience. Godwaits, even in His greatredeeming
purpose, until "the fulness of time is come," and then until the "tender plant
grows up before Him." We, in our impatience, wish to do all things at once, to
convert the world in a day. Our zeal becomes fanaticismthe more difficult to
check because ittakes so holy a form.
(H. Allon, D.D.)
Aversion to Christ
G. F, Pentecost, D. D.
The reasonfor this aversionto Christ may probably be found in the fact of —
1. His sorrowful face.
2. His serious manner.
3. His spiritual teaching.
4. His consecrationto His Father's business.
5. His single walk with God, His habits of retirement and prayer.Men hate
and rejectChrist for these characteristics. The world's spirit and all worldly
religion resentthese aspects ofspiritual life.
(G. F, Pentecost, D. D.)
Handel's Messiah
J. Higgins.
Of Handel, it is said, that when composing his Messiah,"and he came to these
words, he was affectedto tears; and well might he weep, for history furnishes
no parallel to this case.
(J. Higgins.)
A man of sorrows
The causes ofChrist's sorrows
H. Allon, D. D.
I. THE DAILY CONTACT OF HIS PURE AND PIOUS SOUL WITH
SINFUL AND SINNING MEN. And who may conceive the constancyand
intensity of the anguish that would spring from this? There would be the sense
of human relationship to a race that had sinned and fallen; they were men,
and He was a Man too: "He likewise took partof the same;" they were His
proper brothers; He was allied in blood to men so guilty and degraded. It was
as if a vicious brother, a prodigal son, were guilty of nameless and constant
crime. The sense ofmen's guilt, degradation, misery, ingratitude, would bow
down His pure soul with unspeakable sorrow and shame. Then there was His
daily practicalcontactwith acts and hearts of sin; the touch on every side, and
whereverHe felt humanity, of what was unloving and unholy; the sight of
their hate to His loving Father; of their rebelliousness againstHis holy law; a
sinfulness and unspiritualness that led them to rejectand hate Him; to turn
awaywith dislike and determination from His holy words and deeds. His
greathuman love, His perfect human holiness, would wonderfully combine to
wring His soul with anguish. The apostle intimates how greatthis sorrow was,
when he says that "He endured the contradictionof sinners againstHimself;"
that He "resistedunto blood, striving againstsin." And we can understand
the mysterious agony of His soul in Gethsemane only by supposing that it was
the sense ofthe world's guilt that lay upon it: that made His soul so exceeding
sorrowful, even unto death. We have only to think of His pure nature; that He
was "holy, harmless, undefiled, separate from sinners;" and to remember the
men that He came into contactwith; the world in which He lived; the
treatment which His messageofholiness and mercy received:to understand
how sore the sorrow of His soul would be.
II. THE TEMPTATIONSOF THE DEVIL. He, the pure and perfect Son of
the Father, was doomed to listen to polluting and hateful thoughts of distrust
and sin: He who so loathed evil was plied with evil.
III. THE GREAT BUT INEXPLICABLE SORROW OF WHATEVER
CONSTITUTED HIS ATONEMENT — of whateveris meant by its "pleasing
the Fatherto bruise Him" — to "put Him to grief" — to "make His soul an
offering for sin' — to "lay upon Him the iniquity of us all" — to "forsake
Him" on His cross. These were the chief elements of His sorrow — a sorrow
that has had no equal, and that, in many of its ingredients, has had no
likeness.
(H. Allon, D. D.)
Christ a Man of sorrows
E. Payson, D. D.
I. IT IS HERE PREDICTED THAT CHRIST SHOULD BE A MAN OF
SORROWS, and acquaintedwith grief. This prediction was literally fulfilled.
It has been supposedthat His sufferings were rather apparent than real; or, at
least, that His abundant consolations, andHis knowledge ofthe happy
consequenceswhichwould result from His death, rendered His sorrows
comparatively light, and almost convertedthem to joys. But never was
supposition more erroneous. His sufferings were incomparably greaterthan
they appearedto be. No finite mind can conceive oftheir extent. His sufferings
beganwith his birth, and ended but with His life.
1. It must have been exceedinglypainful to such a person as Christ to live in a
world like this.
2. Another circumstance which contributed to render our Saviour a Man of
sorrows was the reception He met with from those He came to save.
3. Another circumstance that threw a shade of gloomover our Saviour s life
was His clearview and constantanticipation of the dreadful agonies in which
it was to terminate. He was not ignorant, as we happily are, of the miseries
which were before Him. How deeply the prospectaffectedHim is evident from
His own language:"I have a baptism to be baptized with, and how am I
straitened till it be accomplished!"
II. We have in this prophetic passageAN ACCOUNT OF OUR SAVIOUR'S
CONDUCT UNDER THE PRESSURE OF THESE SORROWS."He was
oppressed," etc. "He was brought as a Lamb," etc. Never was language more
descriptive of the most perfectmeekness andpatience; never was prediction
more fully justified by the event than in the case before us. If His lips were
opened, it was but to express the most perfectsubmission to His Father's will,
and to breathe out prayers for His murderers. Christian, look at your Master,
and learn how to suffer. Sinner, look at your Saviour, and learn to admire, to
imitate, and to forgive. But why is this patient, innocent Sufferer thus
afflicted? "He was wounded for our transgressions," etc.
III. Our text describes THE MANNER IN WHICH CHRIST WAS
TREATED whenHe thus came as a Man of sorrows to atone for our sins.
"Despisedandrejectedof men." "We hid, as it were, our faces,"etc. He has
long since ascendedto heaven, and therefore cannot be the immediate object
of men's attacks.But His Gospeland His servants are still in the world; and
the manner in which they are treatedis sufficient evidence that the feelings of
the natural heart towardChrist are not materially different from those of the
Jews. His servants are hated, ridiculed and despised, His Gospelis rejected,
and His institutions slighted. Every man who voluntarily neglects to confess
Christ before men, and to commemorate His dying love, must say, either that
He does not choose to do it, or that he is not prepared to do it. If a man says, I
do not choose to confess Christ, he certainly rejects Him.
(E. Payson, D. D.)
The human race typified by the Man of sorrows
F. W. Robertson, M.A.
I. THE LOT OF HUMANITY IN THIS WORLD. This is the portrait of the
species — "A Man of sorrows andacquainted with grief."
II. THE TREATMENTWHICH DEPRESSEDHUMANITY COMMONLY
EXPERIENCE:"We hid, as it were, our faces from Him."
(F. W. Robertson, M.A.)
The Man of sorrows
I. "A MAN." He who was God, and was in the beginning with God, was made
flesh, and dwelt among us. Remembering that Jesus Christ is God, it behoves
us to recollectthatHis manhood was none the less realand substantial It
differed from our own humanity in the absence ofsin, but in no other respect.
This condescending participationin our nature brings the Lord Jesus very
near to us in relationship. Inasmuch as He was man, though also God, He was,
according to Hebrew law, our goel — our kinsman, next of kin. Now it was
according to the law that if an inheritance had been lost, it was the right of the
next kin to redeem it. Our Lord Jesus exercisedHis legalright, and seeing us
sold into bondage and our inheritance takenfrom us, came forward to redeem
both us and all our lost estate. Be thankful that you have not to go to God at
the first, and as you are, but you are invited to come to Jesus Christ, and
through Him to the Father. Then let me add, that every child of God ought
also to be comforted by the fact that our Redeemeris one of our own race,
seeing that He was made like unto His brethren that He might be a merciful
and faithful High Priest;and He was tempted in all points, like as we are, that
He might be able to succourthem that are tempted. The sympathy of Jesus is
the next most precious thing to His sacrifice.
II. "A MAN OF SORROWS." The expressionis intended to be very
emphatic; it is not "a sorrowfulman," but "a Man of sorrows," as if He were
made up of sorrows, andthey were constituent elements of His being. Some
are men of pleasure, others men of wealth, but He was "a Man of sorrows."
He and sorrow might have changednames. He who saw Him, saw sorrow, and
he who would see sorrow, must look on Him. "Behold, and see," saithHe, "if
there was ever sorrow like unto My sorrow which was clone unto Me."
1. Our Lord is calledthe Man of sorrows forpeculiarity, for this was His
peculiar tokenand specialmark. We might wellcall Him "a man of holiness;"
for there was no fault in Him: or a man, of labours, for He did His Father's
business earnestly; or "a man of eloquence," for never man spake like this
man. We might right fittingly callHim "The man of love," for never was
there greaterlove than glowedin His heart. Still, conspicuous as all these and
many other excellencies were,yet had we gazedupon Christ and been asked
afterwards what was the most striking peculiarity in Him, we should have said
His sorrow. Tears were His insignia, and the Cross His escutcheon.
2. Is not the title of "Manof sorrows"givento our Lord by wayof eminence?
He was not only sorrowful, but pre-eminent among the sorrowful. All men
have a burden to bear, but His was heaviestof all. The reasonfor this superior
sorrow may be found in the fact that with His sorrow there was no admixture
of sin. Side by side with His painful sensitiveness ofthe evil of sin, was His
gracious tenderness towards the sorrows of others. Besides this our Saviour
had a peculiar relationship to sin. He was not merely afflicted with the sight of
it, and saddenedby perceiving its effects on others, but sin was actually laid
upon Him, and He was himself numbered with the transgressors.
3. The title of "Man of sorrows,"was also givento our Lord to indicate the
constancyof His afflictions. He changedHis place of abode, but He always
lodged with sorrow. Sorrow wove His swaddling bands, and sorrow spun His
winding sheet.
4. He was also "a Man of sorrows," forthe variety of His woes;He was a man
not of sorrow only, but of "sorrows." As to His poverty. He knew the heart-
rendings of bereavement. Perhaps the bitterest of His sorrows were those
which were connectedwith His gracious work. He came as the Messiahsentof
God, on an embassageoflove, and men rejectedHis claims. Nor did they stay
at cold rejection;they then proceededto derision and ridicule. They charged
Him with every crime which their malice could suggest.And all the while He
was doing nothing but seeking theiradvantage in all ways, As He proceededin
His life His sorrows multiplied. He preached, and when men's hearts were
hard, and they would not believe what He said, "He was grieved for the
hardness of their hearts." His sorrow was not that men injured Him, but that
they destroyedthemselves;this it was, that pulled up the sluices of His soul,
and made His eyes o'erflow with tears: "O Jerusalem!Jerusalem!how often
would I have gathered thy children together," etc. But surely He found some
solace withthe few companions whom He had gathered around Him? He did;
but for all that He must have found as much sorrow as solace in their
company. They were dull scholars;they were miserable comforters for the
Man of sorrows. The Saviour, from the very dignity of His nature, must suffer
alone. The mountain-side, with Christ upon it, seems to me a suggestive
symbol of His earthly life. His soul lived in vast solitudes, sublime and terrible,
and there, amid a midnight of trouble, His spirit communed with the Father,
no one being able to accompanyHim into the dark glens and gloomyravines
of His unique experience. In the last, crowning sorrows ofHis life, there came
upon Him the penal inflictions from God, the chastisementof our peace which
was upon Him.
III. "ACQUAINTED WITH GRIEF."
1. With grief he had an intimate acquaintance. He did not know merely what
it was in others, but it came home to Himself. We have read of grief, we have
sympathized with grief, we have sometimes felt grief: but the.Lord felt it more
intensely than other men in His innermost soul. He and grief were bosom
friends.
2. It was a continuous acquaintance. He did not call at grief's house sometimes
to take a tonic by the way, neither did He sip now and then of the wormwood
and the gall, but the quassia cup was always His, and ashes were always
mingled with His bread. Notonly forty days in the wilderness did Jesus fast;
the world was ever a wilderness to Him, and His life was one long Lent. I do
not saythat He was not, after all, a happy man, for down deep in His soul
benevolence always supplied a living spring of joy to Him. There was a joy
into which we are one day to enter — the "joy of our Lord" — the "joy set
before Him" for which "He endured the Cross, despising the shame;" but that
does not at all take awayfrom the fact that His acquaintance with grief was
continuous and intimate beyond that of any man who ever lived. It was indeed
a growing acquaintance with grief, for eachsteptook Him deeper down into
the grim shades ofsorrow.
3. It was a voluntary acquaintance for our sakes. He need never have known a
grief at all, and at any moment He might have said to grief, farewell. But He
remained to the end, out of love to us, griefs acquaintance.
( C. H. Spurgeon.)
Christ as a Sufferer
J. Stalker, D.D.
1. Jesus sufferedfrom what may be called the ordinary privations of
humanity. Born in a stable, etc. We may not be able to assertthat none ever
suffered so much physical agonyas He, but this is at leastprobable; for the
exquisiteness of His physical organism in all likelihood made Him much more
sensitive than others to pain.
2. He suffered keenly from the pain of anticipating coming evil.
3. He suffered from the sense ofbeing the cause ofsuffering to others. To
persons of an unselfish disposition the keenestpang inflicted by their own
weakness ormisfortunes may sometimes be to see those whom they would like
to make happy rendered miserable through connectionwith themselves. To
the child Jesus how gruesome must have been the story of the babes of
Bethlehem, whom the sword of Herod smote when it was seeking forHim! Or,
if His mother spared Him this recital, He must at leasthave learned how she
and Josephhad to flee with Him to Egypt to escape the jealousyof Herod. As
His life drew near its close, this sense that connectionwith Himself might be
fatal to His friends forceditself more and more upon His notice.
4. The element of shame was, all through, a large ingredient in His cup of
suffering. To a sensitive mind there is nothing more intolerable; it is far
harder to bear than bodily pain. But it assailedJesusin nearly every form,
pursuing Him all through His life. He was railed at for the humbleness of His
birth. The high-born priests and the educatedrabbis sneeredat the
carpenter's son who had never learned, and the wealthy Pharisees derided
Him. He was againand againcalled a madman. Evidently this was whatPilate
took Him for. The Roman soldiers adopted an attitude of savage banter
towards Him all through His trial and crucifixion, treating Him as boys
torment one who is weak in the mind. He heard Barabbas preferred to
Himself by the voice of His fellow-countrymen, and He was crucified between
thieves, as if He were the worstof the worst. A hail of mockerykept falling on
Him in His dying hours. Thus had He who was conscious ofirresistible
strength to submit to be treatedas the weakestofweaklings, andHe who was
the Wisdom of the Highest to submit to be used as if He were less than a man.
5. But to Jesus it was more painful still, being the Holy One of God, to be
regardedand treated as the chief of sinners. To one who loves God and
goodness there canbe nothing so odious as to be suspectedof hypocrisy and to
know that he is believed to be perpetrating crimes at the opposite extreme
from his public profession. Yet this was what Jesus was accusedof. Possibly
there was not a single human being, when He died, who believed that He was
what He claimedto be.
6. If to the holy soulof Jesus it was painful to be believed to be guilty of sins
which He had not committed, it must have been still more painful to feelthat
He was being thrust into sin itself. This attempt was olden made. Satantried it
in the wilderness, and although only this one temptation of his is detailed, he
no doubt often returned to the attack. Wickedmen tried it; they resortedto
every device to cause Him to lose His temper (Luke 11:53, 54). Even friends,
who did not understand the plan of His life, endeavouredto direct Him from
the course prescribedto Him by the will of God — so much so that He had
once to turn on one of them, as if he were temptation personified, with "Get
thee behind Me, Satan."
7. While the proximity of sin awoke suchloathing in His holy soul, and the
touch of it was to Him like the touch of fire on delicate flesh, He was brought
into the closestcontactwith it, and hence arose His deepestsuffering. It
pressedits loathsome presence onHim from a hundred quarters. He who
could not bear to look on it saw it in its worstforms close to His very eyes. His
own presence in the world brought it out; for goodnessstirs up the evil lying
at the bottom of wickedhearts. It was as if all the sin of the race were rushing
upon Him, and Jesus feltit as if it were all His own.
(J. Stalker, D.D.)
The Man of sorrows
Ray Palmer, D.D.
I. THE LANGUAGE DOES NOT DESCRIBETHE CASE OF ONE WHO
ENCOUNTEREDONLY THE ORDINARYOR THE AVERAGE AMOUNT
OF THE TRIALS WHICH BELONG TO HUMAN LIFE. There is implied in
it a pre-eminence in sorrow, a peculiarly deep experience of grief.
II. OF ALL THE MANY GRIEFS OF THE DIVINE REDEEMERIN HIS
HUMAN LIFE, THERE WAS NOT ONE WHICH HE HIMSELF EITHER
NEEDED OR DESERVED TO BEAR. When the apostle tells us that He was
made perfect through suffering, the meaning is that He was by this means
made officially perfect as a Saviour, as the Captain of salvation, and the High-
Priestof His redeemed, and not that He lackedany moral excellence,to
acquire which suffering was needful. So again, when it is said that He learned
obedience by the things which He suffered, the meaning obviously is, that by
putting Himself in a state of humiliation, and in the condition of a servant
under law, He came to know by experience what it was to render obedience to
the law, and not at all that He was ever defective in the least, as to the spirit of
obedience to the Father's will. As He had no need of any improvement of His
virtues, He had no faults, no sins, which called for chastisement.
III. ALL THE SUFFERINGS OF THE LORD JESUS WERE ENDURED
WITH UNWAVERING FORTITUDE.
IV. IN ALL THE GRIEFS AND SORROWS WHICHTHE BLESSED
SAVIOUR SUFFERED, HIS MIND WAS CHIEFLY OCCUPIED WITH
THE GOOD RESULTS IN WHICH HIS SUFFERINGSWERE TO ISSUE.
He deliberately enteredon His singular careerof humiliation and self-
sacrifice for the goodof man and the glory of God. Practicallessons:
1. If even the Son of God, when on earth, was a Man of sorrows and
acquainted with grief, we certainly should not think it strange that days of
trial are appointed unto us.
2. If our blessedLord felt keenly what He suffered, and was evenmoved to
tears, we need not reproachourselves because we deeplyfeel our trials, and
cannot but weepin the fulness of our grief.
3. If Christ was a willing sufferer, deliberately choosing to suffer for the good
of others, we surely should consentto suffer for our own advantage.
4. If our blessedLord and Saviour made less accountof what He suffered than
of the goodresults that were to follow, it is wise at leastin us to do the same.
(Ray Palmer, D.D.)
Christ the Man of sorrows
Evan Lewis, B.A.
While on earth He was surrounded by many sources ofpleasure. The earth
teemed with every form of life, and the air was melodious with music. The
sceneries ofHis native country suggestedthe sublimest imagery, and inspired
poetry of the highest kind: and had He possessednone of these, He would have
been perfectly happy; for He was the Infinite; His sorrows arosefrom —
I. THE FELT RELATION OF A LOVING BEING TO A RUINED RACE.
II. THE CRUSHING PRESSURE OF HIS MEDIATORIAL WORK.
III. HIS CERTAIN KNOWLEDGE THAT THE RESULT OF HIS MISSION
WOULD NOT BE EQUAL TO THE BENEVOLENCEOF HIS WILL.
(Evan Lewis, B.A.)
The mystery of sorrow
W. J. KnoxLittle, M.A.
I. CONSIDERITS RELATION TO MAN. There are facts which know no
frontiers. In the inner life of thought and feeling such is sorrow. It is a
universal language, it obliterates space, it annihilates time; it is the great
leveller, it ignores rank, it stands head and shoulders above any dignity. Think
again, it is too sacredto be only universal. It is also an intimate fact. None can
comfort. There may be sweethelp, deep and real sympathy, not comfort, no,
for none canundo the tragic truth. Yes, there is One. One can come nearestto
the feeling, mad, in our eternal life, in a sense He can undo. One, only One,
has gatheredup the representative experiences ofall.
II. The thought gains precisionwhen we remember that IT BEARS A
WITNESS FOR GOD. LetLove meet death or trouble, and the result is
sorrow. This noblest human sorrow so begottenis a witness to the Source of
its being. Love, the love of the creature, is his highestendowment from the
Love of God.
III. SORROW GAINS A CLEARER OUTLINE TO ITS FRAIL AND
MISTY FORM AS SEEN IN ITS RELATION TO WHAT IS CALLED THE
"SCHEME OF REDEMPTION;" seen, that is, in its place in the awakening
and restoring of the human spirit, great though fallen. Sorrow here is a
power. It takes varying tints.
1. At the darkest, it is a power of warning, of prophecy. It warns of a stern
reality in this world — the dreadfulness of sin.
2. Better, it is a powerto transfigure. Repentance is the one path to pardon,
and it is a certain path. Whence comes true repentance? It comes from God's
love seenin fairest, saddestimage in "the Man of sorrows "
3. It is a powerto purify. Sorrow sends you in on self. Godless sorrowwould
make self more selfish, working death; not so sorrow from the Cross ofChrist.
A life searchedout, repented of, is a spirit purified.
(W. J. KnoxLittle, M.A.)
The suffering Christ
I. THE MATTER, whatHe suffered.
II. THE MANNER, how He came to suffer.
III. THE REASONS and ends why, for our good. Here are three chief lessons
for a Christian to learn: —
1. Patience and comfort.
2. Humility.
3. In the end, love. All this was for you. What will you do for God again?
( T. Manton, D.D.)
Sir NoelPaton's "Manof Sorrows
D. Davies.
To the painter ere he satdown to produce this work of art many questions
would suggestthemselves. Among them, doubtless, would be these: —
1. What shall be the scene? Ofcourse, the artist would naturally think of
many scenes in our Lord's life more or less appropriate for such a
representation. The painter seems to have recognizedthe greattruth which
we all must have proved to some extent, that man tastes deepestofsorrow in
loneliness, that the cross whichweighs heavieston any shoulder is not the
cross which the world can see, but which is borne out of sight, when the heart,
and no one else save God, knowethits ownbitterness. Thus Sir NoelPaton has
represented"The Man of Sorrows" as isolatedfrom His fellows, far away
from the habitations of men and shut out of the world. The whole picture is
one of desolation. In its centre and foreground is represented"The Man of
Sorrows sitting upon a jaggedrock. And, oh, what sorrow is depicted there!
Those large, full, liquid eyes brim over with tears;every expressionof the
countenance is chargedwith grief; the lips are wan, and a deep furrow crosses
that young, manly brow. The swollenveins in the neck and temple, the
powerful muscular actionin the right hand, as with open fingers it rests
heavily upon the rocks and in the left clenchedtightly as it presses upon the
thigh, and in the feet as they press the earth convulsively underneath — for
the Man of Sorrows is representedwith head uncovered and feetunsandalled
— all these tell the story of an awful tension of a withering sorrow.
2. Closelyand inseparably connectedwith the question of scene is that of the
period in our Lord s life in which He can most appropriately be represented
as the Man of sorrows. The artist choosesthe eve of the Temptation, and thus
selects the greatesttransitionalperiod of our Saviour's life — that beginning
with the Baptism and closing with the Temptation. The time of day chosenis
the twilight of morning. There is something in the twilight that is consistent
not only with solemn, but also with sad thoughts and feelings.
3. What can accountfor the sorrow!You look to the picture in vain for the
solution. The painting is a problem, an enigma. It is purposely so. The painter
presents to us the greatfact, not its explanation. He goes to Inspired Writ for
that, and thus refers the perplexed spectatorto the words of Isaiah as
supplying the key to the whole painting: "He hath borne our griefs, and
carried our sorrows," etc. (vers. 4-6). These are the words which Sir Noel
Patonadopts, and practically says, "There!that is what I mean." "We did
esteemHim stricken, smitten of God and afflicted." How shall this false
estimate of Him be corrected? Look atthe picture; that Man of sorrows looks
up and holds communion with the skies;see the half-open mouth expressive of
expectation, and those eyes so full of tears and yet so full of vision. Verily He is
not alone — the Fatheris with Him; for from the heavens and from a source
other than the sun there descends through a rift of the clouds a shaft of light
that looks like the light of the Father's countenance, and rests upon the face of
this Sorrowing One. This human countenance thus lit up by the light of the
Divine countenance is the painter's sublime answerto the old-world estimate
of the Man of sorrows. Whatneed of any more!
(D. Davies.)
Christ's life a model for His people
C. H. Parkhurst, D. D.
The more deeply we enter into the meaning of Christ consideredas the Divine
Man, the more distinctly revealedit becomes to us that what His life was our
life is intended to be. There are instincts and there are impulses and ambitions
that shrink from coming under the sovereigntyof a commitment so cordial
and entire. That accounts for the disproportionate emphasis so customarily
laid upon the commercialfeature of the atonement. It is easierand it is lazier
to believe in a Christ that is going to pay my debts for me, than it is to grow
up in Christ into a Divine endowment, that shall be itself the cure for
insolvency and the material of wealth Divine and inexhaustible. You have
really done nothing for a poor man by paying his debts for him, unless in
addition to squaring his old accounts you have in such manner dealt with him
as to guarantee him againstbeing similarly involved in the time to come.
Emphasize as we may the merely ransoming work of Christ, we are not made
free men by having our fetters broken off, and we are not made wealthy men
by having our debts paid. It is not what Christ delivers us from, but what He
translates us into that makes us saved men in Christ.
(C. H. Parkhurst, D. D.)
Our Lord's life lived in shadow
No fair reading of the narrative of Christ's life will leave the impression that
sorrow of heart was a grace that Christ cultivated. The pathetic was not a
temper of spirit which He encouragedin Himself or in others. Heaviness of
mind was not a thing to be sought in and for itself. There is no gain. saying the
fact that one greatobject of His mission was to make the world glad. Still for
all that He was a Man of sorrows, andacquainted with grief. It needs also to
be said that for us to be heavy-hearted merely because Christwas, to be
sorrowfulby a sheeract of imitation, is distinctly repugnant to everything like
Christian sense, and at the farthest possible remove from all that deserves to
be called Christian sincerity. Neither canwe leave out of the accountall those
passages, especiallyin the New Testament, where particular praise is
accordedto gladness ofheart.
The problems of life involve sorrow
C. H. Parkhurst, D. D.
Nevertheless,whenall these caveats have beenentered and gladness ofheart
eulogizedto the fullest extent, authorized by multitudinous expressions
occurring throughout the entire Scriptures, it still remains beyond dispute
that our Lord's life was lived in shadow, and that He died at lastless because
of the nails and the spear-wounds, than He did of a broken heart.
(C. H. Parkhurst, D. D.)
The sorrow of strained powers
C. H. Parkhurst, D. D.
He came to interfere with the natural current of event. And it made Him
tired. And a man, even a Divine man, is less apt to laugh when He is tired. A
gooddeal of what we callour gladness ofheart, if we will care to scrutinize it,
is simply the congenialluxury of drifting down the current of event. If you are
pulling your boat up-stream you will be soberwhile you are about it. Strained
powers are serious. It is the farthestfrom our thought to disparage
exuberance or even hilarity; nevertheless, it remains a fact that hilarity is
feeling out at pasture and not feeling under the yoke. It is steamescaping at
the throttle because it is not pushing at the piston. I venture to say that Christ
could not shake His purpose off. He was here to stay the downward drift of
event; the purpose was too vast to be easilyflung aside, and His muscles were
too solidly knotted to it to be easilyunknotted and relaxed. And we shall have
to go on and saythat it was an inherent part of Christ to have a purpose and
to be mightily bent to its achievement; and not only that, it was an inherent
part of Christ as the Saviour of this world to seize upon the current of event
and of history and to under. take to reverse it. Exactly that was the genius of
the Christ-mission.
(C. H. Parkhurst, D. D.)
The Christ-life in the Christian
C. H. Parkhurst, D. D.
You cannot drift down the tide of event and be a Christ man or a Christ
woman. The world is to be saved; the tide is to be reversed. Man inspired of
God is to do it; and you cannot buckle yourself down to that problem in
Christian whole-heartedness andnot grow soberunder it. Now you see the
philosophy of the soberChrist. He flung Himself againstforty centuries of bad
event, and the Divine Man gotbruised by the impact. He stoodup and let
forty centuries jump on Him; He held His own, but blood broke through His
pores in perspiration, and about that there is nothing humorous. The edge of
this truth is not brokenby the fact that Christ took hold of the work of the
world's saving in a largerway than it is possible for us to do, and that
therefore the burden of His undertaking came upon Him in a heavier, wider,
and more crushing way than it can come upon us; and that therefore while it
overwhelmed Him in sorrow, our smaller missionand lighter task canwith
entire propriety leave us buoyant and gladsome. All of that conceptionof the
case lacksdignity and reach You can't take hold of a greatmatter in a small
way.
(C. H. Parkhurst, D. D.)
The sorrow of love
C. H. Parkhurst, D. D.
It is but a step now to go on and speak of the saddening effectnecessarily
flowing from the circumstances under which in this world Christian work has
to be done. It was the love which Christ had for the world that made Him sad
while doing His work in the world; and the infinitude of His love is what
explains the unutterableness of His pain; for the world in which Christ
fulfilled His missionwas a suffering world. Now a man who is without love
can be in the midst of suffering and, not suffer. A loveless spirit grieves over
his ownpain, but has no sense ofanother's pain, and no feeling of being
burdened by another's pain. Love has this peculiar property, that it makes the
person whom we love one with us, so that his experience becomes a part of our
own life, his pain becomes painful to us, his burdens make us tired. The
mother feels her child's pain as keenly as though it were her own pain,
perhaps more so. In its Divine relations this is all expressedin those familiar
words of Scripture, "In all their affliction He was afflicted." Sympathy is the
form which love takes in a suffering world. Love is the finest type of
communism.
(C. H. Parkhurst, D. D.)
Christ's greatcapacityfor suffering
H. O. Mackey.
The measure of our being is our capacityfor sorrow or joy. Captain Conder
speaks ofthe shadow castby Mount Hermon being as much as seventy miles
long at some periods. Was it not the very greatness ofChrist that made His
joys and His griefs equally unique?
(H. O. Mackey.)
We hid as it were our faces from Him
A sad confession
, Canon Cook., T.R. Birks.
In the margin of your Bibles this passageis rendered, "He hid as it were His
face from us." The literal translation of the Hebrew would be, "He was as a
hiding of faces from Him," or "from us." Some critical readers think these
words were intended to describe our Lord as having so humbled Himself, and
brought Himself to such a deep degradation, that He was comparable to the
leper who coveredhis face and cried, "Unclean, unclean," hiding himself from
the gaze of men. Abhorred and despisedby men, He was like one put aside
because of His disease andshunned by all mankind. Others suppose the
meaning to be that on accountof our Lord s terrible and protracted sorrow
His face wore an expressionso painful and grievous that men could scarcely
bear to look upon Him. They hid as it were their faces from Him — amazedat
that brow all carved with lines of anxious thought, those cheeks allploughed
with furrows of deep care, those eyes all sunk in shades of sadness, that soul
bowed down, exceeding sorrowful, even unto death! It may be so;we cannot
tell. I have a plain, practicalpurpose to pursue. Here is an indictment to
which we must all plead guilty.
I. Sometimes men hide their faces from Jesus IN COOL CONTEMPT OF
HIM. How astounding! how revolting! He ought surely to be esteemedby all
mankind.
1. Some show their opposition by attempting to ignore or to tarnish the
dignity of His person.
2. Are there not others who affectgreatadmiration for Jesus of Nazarethas
an example of virtue and benevolence, who nevertheless rejectHis mediatorial
work as our Redeemer? As a substitutionary sacrifice theydo not and cannot
esteemHim.
3. Then they will pour contempt upon, the various doctrines of His Gospel.
4. And with what pitiful disdain the Lord s people are slighted! Do I address
anybody who has despisedthe Lord Jesus Christ? Your wantonness canoffer
no excuse but your ignorance. And as for your ignorance, it is without excuse.
II. A far more common way in which men hide their faces from Christ is BY
THEIR HEEDLESSNESS, THEIR INDIFFERENCE,THEIR NEGLECT.
III. We hid as it were our faces from Him BY PREFERRING ANYOTHER
MODE OF SALVATION TO SALVATION BY FAITH IN CHRIST.
IV. After we were quite sure that we could not be saved other than by the one
Mediator, do you remember how we continued to hide our face from Jesus BY
PERSISTENTUNBELIEF IN HIM.
V. But there are some of us who must plead guilty to another charge;we have
hidden as it were our faces from Him since He has savedus, and since we have
known His love, BY OUR SILLY SHAME AND OUR BASE COWARDICE.
VI. Many, if not all, of us who are believers will penitently confess that we
have sometimes hidden our faces from Christ BY NOT WALKING IN
CONSTANT FELLOWSHIP WITHHIM.
( C. H. Spurgeon.)"We hid as it were our faces from Him." Literally, "as one
from whom there is hiding of face," as if shrinking from a horrible sight.
(Canon Cook.)The impersonal form refers to the men just named, or all those
of note and influence. Their faces were avertedfrom Him, as a lunatic, beside
Himself, or one possessed, as a deceiverand a blasphemer.
(T.R. Birks.)
COMMENTARIES
Ellicott's Commentary for English Readers
(3) He is despisedand rejected.—Better, forthe lastword, forsaken. This had
been the crowning sorrow of the righteous sufferer of the Old Testament(Job
17:15;Job 19:14). It was to complete the trial of the perfect sufferer of the
New (Matthew 26:56).
A man of sorrows . . .—The words “sorrow”and “grief” in the Heb. imply the
thought of bodily pain or disease. (Comp. Exodus 3:7; Lamentations 1:12;
Lamentations 1:18.)Men have sometimes raised the rather idle question
whether the body of our Lord was subjectto disease, and have decided on à
priori grounds that it was not. The prophet’s words point to the true view,
that this was an essentialconditionof His fellowship with humanity. If we do
not read of any actualdisease in the Gospel, we at leasthave evidence of an
organisationeverynerve of which thrilled with its sensitiveness to pain, and
was quickly exhausted(Luke 8:46; John 4:6; Mark 4:36). The intensity of His
sympathy made Him feelthe pain of others as His own (Matthew 8:17), the
“blood and water” from the piercedheart, the physical results of the agony in
Gethsemane (Luke 22:44;John 19:34), indicate a nature subject to the
conditions of our humanity.
We hid as it were . . .—Literally, As the hiding of the face from us, or, on our
part. The words start from the picture of the leper covering his face from
men, or their covering their own faces, that they might not look upon him
(Leviticus 13:45). In Lamentations 4:15, we have a like figurative application.
(Comp. also Job 19:13-19;Job 30:10.
Matthew Henry's Concise Commentary
53:1-3 No where in all the Old Testamentis it so plainly and fully prophesied,
that Christ ought to suffer, and then to enter into his glory, as in this chapter.
But to this day few discern, or will acknowledge, thatDivine powerwhich goes
with the word. The authentic and most important report of salvationfor
sinners, through the Son of God, is disregarded. The low condition he
submitted to, and his appearance in the world, were not agreeable to the ideas
the Jews hadformed of the Messiah. It was expectedthat he should come in
pomp; insteadof that, he grew up as a plant, silently, and insensibly. He had
nothing of the glory which one might have thought to meet with him. His
whole life was not only humble as to outward condition, but also sorrowful.
Being made sin for us, he underwent the sentence sin had exposedus to.
Carnal hearts see nothing in the Lord Jesus to desire an interest in him. Alas!
by how many is he still despisedin his people, and rejectedas to his doctrine
and authority!
Barnes'Notes on the Bible
He is despised- This requires no explanation; and it needs no comment to
show that it was fulfilled. The Redeemerwas eminently the objectof contempt
and scornalike by the Pharisees,the Sadducees,and the Romans. In his life
on earth it was so;in his death it was still so;and since then, his name and
person have been extensivelythe objectof contempt. Nothing is a more
striking fulfillment of this than the conduct of the Jews atthe present day. The
very name of Jesus of Nazarethexcites contempt; and they join with their
fathers who rejectedhim in heaping on him every term indicative of scorn.
Rejectedofmen - This phrase is full of meaning, and in three words states the
whole history of man in regard to his treatment of the Redeemer. The name
'The RejectedofMen,' will express all the melancholy history; rejectedby the
Jews;by the rich; the greatand the learned; by the mass of people of every
grade, and age, and rank. No prophecy was ever more strikingly fulfilled;
none could condense more significancyinto few words. In regardto the exact
sense ofthe phrase, interpreters have varied. Jerome renders it, Novissium
virorum - 'The last of men;' that is, the most abject and contemptible of
mankind. The Septuagint, 'His appearance is dishonored (ἄτιμονatimon) and
defective (ἐκλειπον ekleipon) more than the sons of men.' The Chaldee, 'He is
indeed despised, but he shall take away the glory of all kings;they are infirm
and sad, as if exposedto all calamities and sorrows.'Some render it, 'Most
abjectof men,' and they refer to Job 19:14, where the same word is used to
denote those friends who forsake the unfortunate.
The word ‫לדח‬ châdêlused here, is derived from the verb ‫לדח‬ châdal, which
means "to cease,to leave off, to desist";derived, says Gesenius (Lexicon),
from the idea of becoming languid, flaccid; and thence transferred to the act
of ceasing from labor. It means usually, to cease,to desist from, to leave, to let
alone (see 1 Kings 22:6-15;Job 7:15; Job 10:20;Isaiah 2:22). According to
Gesenius, the word here means to be left, to be destitute, or forsaken;and the
idea is, that be was forsakenby people. According to Hengstenberg (Christol.)
it means 'the most abject of men,' he who ceases frommen, who ceases to
belong to the number of men; that is, who is the most abjectof men. Castellio
renders it, Minus quash homo - 'Less than a man.' Junius and Tremellius,
Abjectissimus virorum - 'The most abject of men.' Grotius, 'Rejectedofmen.'
Symmachus, Ἐλάχιστος ἀνδρῶν Elachistos andrōn- 'the leastof men.' The
idea is, undoubtedly, somehow that of ceasing from human beings, or from
being regarded as belonging to mankind.
There was a ceasing, ora withdrawing of that which usually pertains to man,
and which belongs to him. And the thought probably is, that he was not only
'despised,'but that there was an advance on that - there was a ceasing to treat
him as if he had human feelings, and was in any way entitled to human
fellowship and sympathy. It does not refer, therefore, so much to the active
means employed to rejecthim, as to the fact that he was regardedas cut off
from man; and the idea is not essentiallydifferent from this, that he was the
most abjectand vile of mortals in the estimationof others;so vile as not to be
deemed worthy of the treatment due to the lowestof men. This idea has been
substantially expressedin the Syriac translation.
A man of sorrows - What a beautiful expression!A man who was so sadand
sorrowful; whose life was so full of sufferings, that it might be said that that
was the characteristic ofthe man. A similar phraseologyoccurs in Proverbs
29:1, 'He that being often reproved,' in the margin, 'a man of reproofs;' in the
Hebrew, 'A man of chastisements,'thatis, a man who is often chastised.
Compare Daniel 10:11 : 'O Daniel, a man greatlybeloved,' Margin, as in
Hebrew, 'A man of desires;that is, a man greatlydesired. Here, the
expressionmeans that his life was characterizedby sorrows. How remarkably
this was fulfilled in the life of the Redeemer, it is not necessaryto attempt to
show.
And acquainted with grief - Hebrew, ‫דלח‬ ‫ל‬ ‫לח‬ viydûa‛ choliy - 'And knowing
grief.' The word rendered 'grief' means usually sickness, diseaseDeuteronomy
7:15; Deuteronomy 28:61;Isaiah 1:5; but it also means anxiety, affliction
Ecclesiastes5:16;and then any evil or calamity Ecclesiastes6:2. Many of the
old interpreters explain it as meaning, that he was knownor distinguished by
disease;that is, affectedby it in a remarkable manner. So Symm. Γνωστός
νόσῳ Gnōstos nosō. Jerome (the Vulgate) renders it, Scienteminfirmitatem.
The Septuagint renders the whole clause, 'A man in affliction (ἐν πληγῇ en
plēgē), and knowing to bear languor, or disease' (εἰδὼ;φέρειν μαλακίαν eidōs
pherein malakian). But if the word here means disease, it is only a figurative
designationof severe sufferings both of body and of soul. Hengstenberg,
Koppe, and Ammon, suppose that the figure is takenfrom the leprosy, which
was not only one of the most severe ofall diseases, but was in a specialmanner
regardedas a divine judgment. They suppose that many of the expressions
which follow may be explained with reference to this (compare Hebrews 4:15).
The idea is, that he was familiar with sorrow and calamity. It does not mean,
as it seems to me, that he was to be himself sick and diseased;but that he was
to be subjectto various kinds of calamity, and that it was to be a
characteristic ofhis life that he was familiar with it. He was intimate with it.
He knew it personally; he knew it in others. He lived in the midst of scenesof
sorrow, and be became intimately acquainted with its various forms, and with
its evils. There is no evidence that the Redeemerwas himself sick at any time -
which is remarkable - but there is evidence in abundance that he was familiar
with all kinds of sorrow, and that his own life was a life of grief.
And we hid as it were our faces from him - There is here greatvariety of
interpretation and of translation. The margin reads, 'As an hiding of faces
from him,' or 'from us,' or, 'He hid as it were his face from us.' The Hebrew is
literally, 'And as the hiding of faces from him, or from it;' and Hengstenberg
explains it as meaning, 'He was as an hiding of the face before it.' that is, as a
thing or person before whom a man covers his face, because he cannotbear
the disgusting sight. Jerome (the Vulgate) renders it, 'His face was as it were
hidden and despised.'The Septuagint, 'For his countenance was turned away'
(ἀπέστρυπταὶ apestraptai). The Chaldee, 'And when he took awayhis
countenance ofmajesty from us, we were despisedand reputed as nothing.'
Interpreters have explained it in various ways.
1. 'He was as one who hides his face before us;' alluding, as they suppose, to
the Mosaic law, whichrequired lepers to covertheir faces Leviticus 13:45, or
to the custom of covering the face in mourning, or for shame.
2. Others explain it as meaning, 'as one before whom is the covering of the
face, that is, before whom a man covers the face from shame or disgust. So
Gesenius.
3. Others, 'He was as one causing to concealthe face,'that is, he induced
others to coverthe face before him. His sufferings were so terrible as to induce
them to turn away. So John H. Michaelis.
The idea seems to be, that he was as one from whom people hide their faces,
or turn away. This might either arise from a sight of his sufferings, as being so
offensive that they would turn away in pain - as in the case ofa leper; or it
might be, that he was so much an object of contempt, and so unlike what they
expected, that they would hide their faces and turn awayin scorn. This latter I
suppose to be the meaning; and that the idea is, that he was so unlike what
they had expected, that they hid their faces in affectedor real contempt.
And we esteemedhim not - That is, we esteemedhim as nothing; we set no
value on him. In order to give greaterenergyto a declaration, the Hebrews
frequently express a thing positively and then negatively. The prophet had
said that they held him in positive contempt; he here says that they did not
regard him as worthy of their notice. He here speaks in the name of his nation
- as one of the Jewishpeople. 'We, the Jews, the nation to whom he was sent,
did not esteemhim as the Messiah, oras worthy of our affection or regard.'
Jamieson-Fausset-BrownBible Commentary
3. rejected—"forsakenofmen" [Gesenius]. "Mostabjectofmen." Literally,
"He who ceasesfrom men," that is, is no longer regardedas a man
[Hengstenberg]. (See on [851]Isa 52:14;Isa 49:7).
man of sorrows—thatis, whose distinguishing characteristic was sorrows.
acquainted with—familiar by constantcontactwith.
grief—literally, "disease";figuratively for all kinds of calamity (Jer 6:14);
leprosy especiallyrepresentedthis, being a direct judgment from God. It is
remarkable Jesus is not mentioned as having eversuffered under sickness.
and we hid … faces—rather, as one who causes men to hide their faces from
Him (in aversion) [Maurer]. Or, "He was as an hiding of the face before it,"
that is, as a thing before which a man covers his face in disgust
[Hengstenberg]. Or, "as one before whom is the covering of the face";before
whom one covers the face in disgust [Gesenius].
we—the prophet identifying himself with the Jews. See Horsley's view (see on
[852]Isa 53:1).
esteemed… not—negative contempt; the previous words express positive.
Matthew Poole's Commentary
He is despisedand rejectedof men; accountedas the scum of mankind, as one
unworthy of the company and conversationof all men.
A man of sorrows;whose whole life was filled with, and in a manner made up
of, an uninterrupted successionofsorrows and sufferings.
Acquainted with grief; who had constantexperience of and familiar converse
with grievous afflictions; for knowledge is oft takenpractically, or for
experience, as Genesis 3:5 2 Corinthians 5:21, and elsewhere.
We hid as it were our faces from him; we scornedand loathedto look upon
him. Or, as others,
he hid as it were his face from us, as one ashamedto show his face, or to be
seenby any men, as persons conscious to themselves ofany greatdeformity do
commonly shun the sight of men, as lepers did, Leviticus 13:45.
He was despised, and we esteemedhim not: here are divers words expressing
the same thing, to signify both the utmost degree ofcontempt, and how
strange and wonderful a thing it was, that so excellenta person should be so
despised.
Gill's Exposition of the Entire Bible
He is despised, and rejectedof men,.... Or, "ceasethfrom men" (f); was not
admitted into the company and conversationofmen, especiallyoffigure; or
ceasedfrom the class ofmen, in the opinion of others; he was not reckoned
among men, was accounteda worm, and no man; or, if a man, yet not in his
senses,a madman, nay, one that had a devil: or "deficient of men"; he had
none about him of any rank or figure in life, only some few fishermen, and
some women, and publicans, and harlots. The Vulgate Latin versionrenders
it, "the lastof men", the most abject and contemptible of mankind; despised,
because ofthe meanness ofhis birth, and parentage, and education, and of his
outward appearance in public life; because ofhis apostles and audience;
because ofhis doctrines, not agreeablyto carnalreason, and his works, some
of them being done on the sabbath day, and, as they maliciously suggested, by
the help of Satan;and especiallybecause ofhis ignominious sufferings and
death:
a man of sorrows, and acquaintedwith grief: or "knownby grief" (g); he was
known by his troubles, notorious for them; these were his constant
companions, his familiar acquaintance, with whom he was always conversant;
his life was one continued series of sorrow, from the cradle to the cross;in his
infancy his life was soughtfor by Herod, and he was obliged to be takenby his
parents, and flee into Egypt; he ate his bread in sorrow, and with the sweatof
his brow; he met with much sorrow from the hardness and unbelief of men's
hearts, and from the contradictionof sinners againsthimself, and even much
from the frowardness ofhis owndisciples; much from the temptations of
Satan, and more from the wrath and justice of God, as the surety of his
people; he was exceeding sorrowfulin the garden, when his sweatwas as it
were greatdrops of blood; and when on the cross, under the hidings of his
Father's face, under a sense ofdivine displeasure for the sins of his people,
and enduring the pains and agonies ofa shameful and an accurseddeath; he
was made up of sorrows, andgrief was familiar to him. Some render it,
"brokenwith infirmity", or "grief" (h):
and we hid as it were our faces from him; as one loathsome and abominable as
having an aversionto him, and abhorrence of him, as scorning to look at him,
being unworthy of any notice. Some render it, "he hid as it were his face from
us" (i); as conscious ofhis deformity and loathsomeness, andof his being a
disagreeable object, as they said; but the former is best:
he was despised, and we esteemedhim not; which is repeatedto show the
greatcontempt castupon him, and the disesteemhe was had in by all sorts of
persons;professors and profane, high and low, rich poor, rulers and common
people, priests, Scribes, and Pharisees;no setor order of men had any value
for him; and all this disgrace and dishonour he was to undergo, to repair the
loss of honour the Lord sustained by the sin of man, whose surety Christ
became.
(f) "desiit viris", Montanus, Heb.; "desitus virorum", Piscator;"deficiens
virorum", Cocceius;"destitutus viris", Vitringa. (g) "notus aegritudine",
Montanus; "notus infirmitate," Cocceius.(h) "Attritus infirmitate"; so some
in Vatablus, and R. Sol. Urbin. Ohel. Moed. fol. 96. 1.((i) "velut homo
abscondens faciema nobis", Junius & Tremellius; "ettanquam aliquis qui
obtegit faciema nobis", Piscator;"ut res tecta facie averanda prae nobis",
Cocceius.
Geneva Study Bible
He is despisedand rejectedby men; a man of sorrows, and acquaintedwith
{e} grief: and we hid as it were our faces from him; he was despised, and we
esteemedhim not.
(e) Which was by God's singular providence for the comfortof sinners, He
4:15.
EXEGETICAL(ORIGINAL LANGUAGES)
Cambridge Bible for Schools andColleges
3. Notonly did the Servantfail to attract his contemporaries (Isaiah53:2);
there was that in his appearance which excited positive aversion. He is
representedas one strickenwith loathsome and disfiguring disease, probably
leprosy (see on Isaiah53:4), so that men instinctively recoiledfrom him in
horror and disgust.
He is despisedand rejectedof men] Better, Despisedand man-forsaken, i.e.
one with whom men refuse to associate, or, perhaps, one who renounces the
hope of human fellowship. The corresponding verb is used by Job when he
complains of the estrangementof his friends: “my kinsfolk have failed” (ch.
Isaiah19:14).
For sorrows … grief, read pains … sickness.Although both words may be
used tropically of mental suffering, it is plain that in the figure of this verse
and the following they are to be takenin their literal sense.
and we hid &c.]More literally, and as one from whom there is a hiding of the
face;his appearance was suchas to cause men involuntarily to covertheir face
from the sight of him. The expressionis similar to another phrase of Job’s:“I
am a spitting in the face” (Isaiah17:6). For the idea cf. Job 19:19;Job 30:10.
Leprosy is againsuggested. The rendering of LXX. and Vulg. “and as one who
hid his face from us” is grammatically defensible, but conveys a wrong idea;
the Servant“hid not his face from shame and spitting” (ch. Isaiah 50:6).
esteemedhim not] (lit “reckonedhim not”), held him of no account.
Pulpit Commentary
Verse 3. - He is despised; rather, was despised(comp. Isaiah49:7 and Psalm
22:6). Men's contempt was shown, partly in the little attention which they
paid to his teaching, partly in their treatment of him on the night and day
before the Crucifixion (Matthew 26:67, 68; Matthew 27:29-31;Mark 14:65;
Mark 15:18, 19, etc.). Rejectedof men; rather, perhaps, forsakenofmen -
"one from whom men held themselves aloof" (Cheyne); comp. Job 19:14. Our
Lord had at no time more than a "little flock" attachedto him. Of these, after
a time, "many went back, and walkedno more with him" (John 6:66). Some,
who believed on him, would only come to him by night (John 3:2). All the
"rulers" and greatmen held alooffrom him (John 7:48). At the end, even his
apostles "forsook him, and fled" (Matthew 26:56). A Man of sorrows.The
word translated "sorrows" means also pains of any kind. But the beautiful
rendering of our version may well stand, since there are many places where
the word used certainly means "sorrow" and nothing else (see Exodus 3:7; 2
Chronicles 6:29; Psalm32:10; Psalm38:17; Ecclesiastes1:18;Jeremiah30:15;
Jeremiah45:3; Lamentations 1:12, 18, etc.). Aquila well translates, ἄνδρα
ἀλγηδόνωνThe "sorrows" ofJesus appearon every page of the Gospels.
Acquainted with grief; literally, with sickness;but as aegerand aegritudo are
applied in Latin both to the mind and to the body, so kholi, the word here
used, would seemto be in Hebrew (see Jeremiah6:7; Jeremiah10:19). The
translation of the Authorized Versionmay therefore be retained. We hid as it
were our faces from him; literally, and there was as it were the hiding of the
face from him. Some suppose the hiding of God's face to be intended; but the
context, which describes the treatment of the Servant by his fellow-men,
makes the meaning given in our version far preferable. Men turned their faces
from him when they met him, would not see him, would not recognize him
(comp. Job 19:13-17;Job 30:10). Despised. A repetition very characteristicof
Isaiah(see Isaiah 1:7; Isaiah 3:12; Isaiah4:3; Isaiah 6:11; Isaiah14:25; Isaiah
15:8; Isaiah 17:12, 13, etc.).
Keil and DelitzschBiblical Commentary on the Old Testament
This salvationin its immediate manifestationis the liberation of the exiles;
and on the ground of what the prophet sees in spirit, he exclaims to them (as
in Isaiah 48:20), in Isaiah 52:11, Isaiah52:12 : "Go ye forth, go ye forth, go
out from thence, lay hold of no unclean thing; go ye out of the midst of her,
cleanse yourselves,ye that bear the vessels ofJehovah. Forye shall not go out
in confusion, and ye shall not go forth in flight: for Jehovahgoethbefore you,
and the God of Israel is your rear-guard." When they go out from thence, i.e.,
from Babylon, they are not to touch anything unclean, i.e., they are not to
enrich themselves with the property of their now subjugated oppressors, as
was the case atthe exodus from Egypt (Exodus 12:36). It is to be a holy
procession, atwhich they are to appearmorally as wellas corporeally
unstained. But those who bear the vesselsofJehovah, i.e., the vessels ofthe
temple, are not only not to defile themselves, but are to purify themselves
(hibbârū with the tone upon the last syllable, a regularimperative niphal of
bârar). This is an indirect prophecy, and was fulfilled in the fact that Cyrus
directed the goldenand silver vessels, whichNebuchadnezzarhad brought to
Babylon, to be restoredto the returning exiles as their rightful property (Ezra
1:7-11). It would thus be possible for them to put themselves into the right
attitude for their departure, since it would not take place in precipitous haste
(bechippâzon), as the departure from Egypt did (Deuteronomy 16:3, cf.,
Exodus 12:39), nor like a flight, but they would go forth under the guidance of
Jehovah. ‫םכפּסאמ‬ (with the ē changedinto the original ı̆) does not man, "He
bringeth you, the scatteredones, together,"but according to Numbers 10:25;
Joshua 6:9, Joshua 6:13, "He closes yourprocession," -He not only goes
before you to lead you, but also behind you, to protect you (as in Exodus
14:19). For the me'assēph, or the rear-guardof an army, is its keystone, and
has to preserve the compactnessofthe whole.
The division of the chapters generallycoincides with the severalprophetic
addresses.But here it needs emendation. Mostof the commentators are
agreedthat the words "Behold my servant," etc. (hinnēh yaskı̄l ‛abhdı̄)
commence a new section, like hēn ‛abhdı̄ (behold my servant) in Isaiah42:1.
END OF BIBLEHUB RESOURCES
Man of Sorrows
—Isaiah53
This lessoncomes from what may well be regardedas the chief chapter of the
book of Isaiah. Chapter 53 is the prophecy of the suffering servant.
We'll begin where the chapter should really begin, at the words, "Beholdmy
Servant..." (Isaiah52:13), and continue through all of chapter 53. We won't
attempt to gleaneverything these 15 verses offer, but will concentrate onthe
key statement, He was despisedand forsakenofmen, a man of sorrows and
acquainted with grief" (Isaiah 53:3).
This statementrefers to Christ’s suffering on the cross, where "his
appearance was marred more than any man..." (Isaiah52:13-14). Our
passageends with the statement, "He poured out himself unto death and was
numbered with the transgressors —yethe himself bore the sins of many and
interceded for the transgressors (Isaiah53:12).
Christ suffered death to atone for our sins. Atonement means to make “at
one” with God those who are separatedfrom him by sin (1John2:1-2).
He rose to intercede for us as our greatHigh Priestwho ever lives.
Intercessionmeans being our advocate with God, representing us before God.
(Romans 8:34 Hebrews 7:25-27). This is the focus of our lesson.
Man of sorrows acquaintedwith grief
Isaiah53:1-3
In the hearts of unbelievers, Christ "has no form or majesty... that we should
be attracted to him". As believers, however, he does attract us, because like us
he is "a man of sorrows and acquainted with grief". The very thing that
makes some people despise him, makes us turn to him, because he
understands our struggles and hurts and sorrows.
In him we see Godnot as a remote and incomprehensible Being, but as "a
man..." who is truly one of us. Moreover, as "a man of sorrows" he has been
through the same sorrows andtemptations as we experience and therefore is
able to understand and sympathise with us (Hebrews 4:14-16).
1 He has power to overcome tribulations
Isaiah53:4
Christ is pictured as one who "bore our griefs and carriedour sorrows. This
is more than just understanding and being acquainted with our sorrows and
griefs;it's shouldering those troubles and lifting the burden from us. When
Matthew points to the fulfillment of this prophecy, he shows Jesushealing the
sick and casting out demons. Jesus has power to overcome tribulation.
(Matthew 8:16-17).
We cancome to Christ not only for understanding but for overcoming. He'll
listen to our troubles and be sympathetic; but better still he'll empower us to
overcome and conquer.
2 He dealt with our deepestneeds
Isaiah53:5-6,10
It's bad enough that life is so uncertain, and ever so short —death comes to us
all, and always too soon. But worse still, we have sins to condemn us when
death thrusts us before our Maker.
Oh for a way to make death not the end of life but the beginning of a far more
wonderful life that never ends! Oh for a wayto getrid of our guilt and make
us worthy to enter into that life! There is such a way, and Christ is it (John
14:2,3,6, Romans 3:23-26).
The prophecy "He shall see seed, he shall prolong days" speaks ofthe
everlasting life and joy that Christ gives us because he became "a guilt
offering" on our behalf (Isaiah 53:10).
3 He set us an example to follow his steps
Isaiah53:6-7
The manner in which Jesus lived, and died, causes us to follow him. If we
would walk in someone’s steps,we canhave no better example and shepherd
than Jesus. "All we like sheephave gone astray". He who himself was "led as
a lamb to the slaughter" is able now to be our shepherd. He'll be our spiritual
guide along the right path and lead us to green pastures of eternal life (1Peter
2:20-25, Psalms 23).
https://simplybible.com/f055-isaiah53-man-of-sorrows.htm
Man of Sorrows
Author: Ray C. Stedman
Readthe Scripture: Isaiah53
It has become evident through this prophecy that Someone is coming. That
dim and shadowyFigure which appears occasionallyin the opening chapters
is emerging ever more clearly as we move through this book. Here in the 53rd
chapter the Messiahsteps out into full and glorious view.
It is hard to understand how anyone can read this greatchapter and not see
Jesus in it. We have already commented on the factthat, through the
centuries, Jewishpeople have held that it does not refer to Jesus ofNazareth,
but rather that the nation of Israel is the "Servant of Jehovah." The primary
reasonfor their feeling is that they expecteda different kind of Messiah. The
Jews had done like many of us do with Scripture -- they had selectedverses
that appealedto them and formulated from them a vision of a Delivererwho
would come with military might and power. He would overcome the Roman
tyrants, they thought, setIsrael free, and fulfill the promises of God to make it
the chief of the nations of earth. Because ourLord did not fulfill those
promises, they have maintained that this prophecy does not apply to him. Yet
here in this greatchapter it is clearthat God's suffering Servant is brought
before us.
The passageactuallybegins in the closing verses ofChapter 52, which belong
with Chapter 53. Takentogetherwith it, these verses constitute five stanzas
that depict various foreviews of the work of the Messiah, eachone bringing
out a different aspectofhis work and life. Beginning in Verse 13, Chapter 52,
we have God himself announcing the presence ofthe Servant.
Behold, my servant shall prosper,
he shall be exalted and lifted up,
and shall be very high.
As many were astonishedat him --
his appearance was so marred, beyond human semblance,
and his form beyond that of the sons of men --
so shall he startle many nations;
kings shall shut their mouths because of him;
for that which has not been told them they shall see,
and that which they have not heard they shall understand. (Isaiah 52:13-15
RSV)
This section, which describes the remarkable impact that the Messiahwould
make upon mankind, opens with a declarationthat he would be successfulin
all that he did: "Behold, my servant shall prosper." That success wouldbe
accomplishedin three specific stages, describedhere:"He shall be exalted; he
shall be lifted up; he shall be very high." Commentators see in this the events
that happened to Jesus afterthe crucifixion:
First, in the words, "He shall be exalted," there is a reference to the
resurrection. Jesus was brought back from the dead, stepping into a condition
of life that no man had ever enteredbefore. Lazarus had been resurrected, in
a sense, but he merely returned to this earthly life. Jesus, however, becamethe
"firstborn from the dead," (Colossians 1:18). He was thus exalted to a higher
dimension of existence.
Then, "he shall be lifted up." After his resurrection, Jesus took his disciples to
the Mount of Olives and while he was speaking to them he ascendedinto the
heavens until a cloud receivedhim out of sight. So he was physically and
literally "lifted up."
Thirdly, the passagesays, "He shallbe very high." The Hebrew puts it rather
graphically: "He shall be high, very." We cannotbut recallthe words of the
Apostle Paul in the letter to the Philippians. Speaking of Jesus, he says,
"Wherefore Godhas highly exalted him and given him the name which is
above every name, that at the name of Jesus everyknee shall bow and every
tongue confess thatJesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father,"
(Philippians 2:9-11). Thus by his resurrection, his ascension, and his kingly
exaltation the Messiahhas made tremendous impact upon humanity.
Further, it is said of him here that "many were astonishedat him." This
happened in two different ways. First, as Verse 14 implies, many were
"astonished" athis death: "His appearance was so marred, beyond human
semblance, and his form beyond that of the sons of men." This is descriptive
of the face of Jesus afterhe had endured the terrible Romanscourging, the
beatings, the blows to his face with the rod, which the soldiers mockingly
calleda king's scepter, and the crushing of the crown of thorns upon his head.
By the time he was impaled on the cross, his face was a bloody mess. This is
what the prophet sees:our Lord's appearance was so marred that those who
passedby were "astonished" athis visage.
But Verse 15 describes another form of astonishment: "so shallhe startle
many nations." This refers to the tremendous accomplishments he achieved,
not only during his ministry, but through the intervening centuries since.
Many have commented on the remarkable achievements of Jesus. Kenneth
ScottLatourette, a wellknown historian, has said,
As the centuries pass, the evidence is accumulating that, measuredby his
effecton history, Jesus is the most influential life ever lived on this planet.
G.K. Chesterton, that remarkable English Christian novelist and literary
critic, has written,
There was a man who dwelt in the Eastcenturies ago, and now I cannot look
at a sheep or a sparrow, a lily or a cornfield, a raven or a sunset, a vineyard or
a mountain without thinking of him. If this be not to be divine, what is it?
Truly, our Lord has made an astonishing impact upon our world. He is the
Man who cannot be forgotten.
The first three verses ofChapter 53 describe the Messiah's strange rejection.
These words express the feelings of the repentant nation when at last they
recognize him at his return. The prophet cries out as the voice of the nation,
Who has believed our report?
And to whom has the arm of the Lord been revealed?
For he grew up before him like a young plant,
and like a root out of dry ground;
he had no form or comeliness that we should look at him,
and no beauty that we should desire him.
He was despisedand rejectedby men;
a man of sorrows,and acquainted with grief;
and as one from whom men hide their faces
he was despised, and we esteemedhim not. (Isaiah53:1-3 RSV)
These remarkable words are felt by any person who comes to Christ and
remembers how lightly he regardedhim when he first learned of him. Here
the nation asks, "Who has believed our report, that which we have heard. The
arm of the Lord was revealedto us, but we did not understand who he was."
Looking back, they cansee how he fulfilled these words.
He grew up before Jehovah as a "young plant." That speaks ofthe hidden
years at Nazareth when, in the obscurity of the carpenter's shop no one knew
who he was excepthis Heavenly Father. He was the "root out of dry ground."
We have alreadyseenIsaiah's prediction that a root would rise up from the
stem of David, from whom Josephand Mary were both descended. But the
House of David had fallen on evil days. The royal line had become
impoverished and no one recognizedits claims to leadership within Israel.
When our Lord came he was indeed a root out of very dry ground.
The passagecontinues, "He had no form or comeliness that we should look at
him, and no beauty that we should desire him." Again, these are words that
refer to our Lord's appearance as he hung upon the cross. He was a pitiful
figure to behold, hanging naked, blood covering his face, worn and shattered
by suffering. Indeed he had "no beauty that we should desire him."
He was truly "a man of sorrows, andacquainted with grief." There is no
record in Scripture that Jesus everlaughed. I think he did laugh, for you
cannot read some of his parables, or some of the things he said to his disciples,
without sensing a smile on his face or hearing a chuckle in his voice. But there
is no accountthat he everlaughed. He was "a man of sorrows and acquainted
with grief."
We must remember that all through his boyhood, and even into his manhood,
he was pursued by nasty cracks abouthis birth, inferring that he was an
illegitimate son, born to a faithless maiden who had broken her vow of
betrothal. His brothers misunderstood him and did not believe in him. They
were embarrassedat some of the things he said and did. It was not until after
the resurrectionthat they believed in him. He was calleda drunkard and a
glutton, and was said to be possessedby a devil. He was called a Samaritan, a
disparaging term. He had no home to go to. He said himself, "Foxes have
holes, birds have their nests, but the Son of Man has nowhere to lay his head,"
(Matthew 8:20, Luke 9:50). Sometimes his disciples left him alone to go about
their business, but he had to go out to the Gardenof Gethsemane and sleep
alone beneath the o lives trees. He became at one point "Public Enemy No. 1."
In the weeks before his crucifixion the Phariseesoffereda rewardto anyone
who would turn him in. Surely he was rejectedof men! In the words of the
Apostle John, "He came unto his own, and his own people receivedhim not,"
(John 1:11 RSV).
The next stanza portrays our Lord's substitutionary sacrifice:
Surely he has borne our griefs
and carried our sorrows;
yet we esteemedhim stricken,
smitten by God, and afflicted.
But he was wounded for our transgressions,
he was bruised for our iniquities;
upon him was the chastisementthat made us whole,
and with his stripes we are healed.
All we like sheephave gone astray;
we have turned every one to his own way;
and the Lord has laid on him
the iniquity of us all. (Isaiah 53:4-6 RSV)
This, of course, is the very heart of the gospel, the goodnews. Jesus took our
place. As Peterputs it, "He bore our sins in his own body upon the tree," 1
Peter2:24). He took our sins and paid the price for them. He had no sins of his
own and Scripture is very careful to record the sinlessnessofJesus himself.
He was not suffering for his own transgressions, but for the sins of others. One
writer has put it rather well,
It was for me that Jesus died,
For me and a world of men
Just as sinful and just as slow to give back his love again.
And he did not waituntil I came to him.
He loved me at my worst.
He needn't ever have died for me
If I could have loved him first.
That is the problem, isn't it? Why do not we love him first? Why is it that we
can only learn to love our Lord when we have beheld his suffering; his
excruciating agony on our behalf? Why is it we find such difficulty in obeying
the first commandment, "Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart
and all thy soul, and all thy strength," (Deuteronomy 6:5 KJV). It is because
of our transgressions, as this passage declares.Theyhave cut us off from the
divine gift of love that ought to be in every human heart.
Sin is a disease thathas afflicted our entire race. We cannot understand the
depth of human depravity until we see the awful agonythrough which our
Lord passed;behold the hours of darkness and hear the terrible orphaned
cry, "My God, my God, why hast Thou forsakenme?" (Matthew 27:46, Mark
15:34 KJV). All this spells out for us what we really are like. Mostthink of
ourselves as decentpeople, goodpeople. We have not done, perhaps, some of
the terrible things that others have done. But w hen we see in the cross of
Jesus the depth of evil in our hearts we understand that sin is a disease that
has infiltrated our whole lives. Man, who was createdin the image of God and
once wore the glory of his manhood, has become bruised and marred, sick and
broken, his conscienceruined, his understanding faulty, his will enfeebled.
The principle of integrity and the resolve to do right has been completely
undermined in all of us. We know this to be true. No wonder, then, this verse
comes as the best of news: He was wounded for our transgressions.The
bruising that he felt was the chastisementthat we deserved, but it was laid
upon him.
There is no way to read this and fail to see that our Lord is the greatdivine
Substitute for the evil of the human heart. We can lay hold of this personally
by the honest admissionstatedin Verse 6: "All we like sheep have gone
astray; we have turned every one to his own way." How true that is of eachof
us! Who canclaim anything else? I grew up in Monta-a-a-a-na, andI know
something about sheep. Sheepare very foolishand willful creatures. Theycan
find a hole in the fence and get out, but they cannotfind it to getback in.
Someone must go and get them every time. How true are the words, "We have
turned every one to his own way."
Frank Sinatra made a song popular a few years ago, "I Did It My Way."
When you hear that it sounds like something admirable, something everybody
ought to emulate. How proud we feel that we did it "our way." But when you
turn to the recordof the Scripture, you find that that is the problem, not the
solution. Everyone is doing things "their way," so we have a race that is in
constantconflict, foreverstriving with one another, unable to work anything
out, because we all did it "our way."
The way to lay hold of the redemption of Jesus is to admit that "All we like
sheephave gone astray. We have turned every one to his own way"; and then
to believe the next line, "But the Lord has laid on him the iniquity of us all."
One Christian put his testimony in a rather quaint way. He said, "I stooped
down low and went in at the first 'all,' and I stoodup straight and came out at
the last." Notice that this verse begins and ends with the word "all": "All we
like sheephave gone astray." This man said, "I stoopeddown low and went in
at that 'all.'" In other words, "I acknowledgedthat I, too, was part of that
crowdthat had gone astray." Ah, "But I stoodup straight and came out at the
Jesus was a man of sorrows
Jesus was a man of sorrows
Jesus was a man of sorrows
Jesus was a man of sorrows
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Jesus was comparing the kingdom of god to yeast
 
Jesus was telling a shocking parable
Jesus was telling a shocking parableJesus was telling a shocking parable
Jesus was telling a shocking parable
 
Jesus was telling the parable of the talents
Jesus was telling the parable of the talentsJesus was telling the parable of the talents
Jesus was telling the parable of the talents
 
Jesus was explaining the parable of the sower
Jesus was explaining the parable of the sowerJesus was explaining the parable of the sower
Jesus was explaining the parable of the sower
 
Jesus was warning against covetousness
Jesus was warning against covetousnessJesus was warning against covetousness
Jesus was warning against covetousness
 
Jesus was explaining the parable of the weeds
Jesus was explaining the parable of the weedsJesus was explaining the parable of the weeds
Jesus was explaining the parable of the weeds
 
Jesus was laughing
Jesus was laughingJesus was laughing
Jesus was laughing
 
Jesus was and is our protector
Jesus was and is our protectorJesus was and is our protector
Jesus was and is our protector
 
Jesus was not a self pleaser
Jesus was not a self pleaserJesus was not a self pleaser
Jesus was not a self pleaser
 
Jesus was to be our clothing
Jesus was to be our clothingJesus was to be our clothing
Jesus was to be our clothing
 
Jesus was the source of unity
Jesus was the source of unityJesus was the source of unity
Jesus was the source of unity
 
Jesus was love unending
Jesus was love unendingJesus was love unending
Jesus was love unending
 
Jesus was our liberator
Jesus was our liberatorJesus was our liberator
Jesus was our liberator
 
Jesus was our new marriage partner
Jesus was our new marriage partnerJesus was our new marriage partner
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Jesus was a man of sorrows

  • 1. JESUS WAS A MAN OF SORROWS EDITED BY GLENN PEASE Isaiah53:3 3He was despisedand rejected by mankind, a man of suffering, and familiarwith pain. Like one from whom peoplehide their faces he was despised, and we held him in low esteem. BIBLEHUB RESOURCES Pulpit Commentary Homiletics The RejectedSaviour Isaiah53:3 W.M. Statham He is desvisedand rejectedof men; a Man of sorrows, andacquainted with grief. He! Who? The incarnate Lord, who has grown up in childhood as a "tender plant;" who is the one "living root," while all others are the dry soil of a decrepit and degenerate humanity. I. THIS REVEALS TO US WHAT THE HEBREW CHURCH WAS. Christ was the "touchstone" ofthat Church. Its conduct to him made manifest to what a condition they had come. Think of the contrast. Pharisaismwas triumphant - Christ was despised. The outward, the formal, the ritual, was preferred before the holy, the inward, and the spiritual. Christ was "rejected." Theyhad the first opportunity of welcoming the "Lord from
  • 2. heaven." "To the Jew first." How learned men may be in tradition! how well acquainted with the 'Mishna' and the 'Gemara,'and yet know ail of ancient revelation exceptits meaning! The greatgates ofprophecy open wide to lot the true King through; and then treat him as a Pretender, and crownhim with thorns. II. THIS REVEALS TO US WHAT CHRIST WAS ON THE HUMAN SIDE. "A Man of sorrows."Think of his exquisite moral sensitivenessin a world of sin. Think of his tender human sympathies in a world of sorrow. "Acquainted with grief." Not in one specialform, but in all its spheres, that he might be a Brother born for adversity. Acquainted with it. So that he had daily fellowship with it; not passing through its transient experiences, but familiar with it as the companion of his life. - W.M.S. Biblical Illustrator He is despisedand rejectedof men. Isaiah53:3-7
  • 3. The mean appearance ofthe Redeemerforetold T. Sherlock, D.D. I. THE WISDOM AND GOODNESSOF GOD IN DETERMININGTO SEND HIS SON INTO THE WORLD IN A STATE OF POVERTYAND AFFLICTION. 1. With regardto His being a teacher, His sufferings set Him above the reach of suspicions. What ends could He have to serve by His doctrine, who met with nothing but misery and affliction, as the rewardof His labour? 2. With regardto our Lord's being an example of holiness and obedience set before us for our instruction and imitation. His sufferings render the pattern perfect, and show His virtues in their truest lustre, and at the same time silence the pleas which laziness or self-love would otherwise have suggested. 3. With regardto His Divine mission. His sufferings were an evident token that the hand of God was with Him. He only can produce strength out of weakness,and knows how to confound the mighty things of the world by things which are of no account. Add to this the evidence of prophecy, which is so much the strongerby how much the weakerChrist was:so admirably has the wisdomof God displayed itself in this mystery of faith. II. THE EVIDENCE OF PROPHECYCONCERNING THE MEAN APPEARANCE OUR LORD WAS TO MAKE. III. THE HISTORICAL EVIDENCE WE HAVE FOR THE COMPLETION OF THESE PROPHECIES. (T. Sherlock, D.D.) Christ despisedand rejectedof men R. Walker. I. IN WHAT RESPECTSIT MAY STILL BE SAID THAT CHRIST IS DESPISEDAND REJECTED OF MEN.
  • 4. 1. Men may be said to despise Christ when they do not receive Him as their alone Saviour, the true and only way to the Father. 2. When they practically deny His authority by breaking His Commandments. 3. When they do not give Him the chief room in their hearts, nor prefer Him in their choice to everything else. 4. When they do not publicly, confess Him before men. II. THE CAUSES OF THIS CONTEMPT. 1. The main cause is a secretunbelief. 2. Love of this would. 3. Ignorance oftheir owncondition. 4. An opinion that they may obtain His aid at what time soeverthey shall choose to ask it. III. THE MALIGNITY OF THIS SIN. 1. To despise and rejectsuch a Saviour, is the blackestingratitude that can possibly be imagined. 2. Your ingratitude is heightened by the most insolent contempt both of the wisdom and goodnessofGod. 3. By despising and rejecting Christ, you openly proclaim war againstthe MostHigh, and bid Him defiance. (R. Walker.) Designedand rejected J. Higgins. I. CHRIST WAS AN OBJECTOF SCORN AND CONTEMPT. 1. He was despisedas an impostor.
  • 5. 2. Despisedin His teachings. 3. In his work. 4. In His claims to a righteous judgment at the national tribunal. II. NOT ONLY WAS JESUS AN OBJECT OF CONTEMPTAND SCORN BUT OF ABSOLUTE REJECTION. If the word had read "neglected," — deserted, coldly passedby — this would have revealedan indifference that would have coveredHis nation and age with reproach, and would have stood out a lasting monument of their base ingratitude. But here is a word conveying the idea of the most inveterate and active hatred. But why this active hostility to Christ? (J. Higgins.) Despisedand rejectedof men S. H. Tindall. In the Gospelwe see this rejectionin actualoccurrence. I. HE WAS DESPISED AND REJECTEDBY THE WORLDLY-MINDED (John 6). Following Christ for the sake of bread may lead to much enthusiastic and self-denying exertion. Here, the very meanestview of Christ is preferred to those lofty and spiritual truths by which He tried to allure and save their souls. In his presence, before His face, while listening to His voice, and with the splendour of the miracle before them — all are passedby for the bread. Is not this the essenceofworldly-mindedness? Christianity is the religion of many, not for the sake ofthe Lord Himself, nor His gracious words, nor even His miracles, but for the bread, for reputation's sake, and socialcharacterandrespectability. II. HE WAS DESPISEDAND REJECTED BYTHE RATIONALIST (Matthew 13:54-57). It was in "His own country." There men thought they knew Him; His family had long dwelt there. Parents, brothers, sisters were all familiarly known— all, down to their very trade: "Is not this the carpenter?"
  • 6. The facts of the case,as the rationalist is so fond of saying, were all clearly apprehended, and stoodforth in their true dimensions. "Whence hath this man this wisdom and these mighty works?" Is it real? is it not on the face of it absurd, this mere carpenter's son? This is the inmost spirit of rationalism. It rejects everything above the level of visible and tangible fact, everything that cannot be weighedand measured, everything spiritual in Scripture doctrine and supernatural in Scripture history. III. HE IS DESPISEDAND REJECTED BYTHE ECCLESIASTIC (Matthew 21:15-23). The ecclesiasticaltemperis not found solely or chiefly amongstthose who are ecclesiasticsby profession. The religious spirit may be crushed — indeed, has often been; rigid and severe forms may take the place of the easyand gracefulmotions of vital Christianity. "This" is "the rejection of Christ in the freedom by which His Holy Spirit "distributes to every man severallyas He will." IV. HE IS DESPISEDAND REJECTED BYMEN OF BRUTE FORCE (Luke 23:11). To some the tenderness of the Gospelreligion is an offence. Humanity is a peculiarly Christian virtue, and meeknessand resignation. The calm tranquillity of meditation, the tearful eye of compassion, the sublime courage ofpatience, the dating heroism of forgiveness, excite no sympathy or admiration in some breasts. Theirs is the rejectionof Christ; through a false manliness. V. CHRIST IS DESPISED AND REJECTEDBYHIS OWN (John 1:11). Some, from a natural sweetness andamiability of disposition, seemin a certain degree adaptedto be Christians. The restraining effects ofhome discipline and generous educationhave restrained them from open transgression. Yet their rejectionof Christ as a Saviour from sin is often most decided and even disdainful. They think the charge of sin inappropriate, for they have no consciousnessofit, and no felt need of a Saviour. The sinfulness of rejecting Christ is seenin its being a rejectionof the Father(Luke 10:16). It is not possible to rejectChrist, and be right with God. (S. H. Tindall.)
  • 7. Failure C. G. Lang. In a life that is lived with the thoughts of eternity, in one aspectfailure is inevitable: in another aspectfailure is impossible. 1. Failure is inevitable. If I acceptfor myself an ideal which is beyond the limits of here and now, then manifestly it is impossible that I can here and now realize it. There must be always with me, so long as I am faithful to that ideal, a sense ofincompleteness, a ceaselessaspiration, an effort that only the grave can close. He knows if he is faithful that he has before him an eternal career, that the end to which he is moving is likeness to Jesus Christ; that he has to pass into the unveiled presence of God and hold communion with Him. If that be the end, can it be otherwise than that, in the meanwhile, there should be failure, humiliation, penitence, and ceaselessand unwearied discipline of self? 2. Failure, in another aspect, is impossible. Only be sure that deep down at the root of life there is loyalty to God, and then begin where we are placed — in the effort to find Him He will fulfil the search. The miracle of the failure of Calvary is our assurance ofthat truth. It is this living for the Eternal, as a venture of faith, which has always appealedto the eternalGod, which His own nature is pledged to meet. Do we stumble? It is only that we may realize His readiness to help. Are we bewildered? It is only in order that we may find how sure He guides. Are we humiliated by our confessions?It is only that we may realize the readiness of His pardon. Are we conscious andstrickenwith the sense ofour weakness?It is only that we may find His strength perfected within us. If we have only takensides with Him in the greatissues of human life, then He will justify our choice. (C. G. Lang.) Failure may be welcomed C. G. Lang.
  • 8. Our failure in the light of the Cross, our spiritual failures, are things to be welcomed;they prevent the torpor of dull assurancecreeping overus like a poison; they prevent our falling under imperfect standards of life, they prove, so long as their are constantwith us, that the energyof the Spirit of God has not left us to ourselves;they witness to us that we recognize the truth that our souls can find their restand satisfactiononly in God. (C. G. Lang.) The despisedSaviour R. C. Ford, M.A. To all God grants some dim vision of what He intends man to be. The holiest men have had the clearestglimpses ofthat character. One nation was separatedto keepthe ideal before the world. The majority corrupted the representation, but some prophets saw it clearly. I. GOD'S IDEAL FOR MAN, AND ITS REALIZATION IN CHRIST. The majority thought He would be another Solomon, David's greaterson. The prophet saw that He would be a Sinless Sufferer; what it had been intended that the nation should be, that the Suffering Servant would be. The voice of God, which setforth the ideal by the lips of prophets, now speaks throughour own highest desires. II. THE WORLD'S RECEPTION OF THE REVEALED IDEAL. Pilate has brought Him forth that His suffering may excite their pity, but His pure and loving life has made them relentless in their hate. There is no beauty that they should desire Him. Barabbas, the bold and reckless, is the people's choice. While boon companions crowdround him, cold looks and scornful smiles are reservedfor Christ. Christ had headed no revolt againstthe powers that be, and therefore He was not popular. Politicalemancipationis more popular than spiritual. The path of righteousness ends on Calvary; its crown is one of thorns, its throne a cross.
  • 9. III. THE MEANING OF THE REVELATION OF THIS IDEAL. The world says, Blessedare the wealthy, the powerful, the great, and the wise. Christ says, Blessedare the poor in spirit, the pure in heart, the meek, the mourners, the persecuted. At first we pity Christ, and reserve our indignation for His persecutors. ButHe was the leastpitiable of all that group. Pilate was a pitiable victim, the people were pitiable because carriedawayby passion, and the priests by desire for revenge. The greatnessofapparent weaknessis here revealed. Yet we despise weakness. Here is a dramatic representationof weighty decisions made every day in human hearts. When we choose easeand worldly glory in preference to holiness and self-denial, we despise and reject Christ. Here our choice is seenworkedout to the bitter end. This is a revelation of the meaning of sin. IV. THE EFFECT OF THIS REVELATION. The world cannever forget that spiracle. In the dark ages,whenthe Bible was a hidden book, a representation of this scene was to be found in every church. Though obscuredby superstition, the ideal was still held up, and was still moulding the minds and stimulating the holy endeavours of men. In an open Bible we have the ideal more truthfully setforth. The love there revealedhas been the constraining motive which moved apostles to preach, martyrs to suffer, missionaries to forgo the joys of home, and humble men and women to labour in countless ways to advance the interests of Christ. His patience shames our murmuring: His burning love to us kindles our love to Him. (R. C. Ford, M.A.) The world's regardfor the outward H. Allen, D.D. The greatcause assignedby the prophet for the astonishment of men at the Messiahand for their rejection of Him is, that His real glory is hidden beneath humiliation and sorrow. The world, that is, which always looks atthe outward appearance ofthings, judges them according to their material splendours; having a carnaleye, it can but dimly discern moral beauty. It renders homage
  • 10. to thrones and crowns, and wealth and power, and does not care to see the moral iniquity and the spiritual repulsiveness there may be behind them; it feels pity and contempt for suffering and poverty and obloquy, and does not care to see the moral grandeur that these may coveror indicate. There are few of us so reverent to a poor, godly man, as to a rich godless one. We may not refuse to utter words commending the one and condemning the other, but we utter them very tenderly; the goodness ofa rich man causes us to exhaust our expletives, and almostourselves, in admiring praise; the wickedness ofa poor man is denounced by us without mercy; but when the conditions are reversed we have a great dealmore reserve. Our praise is a concessionthat we cannot withhold. We blame "with bated breath, and whispering humbleness." The raggedgarments of poverty have a wonderful transparencywhen vice lies behind them; while riches usurp the powers of charity, and "hide the multitude of sins." (H. Allen, D.D.) The art of seeing the spiritual H. Allon, D.D. The Jews did not look for spiritual meaning in their dispensation, but simply at material and mechanicalordinances, and they became Pharisees — regarding religionas a thing of phylacteries and tithes and streetprayers: they did not look for spiritual glory in their expectedMessiah, orfor spiritual blessings in His coming, and they became absorbedin the conceptionof a temporal prince, and were incapable of seeing anything else in Him; and, because He was not this, in their astonishment and anger, they rejectedand crucified Him. The lessonis a universal one; it affects the spiritual education of every soul, our own daily habits of interpreting things. We may look at God's world until we see nothing of God's presence in it; nothing but mechanicalforces. A scientific or philosophicaleye may sooneducate itself to see nothing but science and philosophy; a material eye, to see nothing but materialism. We may look upon creation, and see no Creator;upon providence, and see no Benefactor. So we may read the Bible, and see nothing
  • 11. but sacredhistory, or scientific philosophy — the letter and not the spirit. So we may look at Christian things on their material rather than their spiritual side. We may speculate upon a millennium coming of Christ, until we forget His spiritual presence — even upon heaven itself, until we forget the inward grace, and holiness and Divine communion that chiefly make it heaven. Let us carefully cultivate the Divine art of seeing spiritual aspects andmeanings in all things, of judging of all things by their spiritual importance, of valuing them for their spiritual influence, of applying them to spiritual uses. "The pure in heart see God;" spiritual things are spiritually discerned." (H. Allon, D.D.) Christ rejected H. Allon, D.D. I. The first reasonassignedforthe rejectionof the Messiahby the Jews was THE GRADUAL AND UNOSTENTATIOUS MANNEROF HIS MANIFESTATION."He shall grow up before Him as a tender plant, and as a root out of a dry ground," etc. The generalreference is, no doubt, to His parentage, and His manner of entering the world — so contrastedwith the probable expectations of the Jews. Notlike a cedar of Lebanon did the world s Messiahappear;not as a scionof a noble and wealthy house; not as the son of a Herod or a Caiaphas — but "as a "tender plant," as "a root, out of a dry ground." It is a repetition of the figure in the eleventh chapter, "There shall come forth a Shoot out of the stem of Jesse;and a Scion shall spring forth from his roots." Justas the descendants of the Plantagenets are to be found amongstour English peasantry, the glory of the family had departed. Nothing could be farther from the thought of the carnalJews than that Messiahthe Prince should be a scion of such a forgottenhouse. How wonderful in its obscurity and helplessness wasHis childhood; not hastening towards His manifestation, not hastening even towards His ministry to the perishing, but waiting until "the fulness of time was come;" growing into the child, the youth, the man; for more than thirty years giving scarcelya sign that He was other than an ordinary sonof humanity; at first helplessly dependent upon
  • 12. His parents for support and direction, then obediently "subjectto them," fulfilling all the conditions and duties of childhood, a child with children as well as a man with men; then a youth labouring as an artisan, fulfilling His greatmission to the world in a carpenter's shop. And then fulfilling His ministry, not amongstthe rich, but amongstthe poor; not in acts of rule and conquest, but in deeds of beneficence and words of spiritual life; and consummating it by a death on a cross. II. The secondreasonforthe rejectionof the Messiahby the Jews, whichthe prophet assigns, is HIS UNATTRACTIVE APPEARANCE WHEN MANIFESTED.This he puts both negatively and positively. 1. Negatively, He was destitute of all attractions;He had "no form nor comeliness;" He was without "beauty" to make men "desire Him". 2. But there were positive repulsions; everything to offend men who had such prepossessionsas they had. A Messiahin the guise of a peasantbabe — the Divine in the form of a servantand a sufferer. Chiefly, however, we are arrestedby the phrase, which, because of its touching beauty, has almost become one of the personaldesignations of the Messiah — "A Man of sorrows" — literally, a Man of sufferings, or of many sufferings — One who possesses sufferings as othermen possessintelligence, orphysical faculty — One who was "acquaintedwith grief," not in the casual, transient wayin which most men are, but with an intimacy as of companionship; the utmost bodily and mental sorrow was endured by Him. The emphasis of the description lies not in the fact that one who came to be a Prophet and Reformerwas subjected to martyr treatment, for such men have ever been rejectedand persecutedby the ignorance, envy and madness of their generation. It is that He who was the Creatorand Lord of all things should have submitted to this condition, borne this obloquy, endured this suffering; that the Lord of life and blessednessshould appearin our world, not only as a Man, but as so suffering a Man, as that He should be known amongstother suffering men as pre-eminently "a Man of sorrows"— a Man whose sorrows were greaterthan other men's sorrows. Now, we cannotthink that this designationis given to Him merely because ofthe bodily sufferings, or social provocations, that were inflicted upon Him. We shall touch but very distantly
  • 13. the true heart of the Redeemer's sorrows,if we limit the cause of them to the mere stubbornness of His generation, orto the mere physical agonies ofHis death. It is doing no wrong to the pre-eminence of the Saviour's agonies to say, that many teachers of truth have been opposedand persecutedmore than He was, and that many martyrs have endured deaths of more terrible physical agony. If this were all, we should be compelled, I think, to admit that the prophetic description is somewhatexaggerated. How, then, is it to be accountedfor? Only by the factof His having also endured transcendent inward sorrow;sorrow of mind, sorrow of heart, of which ordinary men have no experience;only by His own strange expressionin His agony, when no human hand touched Him — "My soul is exceedinglysorrowful, even unto death." Then comes the mystery of such a pure and perfect soul experiencing such a sorrow. If He were only a prophet and martyr for the truth of God, why, as distinguished from all other prophets and martyrs, should He have endured so much inward anguish? Here we touch the greatmystery of atonement, and we are bold to say that this alone interprets Christ's peculiar sorrow. (H. Allon, D.D.) Lessons from the manner of Christ's appearing H. Allon, D.D. 1. Greatthings may be found in very lowly forms. We judge of things by material magnitudes; the spiritual God judges them by moral qualities. The greatforces that have ruled the world have mostly been born in lowly places; they have been moulded to greatness in the schoolofnecessity;trained to greatness in the schoolof endurance. He who has not to endure cannever be great. Let us cultivate the spiritual eye, that canrecognize spiritual qualities, everywhere, and neither in others nor in "ourselves disparage" the day of small things, the germs of virtue and strength; for we know not what they may achieve. The acorn becomes anoak;the "solitarymonk shakes the world;" the Babe of Bethlehem becomes the Christ of Christianity. Your solitary
  • 14. scholarmay be the nucleus of a greatsystemof education;your solitary convert may evangelize a nation (Matthew 13:31-32). 2. The power of Divine patience. Godwaits, even in His greatredeeming purpose, until "the fulness of time is come," and then until the "tender plant grows up before Him." We, in our impatience, wish to do all things at once, to convert the world in a day. Our zeal becomes fanaticismthe more difficult to check because ittakes so holy a form. (H. Allon, D.D.) Aversion to Christ G. F, Pentecost, D. D. The reasonfor this aversionto Christ may probably be found in the fact of — 1. His sorrowful face. 2. His serious manner. 3. His spiritual teaching. 4. His consecrationto His Father's business. 5. His single walk with God, His habits of retirement and prayer.Men hate and rejectChrist for these characteristics. The world's spirit and all worldly religion resentthese aspects ofspiritual life. (G. F, Pentecost, D. D.) Handel's Messiah J. Higgins. Of Handel, it is said, that when composing his Messiah,"and he came to these words, he was affectedto tears; and well might he weep, for history furnishes no parallel to this case.
  • 15. (J. Higgins.) A man of sorrows The causes ofChrist's sorrows H. Allon, D. D. I. THE DAILY CONTACT OF HIS PURE AND PIOUS SOUL WITH SINFUL AND SINNING MEN. And who may conceive the constancyand intensity of the anguish that would spring from this? There would be the sense of human relationship to a race that had sinned and fallen; they were men, and He was a Man too: "He likewise took partof the same;" they were His proper brothers; He was allied in blood to men so guilty and degraded. It was as if a vicious brother, a prodigal son, were guilty of nameless and constant crime. The sense ofmen's guilt, degradation, misery, ingratitude, would bow down His pure soul with unspeakable sorrow and shame. Then there was His daily practicalcontactwith acts and hearts of sin; the touch on every side, and whereverHe felt humanity, of what was unloving and unholy; the sight of their hate to His loving Father; of their rebelliousness againstHis holy law; a sinfulness and unspiritualness that led them to rejectand hate Him; to turn awaywith dislike and determination from His holy words and deeds. His greathuman love, His perfect human holiness, would wonderfully combine to wring His soul with anguish. The apostle intimates how greatthis sorrow was, when he says that "He endured the contradictionof sinners againstHimself;" that He "resistedunto blood, striving againstsin." And we can understand the mysterious agony of His soul in Gethsemane only by supposing that it was the sense ofthe world's guilt that lay upon it: that made His soul so exceeding sorrowful, even unto death. We have only to think of His pure nature; that He was "holy, harmless, undefiled, separate from sinners;" and to remember the men that He came into contactwith; the world in which He lived; the treatment which His messageofholiness and mercy received:to understand how sore the sorrow of His soul would be.
  • 16. II. THE TEMPTATIONSOF THE DEVIL. He, the pure and perfect Son of the Father, was doomed to listen to polluting and hateful thoughts of distrust and sin: He who so loathed evil was plied with evil. III. THE GREAT BUT INEXPLICABLE SORROW OF WHATEVER CONSTITUTED HIS ATONEMENT — of whateveris meant by its "pleasing the Fatherto bruise Him" — to "put Him to grief" — to "make His soul an offering for sin' — to "lay upon Him the iniquity of us all" — to "forsake Him" on His cross. These were the chief elements of His sorrow — a sorrow that has had no equal, and that, in many of its ingredients, has had no likeness. (H. Allon, D. D.) Christ a Man of sorrows E. Payson, D. D. I. IT IS HERE PREDICTED THAT CHRIST SHOULD BE A MAN OF SORROWS, and acquaintedwith grief. This prediction was literally fulfilled. It has been supposedthat His sufferings were rather apparent than real; or, at least, that His abundant consolations, andHis knowledge ofthe happy consequenceswhichwould result from His death, rendered His sorrows comparatively light, and almost convertedthem to joys. But never was supposition more erroneous. His sufferings were incomparably greaterthan they appearedto be. No finite mind can conceive oftheir extent. His sufferings beganwith his birth, and ended but with His life. 1. It must have been exceedinglypainful to such a person as Christ to live in a world like this. 2. Another circumstance which contributed to render our Saviour a Man of sorrows was the reception He met with from those He came to save. 3. Another circumstance that threw a shade of gloomover our Saviour s life was His clearview and constantanticipation of the dreadful agonies in which it was to terminate. He was not ignorant, as we happily are, of the miseries
  • 17. which were before Him. How deeply the prospectaffectedHim is evident from His own language:"I have a baptism to be baptized with, and how am I straitened till it be accomplished!" II. We have in this prophetic passageAN ACCOUNT OF OUR SAVIOUR'S CONDUCT UNDER THE PRESSURE OF THESE SORROWS."He was oppressed," etc. "He was brought as a Lamb," etc. Never was language more descriptive of the most perfectmeekness andpatience; never was prediction more fully justified by the event than in the case before us. If His lips were opened, it was but to express the most perfectsubmission to His Father's will, and to breathe out prayers for His murderers. Christian, look at your Master, and learn how to suffer. Sinner, look at your Saviour, and learn to admire, to imitate, and to forgive. But why is this patient, innocent Sufferer thus afflicted? "He was wounded for our transgressions," etc. III. Our text describes THE MANNER IN WHICH CHRIST WAS TREATED whenHe thus came as a Man of sorrows to atone for our sins. "Despisedandrejectedof men." "We hid, as it were, our faces,"etc. He has long since ascendedto heaven, and therefore cannot be the immediate object of men's attacks.But His Gospeland His servants are still in the world; and the manner in which they are treatedis sufficient evidence that the feelings of the natural heart towardChrist are not materially different from those of the Jews. His servants are hated, ridiculed and despised, His Gospelis rejected, and His institutions slighted. Every man who voluntarily neglects to confess Christ before men, and to commemorate His dying love, must say, either that He does not choose to do it, or that he is not prepared to do it. If a man says, I do not choose to confess Christ, he certainly rejects Him. (E. Payson, D. D.) The human race typified by the Man of sorrows F. W. Robertson, M.A. I. THE LOT OF HUMANITY IN THIS WORLD. This is the portrait of the species — "A Man of sorrows andacquainted with grief."
  • 18. II. THE TREATMENTWHICH DEPRESSEDHUMANITY COMMONLY EXPERIENCE:"We hid, as it were, our faces from Him." (F. W. Robertson, M.A.) The Man of sorrows I. "A MAN." He who was God, and was in the beginning with God, was made flesh, and dwelt among us. Remembering that Jesus Christ is God, it behoves us to recollectthatHis manhood was none the less realand substantial It differed from our own humanity in the absence ofsin, but in no other respect. This condescending participationin our nature brings the Lord Jesus very near to us in relationship. Inasmuch as He was man, though also God, He was, according to Hebrew law, our goel — our kinsman, next of kin. Now it was according to the law that if an inheritance had been lost, it was the right of the next kin to redeem it. Our Lord Jesus exercisedHis legalright, and seeing us sold into bondage and our inheritance takenfrom us, came forward to redeem both us and all our lost estate. Be thankful that you have not to go to God at the first, and as you are, but you are invited to come to Jesus Christ, and through Him to the Father. Then let me add, that every child of God ought also to be comforted by the fact that our Redeemeris one of our own race, seeing that He was made like unto His brethren that He might be a merciful and faithful High Priest;and He was tempted in all points, like as we are, that He might be able to succourthem that are tempted. The sympathy of Jesus is the next most precious thing to His sacrifice. II. "A MAN OF SORROWS." The expressionis intended to be very emphatic; it is not "a sorrowfulman," but "a Man of sorrows," as if He were made up of sorrows, andthey were constituent elements of His being. Some are men of pleasure, others men of wealth, but He was "a Man of sorrows." He and sorrow might have changednames. He who saw Him, saw sorrow, and he who would see sorrow, must look on Him. "Behold, and see," saithHe, "if there was ever sorrow like unto My sorrow which was clone unto Me."
  • 19. 1. Our Lord is calledthe Man of sorrows forpeculiarity, for this was His peculiar tokenand specialmark. We might wellcall Him "a man of holiness;" for there was no fault in Him: or a man, of labours, for He did His Father's business earnestly; or "a man of eloquence," for never man spake like this man. We might right fittingly callHim "The man of love," for never was there greaterlove than glowedin His heart. Still, conspicuous as all these and many other excellencies were,yet had we gazedupon Christ and been asked afterwards what was the most striking peculiarity in Him, we should have said His sorrow. Tears were His insignia, and the Cross His escutcheon. 2. Is not the title of "Manof sorrows"givento our Lord by wayof eminence? He was not only sorrowful, but pre-eminent among the sorrowful. All men have a burden to bear, but His was heaviestof all. The reasonfor this superior sorrow may be found in the fact that with His sorrow there was no admixture of sin. Side by side with His painful sensitiveness ofthe evil of sin, was His gracious tenderness towards the sorrows of others. Besides this our Saviour had a peculiar relationship to sin. He was not merely afflicted with the sight of it, and saddenedby perceiving its effects on others, but sin was actually laid upon Him, and He was himself numbered with the transgressors. 3. The title of "Man of sorrows,"was also givento our Lord to indicate the constancyof His afflictions. He changedHis place of abode, but He always lodged with sorrow. Sorrow wove His swaddling bands, and sorrow spun His winding sheet. 4. He was also "a Man of sorrows," forthe variety of His woes;He was a man not of sorrow only, but of "sorrows." As to His poverty. He knew the heart- rendings of bereavement. Perhaps the bitterest of His sorrows were those which were connectedwith His gracious work. He came as the Messiahsentof God, on an embassageoflove, and men rejectedHis claims. Nor did they stay at cold rejection;they then proceededto derision and ridicule. They charged Him with every crime which their malice could suggest.And all the while He was doing nothing but seeking theiradvantage in all ways, As He proceededin His life His sorrows multiplied. He preached, and when men's hearts were hard, and they would not believe what He said, "He was grieved for the hardness of their hearts." His sorrow was not that men injured Him, but that
  • 20. they destroyedthemselves;this it was, that pulled up the sluices of His soul, and made His eyes o'erflow with tears: "O Jerusalem!Jerusalem!how often would I have gathered thy children together," etc. But surely He found some solace withthe few companions whom He had gathered around Him? He did; but for all that He must have found as much sorrow as solace in their company. They were dull scholars;they were miserable comforters for the Man of sorrows. The Saviour, from the very dignity of His nature, must suffer alone. The mountain-side, with Christ upon it, seems to me a suggestive symbol of His earthly life. His soul lived in vast solitudes, sublime and terrible, and there, amid a midnight of trouble, His spirit communed with the Father, no one being able to accompanyHim into the dark glens and gloomyravines of His unique experience. In the last, crowning sorrows ofHis life, there came upon Him the penal inflictions from God, the chastisementof our peace which was upon Him. III. "ACQUAINTED WITH GRIEF." 1. With grief he had an intimate acquaintance. He did not know merely what it was in others, but it came home to Himself. We have read of grief, we have sympathized with grief, we have sometimes felt grief: but the.Lord felt it more intensely than other men in His innermost soul. He and grief were bosom friends. 2. It was a continuous acquaintance. He did not call at grief's house sometimes to take a tonic by the way, neither did He sip now and then of the wormwood and the gall, but the quassia cup was always His, and ashes were always mingled with His bread. Notonly forty days in the wilderness did Jesus fast; the world was ever a wilderness to Him, and His life was one long Lent. I do not saythat He was not, after all, a happy man, for down deep in His soul benevolence always supplied a living spring of joy to Him. There was a joy into which we are one day to enter — the "joy of our Lord" — the "joy set before Him" for which "He endured the Cross, despising the shame;" but that does not at all take awayfrom the fact that His acquaintance with grief was continuous and intimate beyond that of any man who ever lived. It was indeed a growing acquaintance with grief, for eachsteptook Him deeper down into the grim shades ofsorrow.
  • 21. 3. It was a voluntary acquaintance for our sakes. He need never have known a grief at all, and at any moment He might have said to grief, farewell. But He remained to the end, out of love to us, griefs acquaintance. ( C. H. Spurgeon.) Christ as a Sufferer J. Stalker, D.D. 1. Jesus sufferedfrom what may be called the ordinary privations of humanity. Born in a stable, etc. We may not be able to assertthat none ever suffered so much physical agonyas He, but this is at leastprobable; for the exquisiteness of His physical organism in all likelihood made Him much more sensitive than others to pain. 2. He suffered keenly from the pain of anticipating coming evil. 3. He suffered from the sense ofbeing the cause ofsuffering to others. To persons of an unselfish disposition the keenestpang inflicted by their own weakness ormisfortunes may sometimes be to see those whom they would like to make happy rendered miserable through connectionwith themselves. To the child Jesus how gruesome must have been the story of the babes of Bethlehem, whom the sword of Herod smote when it was seeking forHim! Or, if His mother spared Him this recital, He must at leasthave learned how she and Josephhad to flee with Him to Egypt to escape the jealousyof Herod. As His life drew near its close, this sense that connectionwith Himself might be fatal to His friends forceditself more and more upon His notice. 4. The element of shame was, all through, a large ingredient in His cup of suffering. To a sensitive mind there is nothing more intolerable; it is far harder to bear than bodily pain. But it assailedJesusin nearly every form, pursuing Him all through His life. He was railed at for the humbleness of His birth. The high-born priests and the educatedrabbis sneeredat the carpenter's son who had never learned, and the wealthy Pharisees derided Him. He was againand againcalled a madman. Evidently this was whatPilate
  • 22. took Him for. The Roman soldiers adopted an attitude of savage banter towards Him all through His trial and crucifixion, treating Him as boys torment one who is weak in the mind. He heard Barabbas preferred to Himself by the voice of His fellow-countrymen, and He was crucified between thieves, as if He were the worstof the worst. A hail of mockerykept falling on Him in His dying hours. Thus had He who was conscious ofirresistible strength to submit to be treatedas the weakestofweaklings, andHe who was the Wisdom of the Highest to submit to be used as if He were less than a man. 5. But to Jesus it was more painful still, being the Holy One of God, to be regardedand treated as the chief of sinners. To one who loves God and goodness there canbe nothing so odious as to be suspectedof hypocrisy and to know that he is believed to be perpetrating crimes at the opposite extreme from his public profession. Yet this was what Jesus was accusedof. Possibly there was not a single human being, when He died, who believed that He was what He claimedto be. 6. If to the holy soulof Jesus it was painful to be believed to be guilty of sins which He had not committed, it must have been still more painful to feelthat He was being thrust into sin itself. This attempt was olden made. Satantried it in the wilderness, and although only this one temptation of his is detailed, he no doubt often returned to the attack. Wickedmen tried it; they resortedto every device to cause Him to lose His temper (Luke 11:53, 54). Even friends, who did not understand the plan of His life, endeavouredto direct Him from the course prescribedto Him by the will of God — so much so that He had once to turn on one of them, as if he were temptation personified, with "Get thee behind Me, Satan." 7. While the proximity of sin awoke suchloathing in His holy soul, and the touch of it was to Him like the touch of fire on delicate flesh, He was brought into the closestcontactwith it, and hence arose His deepestsuffering. It pressedits loathsome presence onHim from a hundred quarters. He who could not bear to look on it saw it in its worstforms close to His very eyes. His own presence in the world brought it out; for goodnessstirs up the evil lying at the bottom of wickedhearts. It was as if all the sin of the race were rushing upon Him, and Jesus feltit as if it were all His own.
  • 23. (J. Stalker, D.D.) The Man of sorrows Ray Palmer, D.D. I. THE LANGUAGE DOES NOT DESCRIBETHE CASE OF ONE WHO ENCOUNTEREDONLY THE ORDINARYOR THE AVERAGE AMOUNT OF THE TRIALS WHICH BELONG TO HUMAN LIFE. There is implied in it a pre-eminence in sorrow, a peculiarly deep experience of grief. II. OF ALL THE MANY GRIEFS OF THE DIVINE REDEEMERIN HIS HUMAN LIFE, THERE WAS NOT ONE WHICH HE HIMSELF EITHER NEEDED OR DESERVED TO BEAR. When the apostle tells us that He was made perfect through suffering, the meaning is that He was by this means made officially perfect as a Saviour, as the Captain of salvation, and the High- Priestof His redeemed, and not that He lackedany moral excellence,to acquire which suffering was needful. So again, when it is said that He learned obedience by the things which He suffered, the meaning obviously is, that by putting Himself in a state of humiliation, and in the condition of a servant under law, He came to know by experience what it was to render obedience to the law, and not at all that He was ever defective in the least, as to the spirit of obedience to the Father's will. As He had no need of any improvement of His virtues, He had no faults, no sins, which called for chastisement. III. ALL THE SUFFERINGS OF THE LORD JESUS WERE ENDURED WITH UNWAVERING FORTITUDE. IV. IN ALL THE GRIEFS AND SORROWS WHICHTHE BLESSED SAVIOUR SUFFERED, HIS MIND WAS CHIEFLY OCCUPIED WITH THE GOOD RESULTS IN WHICH HIS SUFFERINGSWERE TO ISSUE. He deliberately enteredon His singular careerof humiliation and self- sacrifice for the goodof man and the glory of God. Practicallessons:
  • 24. 1. If even the Son of God, when on earth, was a Man of sorrows and acquainted with grief, we certainly should not think it strange that days of trial are appointed unto us. 2. If our blessedLord felt keenly what He suffered, and was evenmoved to tears, we need not reproachourselves because we deeplyfeel our trials, and cannot but weepin the fulness of our grief. 3. If Christ was a willing sufferer, deliberately choosing to suffer for the good of others, we surely should consentto suffer for our own advantage. 4. If our blessedLord and Saviour made less accountof what He suffered than of the goodresults that were to follow, it is wise at leastin us to do the same. (Ray Palmer, D.D.) Christ the Man of sorrows Evan Lewis, B.A. While on earth He was surrounded by many sources ofpleasure. The earth teemed with every form of life, and the air was melodious with music. The sceneries ofHis native country suggestedthe sublimest imagery, and inspired poetry of the highest kind: and had He possessednone of these, He would have been perfectly happy; for He was the Infinite; His sorrows arosefrom — I. THE FELT RELATION OF A LOVING BEING TO A RUINED RACE. II. THE CRUSHING PRESSURE OF HIS MEDIATORIAL WORK. III. HIS CERTAIN KNOWLEDGE THAT THE RESULT OF HIS MISSION WOULD NOT BE EQUAL TO THE BENEVOLENCEOF HIS WILL. (Evan Lewis, B.A.) The mystery of sorrow W. J. KnoxLittle, M.A.
  • 25. I. CONSIDERITS RELATION TO MAN. There are facts which know no frontiers. In the inner life of thought and feeling such is sorrow. It is a universal language, it obliterates space, it annihilates time; it is the great leveller, it ignores rank, it stands head and shoulders above any dignity. Think again, it is too sacredto be only universal. It is also an intimate fact. None can comfort. There may be sweethelp, deep and real sympathy, not comfort, no, for none canundo the tragic truth. Yes, there is One. One can come nearestto the feeling, mad, in our eternal life, in a sense He can undo. One, only One, has gatheredup the representative experiences ofall. II. The thought gains precisionwhen we remember that IT BEARS A WITNESS FOR GOD. LetLove meet death or trouble, and the result is sorrow. This noblest human sorrow so begottenis a witness to the Source of its being. Love, the love of the creature, is his highestendowment from the Love of God. III. SORROW GAINS A CLEARER OUTLINE TO ITS FRAIL AND MISTY FORM AS SEEN IN ITS RELATION TO WHAT IS CALLED THE "SCHEME OF REDEMPTION;" seen, that is, in its place in the awakening and restoring of the human spirit, great though fallen. Sorrow here is a power. It takes varying tints. 1. At the darkest, it is a power of warning, of prophecy. It warns of a stern reality in this world — the dreadfulness of sin. 2. Better, it is a powerto transfigure. Repentance is the one path to pardon, and it is a certain path. Whence comes true repentance? It comes from God's love seenin fairest, saddestimage in "the Man of sorrows " 3. It is a powerto purify. Sorrow sends you in on self. Godless sorrowwould make self more selfish, working death; not so sorrow from the Cross ofChrist. A life searchedout, repented of, is a spirit purified. (W. J. KnoxLittle, M.A.) The suffering Christ
  • 26. I. THE MATTER, whatHe suffered. II. THE MANNER, how He came to suffer. III. THE REASONS and ends why, for our good. Here are three chief lessons for a Christian to learn: — 1. Patience and comfort. 2. Humility. 3. In the end, love. All this was for you. What will you do for God again? ( T. Manton, D.D.) Sir NoelPaton's "Manof Sorrows D. Davies. To the painter ere he satdown to produce this work of art many questions would suggestthemselves. Among them, doubtless, would be these: — 1. What shall be the scene? Ofcourse, the artist would naturally think of many scenes in our Lord's life more or less appropriate for such a representation. The painter seems to have recognizedthe greattruth which we all must have proved to some extent, that man tastes deepestofsorrow in loneliness, that the cross whichweighs heavieston any shoulder is not the cross which the world can see, but which is borne out of sight, when the heart, and no one else save God, knowethits ownbitterness. Thus Sir NoelPaton has represented"The Man of Sorrows" as isolatedfrom His fellows, far away from the habitations of men and shut out of the world. The whole picture is one of desolation. In its centre and foreground is represented"The Man of Sorrows sitting upon a jaggedrock. And, oh, what sorrow is depicted there! Those large, full, liquid eyes brim over with tears;every expressionof the countenance is chargedwith grief; the lips are wan, and a deep furrow crosses that young, manly brow. The swollenveins in the neck and temple, the powerful muscular actionin the right hand, as with open fingers it rests heavily upon the rocks and in the left clenchedtightly as it presses upon the
  • 27. thigh, and in the feet as they press the earth convulsively underneath — for the Man of Sorrows is representedwith head uncovered and feetunsandalled — all these tell the story of an awful tension of a withering sorrow. 2. Closelyand inseparably connectedwith the question of scene is that of the period in our Lord s life in which He can most appropriately be represented as the Man of sorrows. The artist choosesthe eve of the Temptation, and thus selects the greatesttransitionalperiod of our Saviour's life — that beginning with the Baptism and closing with the Temptation. The time of day chosenis the twilight of morning. There is something in the twilight that is consistent not only with solemn, but also with sad thoughts and feelings. 3. What can accountfor the sorrow!You look to the picture in vain for the solution. The painting is a problem, an enigma. It is purposely so. The painter presents to us the greatfact, not its explanation. He goes to Inspired Writ for that, and thus refers the perplexed spectatorto the words of Isaiah as supplying the key to the whole painting: "He hath borne our griefs, and carried our sorrows," etc. (vers. 4-6). These are the words which Sir Noel Patonadopts, and practically says, "There!that is what I mean." "We did esteemHim stricken, smitten of God and afflicted." How shall this false estimate of Him be corrected? Look atthe picture; that Man of sorrows looks up and holds communion with the skies;see the half-open mouth expressive of expectation, and those eyes so full of tears and yet so full of vision. Verily He is not alone — the Fatheris with Him; for from the heavens and from a source other than the sun there descends through a rift of the clouds a shaft of light that looks like the light of the Father's countenance, and rests upon the face of this Sorrowing One. This human countenance thus lit up by the light of the Divine countenance is the painter's sublime answerto the old-world estimate of the Man of sorrows. Whatneed of any more! (D. Davies.) Christ's life a model for His people C. H. Parkhurst, D. D.
  • 28. The more deeply we enter into the meaning of Christ consideredas the Divine Man, the more distinctly revealedit becomes to us that what His life was our life is intended to be. There are instincts and there are impulses and ambitions that shrink from coming under the sovereigntyof a commitment so cordial and entire. That accounts for the disproportionate emphasis so customarily laid upon the commercialfeature of the atonement. It is easierand it is lazier to believe in a Christ that is going to pay my debts for me, than it is to grow up in Christ into a Divine endowment, that shall be itself the cure for insolvency and the material of wealth Divine and inexhaustible. You have really done nothing for a poor man by paying his debts for him, unless in addition to squaring his old accounts you have in such manner dealt with him as to guarantee him againstbeing similarly involved in the time to come. Emphasize as we may the merely ransoming work of Christ, we are not made free men by having our fetters broken off, and we are not made wealthy men by having our debts paid. It is not what Christ delivers us from, but what He translates us into that makes us saved men in Christ. (C. H. Parkhurst, D. D.) Our Lord's life lived in shadow No fair reading of the narrative of Christ's life will leave the impression that sorrow of heart was a grace that Christ cultivated. The pathetic was not a temper of spirit which He encouragedin Himself or in others. Heaviness of mind was not a thing to be sought in and for itself. There is no gain. saying the fact that one greatobject of His mission was to make the world glad. Still for all that He was a Man of sorrows, andacquainted with grief. It needs also to be said that for us to be heavy-hearted merely because Christwas, to be sorrowfulby a sheeract of imitation, is distinctly repugnant to everything like Christian sense, and at the farthest possible remove from all that deserves to be called Christian sincerity. Neither canwe leave out of the accountall those passages, especiallyin the New Testament, where particular praise is accordedto gladness ofheart.
  • 29. The problems of life involve sorrow C. H. Parkhurst, D. D. Nevertheless,whenall these caveats have beenentered and gladness ofheart eulogizedto the fullest extent, authorized by multitudinous expressions occurring throughout the entire Scriptures, it still remains beyond dispute that our Lord's life was lived in shadow, and that He died at lastless because of the nails and the spear-wounds, than He did of a broken heart. (C. H. Parkhurst, D. D.) The sorrow of strained powers C. H. Parkhurst, D. D. He came to interfere with the natural current of event. And it made Him tired. And a man, even a Divine man, is less apt to laugh when He is tired. A gooddeal of what we callour gladness ofheart, if we will care to scrutinize it, is simply the congenialluxury of drifting down the current of event. If you are pulling your boat up-stream you will be soberwhile you are about it. Strained powers are serious. It is the farthestfrom our thought to disparage exuberance or even hilarity; nevertheless, it remains a fact that hilarity is feeling out at pasture and not feeling under the yoke. It is steamescaping at the throttle because it is not pushing at the piston. I venture to say that Christ could not shake His purpose off. He was here to stay the downward drift of event; the purpose was too vast to be easilyflung aside, and His muscles were too solidly knotted to it to be easilyunknotted and relaxed. And we shall have to go on and saythat it was an inherent part of Christ to have a purpose and to be mightily bent to its achievement; and not only that, it was an inherent part of Christ as the Saviour of this world to seize upon the current of event and of history and to under. take to reverse it. Exactly that was the genius of the Christ-mission. (C. H. Parkhurst, D. D.)
  • 30. The Christ-life in the Christian C. H. Parkhurst, D. D. You cannot drift down the tide of event and be a Christ man or a Christ woman. The world is to be saved; the tide is to be reversed. Man inspired of God is to do it; and you cannot buckle yourself down to that problem in Christian whole-heartedness andnot grow soberunder it. Now you see the philosophy of the soberChrist. He flung Himself againstforty centuries of bad event, and the Divine Man gotbruised by the impact. He stoodup and let forty centuries jump on Him; He held His own, but blood broke through His pores in perspiration, and about that there is nothing humorous. The edge of this truth is not brokenby the fact that Christ took hold of the work of the world's saving in a largerway than it is possible for us to do, and that therefore the burden of His undertaking came upon Him in a heavier, wider, and more crushing way than it can come upon us; and that therefore while it overwhelmed Him in sorrow, our smaller missionand lighter task canwith entire propriety leave us buoyant and gladsome. All of that conceptionof the case lacksdignity and reach You can't take hold of a greatmatter in a small way. (C. H. Parkhurst, D. D.) The sorrow of love C. H. Parkhurst, D. D. It is but a step now to go on and speak of the saddening effectnecessarily flowing from the circumstances under which in this world Christian work has to be done. It was the love which Christ had for the world that made Him sad while doing His work in the world; and the infinitude of His love is what explains the unutterableness of His pain; for the world in which Christ fulfilled His missionwas a suffering world. Now a man who is without love can be in the midst of suffering and, not suffer. A loveless spirit grieves over his ownpain, but has no sense ofanother's pain, and no feeling of being burdened by another's pain. Love has this peculiar property, that it makes the
  • 31. person whom we love one with us, so that his experience becomes a part of our own life, his pain becomes painful to us, his burdens make us tired. The mother feels her child's pain as keenly as though it were her own pain, perhaps more so. In its Divine relations this is all expressedin those familiar words of Scripture, "In all their affliction He was afflicted." Sympathy is the form which love takes in a suffering world. Love is the finest type of communism. (C. H. Parkhurst, D. D.) Christ's greatcapacityfor suffering H. O. Mackey. The measure of our being is our capacityfor sorrow or joy. Captain Conder speaks ofthe shadow castby Mount Hermon being as much as seventy miles long at some periods. Was it not the very greatness ofChrist that made His joys and His griefs equally unique? (H. O. Mackey.) We hid as it were our faces from Him A sad confession , Canon Cook., T.R. Birks. In the margin of your Bibles this passageis rendered, "He hid as it were His face from us." The literal translation of the Hebrew would be, "He was as a hiding of faces from Him," or "from us." Some critical readers think these words were intended to describe our Lord as having so humbled Himself, and brought Himself to such a deep degradation, that He was comparable to the leper who coveredhis face and cried, "Unclean, unclean," hiding himself from the gaze of men. Abhorred and despisedby men, He was like one put aside because of His disease andshunned by all mankind. Others suppose the meaning to be that on accountof our Lord s terrible and protracted sorrow
  • 32. His face wore an expressionso painful and grievous that men could scarcely bear to look upon Him. They hid as it were their faces from Him — amazedat that brow all carved with lines of anxious thought, those cheeks allploughed with furrows of deep care, those eyes all sunk in shades of sadness, that soul bowed down, exceeding sorrowful, even unto death! It may be so;we cannot tell. I have a plain, practicalpurpose to pursue. Here is an indictment to which we must all plead guilty. I. Sometimes men hide their faces from Jesus IN COOL CONTEMPT OF HIM. How astounding! how revolting! He ought surely to be esteemedby all mankind. 1. Some show their opposition by attempting to ignore or to tarnish the dignity of His person. 2. Are there not others who affectgreatadmiration for Jesus of Nazarethas an example of virtue and benevolence, who nevertheless rejectHis mediatorial work as our Redeemer? As a substitutionary sacrifice theydo not and cannot esteemHim. 3. Then they will pour contempt upon, the various doctrines of His Gospel. 4. And with what pitiful disdain the Lord s people are slighted! Do I address anybody who has despisedthe Lord Jesus Christ? Your wantonness canoffer no excuse but your ignorance. And as for your ignorance, it is without excuse. II. A far more common way in which men hide their faces from Christ is BY THEIR HEEDLESSNESS, THEIR INDIFFERENCE,THEIR NEGLECT. III. We hid as it were our faces from Him BY PREFERRING ANYOTHER MODE OF SALVATION TO SALVATION BY FAITH IN CHRIST. IV. After we were quite sure that we could not be saved other than by the one Mediator, do you remember how we continued to hide our face from Jesus BY PERSISTENTUNBELIEF IN HIM. V. But there are some of us who must plead guilty to another charge;we have hidden as it were our faces from Him since He has savedus, and since we have known His love, BY OUR SILLY SHAME AND OUR BASE COWARDICE.
  • 33. VI. Many, if not all, of us who are believers will penitently confess that we have sometimes hidden our faces from Christ BY NOT WALKING IN CONSTANT FELLOWSHIP WITHHIM. ( C. H. Spurgeon.)"We hid as it were our faces from Him." Literally, "as one from whom there is hiding of face," as if shrinking from a horrible sight. (Canon Cook.)The impersonal form refers to the men just named, or all those of note and influence. Their faces were avertedfrom Him, as a lunatic, beside Himself, or one possessed, as a deceiverand a blasphemer. (T.R. Birks.) COMMENTARIES Ellicott's Commentary for English Readers (3) He is despisedand rejected.—Better, forthe lastword, forsaken. This had been the crowning sorrow of the righteous sufferer of the Old Testament(Job 17:15;Job 19:14). It was to complete the trial of the perfect sufferer of the New (Matthew 26:56). A man of sorrows . . .—The words “sorrow”and “grief” in the Heb. imply the thought of bodily pain or disease. (Comp. Exodus 3:7; Lamentations 1:12; Lamentations 1:18.)Men have sometimes raised the rather idle question whether the body of our Lord was subjectto disease, and have decided on à priori grounds that it was not. The prophet’s words point to the true view, that this was an essentialconditionof His fellowship with humanity. If we do not read of any actualdisease in the Gospel, we at leasthave evidence of an organisationeverynerve of which thrilled with its sensitiveness to pain, and was quickly exhausted(Luke 8:46; John 4:6; Mark 4:36). The intensity of His sympathy made Him feelthe pain of others as His own (Matthew 8:17), the “blood and water” from the piercedheart, the physical results of the agony in
  • 34. Gethsemane (Luke 22:44;John 19:34), indicate a nature subject to the conditions of our humanity. We hid as it were . . .—Literally, As the hiding of the face from us, or, on our part. The words start from the picture of the leper covering his face from men, or their covering their own faces, that they might not look upon him (Leviticus 13:45). In Lamentations 4:15, we have a like figurative application. (Comp. also Job 19:13-19;Job 30:10. Matthew Henry's Concise Commentary 53:1-3 No where in all the Old Testamentis it so plainly and fully prophesied, that Christ ought to suffer, and then to enter into his glory, as in this chapter. But to this day few discern, or will acknowledge, thatDivine powerwhich goes with the word. The authentic and most important report of salvationfor sinners, through the Son of God, is disregarded. The low condition he submitted to, and his appearance in the world, were not agreeable to the ideas the Jews hadformed of the Messiah. It was expectedthat he should come in pomp; insteadof that, he grew up as a plant, silently, and insensibly. He had nothing of the glory which one might have thought to meet with him. His whole life was not only humble as to outward condition, but also sorrowful. Being made sin for us, he underwent the sentence sin had exposedus to. Carnal hearts see nothing in the Lord Jesus to desire an interest in him. Alas! by how many is he still despisedin his people, and rejectedas to his doctrine and authority! Barnes'Notes on the Bible He is despised- This requires no explanation; and it needs no comment to show that it was fulfilled. The Redeemerwas eminently the objectof contempt and scornalike by the Pharisees,the Sadducees,and the Romans. In his life on earth it was so;in his death it was still so;and since then, his name and person have been extensivelythe objectof contempt. Nothing is a more striking fulfillment of this than the conduct of the Jews atthe present day. The
  • 35. very name of Jesus of Nazarethexcites contempt; and they join with their fathers who rejectedhim in heaping on him every term indicative of scorn. Rejectedofmen - This phrase is full of meaning, and in three words states the whole history of man in regard to his treatment of the Redeemer. The name 'The RejectedofMen,' will express all the melancholy history; rejectedby the Jews;by the rich; the greatand the learned; by the mass of people of every grade, and age, and rank. No prophecy was ever more strikingly fulfilled; none could condense more significancyinto few words. In regardto the exact sense ofthe phrase, interpreters have varied. Jerome renders it, Novissium virorum - 'The last of men;' that is, the most abject and contemptible of mankind. The Septuagint, 'His appearance is dishonored (ἄτιμονatimon) and defective (ἐκλειπον ekleipon) more than the sons of men.' The Chaldee, 'He is indeed despised, but he shall take away the glory of all kings;they are infirm and sad, as if exposedto all calamities and sorrows.'Some render it, 'Most abjectof men,' and they refer to Job 19:14, where the same word is used to denote those friends who forsake the unfortunate. The word ‫לדח‬ châdêlused here, is derived from the verb ‫לדח‬ châdal, which means "to cease,to leave off, to desist";derived, says Gesenius (Lexicon), from the idea of becoming languid, flaccid; and thence transferred to the act of ceasing from labor. It means usually, to cease,to desist from, to leave, to let alone (see 1 Kings 22:6-15;Job 7:15; Job 10:20;Isaiah 2:22). According to Gesenius, the word here means to be left, to be destitute, or forsaken;and the idea is, that be was forsakenby people. According to Hengstenberg (Christol.) it means 'the most abject of men,' he who ceases frommen, who ceases to belong to the number of men; that is, who is the most abjectof men. Castellio renders it, Minus quash homo - 'Less than a man.' Junius and Tremellius, Abjectissimus virorum - 'The most abject of men.' Grotius, 'Rejectedofmen.' Symmachus, Ἐλάχιστος ἀνδρῶν Elachistos andrōn- 'the leastof men.' The idea is, undoubtedly, somehow that of ceasing from human beings, or from being regarded as belonging to mankind. There was a ceasing, ora withdrawing of that which usually pertains to man, and which belongs to him. And the thought probably is, that he was not only 'despised,'but that there was an advance on that - there was a ceasing to treat
  • 36. him as if he had human feelings, and was in any way entitled to human fellowship and sympathy. It does not refer, therefore, so much to the active means employed to rejecthim, as to the fact that he was regardedas cut off from man; and the idea is not essentiallydifferent from this, that he was the most abjectand vile of mortals in the estimationof others;so vile as not to be deemed worthy of the treatment due to the lowestof men. This idea has been substantially expressedin the Syriac translation. A man of sorrows - What a beautiful expression!A man who was so sadand sorrowful; whose life was so full of sufferings, that it might be said that that was the characteristic ofthe man. A similar phraseologyoccurs in Proverbs 29:1, 'He that being often reproved,' in the margin, 'a man of reproofs;' in the Hebrew, 'A man of chastisements,'thatis, a man who is often chastised. Compare Daniel 10:11 : 'O Daniel, a man greatlybeloved,' Margin, as in Hebrew, 'A man of desires;that is, a man greatlydesired. Here, the expressionmeans that his life was characterizedby sorrows. How remarkably this was fulfilled in the life of the Redeemer, it is not necessaryto attempt to show. And acquainted with grief - Hebrew, ‫דלח‬ ‫ל‬ ‫לח‬ viydûa‛ choliy - 'And knowing grief.' The word rendered 'grief' means usually sickness, diseaseDeuteronomy 7:15; Deuteronomy 28:61;Isaiah 1:5; but it also means anxiety, affliction Ecclesiastes5:16;and then any evil or calamity Ecclesiastes6:2. Many of the old interpreters explain it as meaning, that he was knownor distinguished by disease;that is, affectedby it in a remarkable manner. So Symm. Γνωστός νόσῳ Gnōstos nosō. Jerome (the Vulgate) renders it, Scienteminfirmitatem. The Septuagint renders the whole clause, 'A man in affliction (ἐν πληγῇ en plēgē), and knowing to bear languor, or disease' (εἰδὼ;φέρειν μαλακίαν eidōs pherein malakian). But if the word here means disease, it is only a figurative designationof severe sufferings both of body and of soul. Hengstenberg, Koppe, and Ammon, suppose that the figure is takenfrom the leprosy, which was not only one of the most severe ofall diseases, but was in a specialmanner regardedas a divine judgment. They suppose that many of the expressions which follow may be explained with reference to this (compare Hebrews 4:15). The idea is, that he was familiar with sorrow and calamity. It does not mean, as it seems to me, that he was to be himself sick and diseased;but that he was
  • 37. to be subjectto various kinds of calamity, and that it was to be a characteristic ofhis life that he was familiar with it. He was intimate with it. He knew it personally; he knew it in others. He lived in the midst of scenesof sorrow, and be became intimately acquainted with its various forms, and with its evils. There is no evidence that the Redeemerwas himself sick at any time - which is remarkable - but there is evidence in abundance that he was familiar with all kinds of sorrow, and that his own life was a life of grief. And we hid as it were our faces from him - There is here greatvariety of interpretation and of translation. The margin reads, 'As an hiding of faces from him,' or 'from us,' or, 'He hid as it were his face from us.' The Hebrew is literally, 'And as the hiding of faces from him, or from it;' and Hengstenberg explains it as meaning, 'He was as an hiding of the face before it.' that is, as a thing or person before whom a man covers his face, because he cannotbear the disgusting sight. Jerome (the Vulgate) renders it, 'His face was as it were hidden and despised.'The Septuagint, 'For his countenance was turned away' (ἀπέστρυπταὶ apestraptai). The Chaldee, 'And when he took awayhis countenance ofmajesty from us, we were despisedand reputed as nothing.' Interpreters have explained it in various ways. 1. 'He was as one who hides his face before us;' alluding, as they suppose, to the Mosaic law, whichrequired lepers to covertheir faces Leviticus 13:45, or to the custom of covering the face in mourning, or for shame. 2. Others explain it as meaning, 'as one before whom is the covering of the face, that is, before whom a man covers the face from shame or disgust. So Gesenius. 3. Others, 'He was as one causing to concealthe face,'that is, he induced others to coverthe face before him. His sufferings were so terrible as to induce them to turn away. So John H. Michaelis. The idea seems to be, that he was as one from whom people hide their faces, or turn away. This might either arise from a sight of his sufferings, as being so offensive that they would turn away in pain - as in the case ofa leper; or it might be, that he was so much an object of contempt, and so unlike what they expected, that they would hide their faces and turn awayin scorn. This latter I
  • 38. suppose to be the meaning; and that the idea is, that he was so unlike what they had expected, that they hid their faces in affectedor real contempt. And we esteemedhim not - That is, we esteemedhim as nothing; we set no value on him. In order to give greaterenergyto a declaration, the Hebrews frequently express a thing positively and then negatively. The prophet had said that they held him in positive contempt; he here says that they did not regard him as worthy of their notice. He here speaks in the name of his nation - as one of the Jewishpeople. 'We, the Jews, the nation to whom he was sent, did not esteemhim as the Messiah, oras worthy of our affection or regard.' Jamieson-Fausset-BrownBible Commentary 3. rejected—"forsakenofmen" [Gesenius]. "Mostabjectofmen." Literally, "He who ceasesfrom men," that is, is no longer regardedas a man [Hengstenberg]. (See on [851]Isa 52:14;Isa 49:7). man of sorrows—thatis, whose distinguishing characteristic was sorrows. acquainted with—familiar by constantcontactwith. grief—literally, "disease";figuratively for all kinds of calamity (Jer 6:14); leprosy especiallyrepresentedthis, being a direct judgment from God. It is remarkable Jesus is not mentioned as having eversuffered under sickness. and we hid … faces—rather, as one who causes men to hide their faces from Him (in aversion) [Maurer]. Or, "He was as an hiding of the face before it," that is, as a thing before which a man covers his face in disgust [Hengstenberg]. Or, "as one before whom is the covering of the face";before whom one covers the face in disgust [Gesenius]. we—the prophet identifying himself with the Jews. See Horsley's view (see on [852]Isa 53:1). esteemed… not—negative contempt; the previous words express positive. Matthew Poole's Commentary He is despisedand rejectedof men; accountedas the scum of mankind, as one unworthy of the company and conversationof all men.
  • 39. A man of sorrows;whose whole life was filled with, and in a manner made up of, an uninterrupted successionofsorrows and sufferings. Acquainted with grief; who had constantexperience of and familiar converse with grievous afflictions; for knowledge is oft takenpractically, or for experience, as Genesis 3:5 2 Corinthians 5:21, and elsewhere. We hid as it were our faces from him; we scornedand loathedto look upon him. Or, as others, he hid as it were his face from us, as one ashamedto show his face, or to be seenby any men, as persons conscious to themselves ofany greatdeformity do commonly shun the sight of men, as lepers did, Leviticus 13:45. He was despised, and we esteemedhim not: here are divers words expressing the same thing, to signify both the utmost degree ofcontempt, and how strange and wonderful a thing it was, that so excellenta person should be so despised. Gill's Exposition of the Entire Bible He is despised, and rejectedof men,.... Or, "ceasethfrom men" (f); was not admitted into the company and conversationofmen, especiallyoffigure; or ceasedfrom the class ofmen, in the opinion of others; he was not reckoned among men, was accounteda worm, and no man; or, if a man, yet not in his senses,a madman, nay, one that had a devil: or "deficient of men"; he had none about him of any rank or figure in life, only some few fishermen, and some women, and publicans, and harlots. The Vulgate Latin versionrenders it, "the lastof men", the most abject and contemptible of mankind; despised, because ofthe meanness ofhis birth, and parentage, and education, and of his
  • 40. outward appearance in public life; because ofhis apostles and audience; because ofhis doctrines, not agreeablyto carnalreason, and his works, some of them being done on the sabbath day, and, as they maliciously suggested, by the help of Satan;and especiallybecause ofhis ignominious sufferings and death: a man of sorrows, and acquaintedwith grief: or "knownby grief" (g); he was known by his troubles, notorious for them; these were his constant companions, his familiar acquaintance, with whom he was always conversant; his life was one continued series of sorrow, from the cradle to the cross;in his infancy his life was soughtfor by Herod, and he was obliged to be takenby his parents, and flee into Egypt; he ate his bread in sorrow, and with the sweatof his brow; he met with much sorrow from the hardness and unbelief of men's hearts, and from the contradictionof sinners againsthimself, and even much from the frowardness ofhis owndisciples; much from the temptations of Satan, and more from the wrath and justice of God, as the surety of his people; he was exceeding sorrowfulin the garden, when his sweatwas as it were greatdrops of blood; and when on the cross, under the hidings of his Father's face, under a sense ofdivine displeasure for the sins of his people, and enduring the pains and agonies ofa shameful and an accurseddeath; he was made up of sorrows, andgrief was familiar to him. Some render it, "brokenwith infirmity", or "grief" (h): and we hid as it were our faces from him; as one loathsome and abominable as having an aversionto him, and abhorrence of him, as scorning to look at him, being unworthy of any notice. Some render it, "he hid as it were his face from us" (i); as conscious ofhis deformity and loathsomeness, andof his being a disagreeable object, as they said; but the former is best: he was despised, and we esteemedhim not; which is repeatedto show the greatcontempt castupon him, and the disesteemhe was had in by all sorts of persons;professors and profane, high and low, rich poor, rulers and common people, priests, Scribes, and Pharisees;no setor order of men had any value for him; and all this disgrace and dishonour he was to undergo, to repair the loss of honour the Lord sustained by the sin of man, whose surety Christ became.
  • 41. (f) "desiit viris", Montanus, Heb.; "desitus virorum", Piscator;"deficiens virorum", Cocceius;"destitutus viris", Vitringa. (g) "notus aegritudine", Montanus; "notus infirmitate," Cocceius.(h) "Attritus infirmitate"; so some in Vatablus, and R. Sol. Urbin. Ohel. Moed. fol. 96. 1.((i) "velut homo abscondens faciema nobis", Junius & Tremellius; "ettanquam aliquis qui obtegit faciema nobis", Piscator;"ut res tecta facie averanda prae nobis", Cocceius. Geneva Study Bible He is despisedand rejectedby men; a man of sorrows, and acquaintedwith {e} grief: and we hid as it were our faces from him; he was despised, and we esteemedhim not. (e) Which was by God's singular providence for the comfortof sinners, He 4:15. EXEGETICAL(ORIGINAL LANGUAGES) Cambridge Bible for Schools andColleges 3. Notonly did the Servantfail to attract his contemporaries (Isaiah53:2); there was that in his appearance which excited positive aversion. He is representedas one strickenwith loathsome and disfiguring disease, probably leprosy (see on Isaiah53:4), so that men instinctively recoiledfrom him in horror and disgust. He is despisedand rejectedof men] Better, Despisedand man-forsaken, i.e. one with whom men refuse to associate, or, perhaps, one who renounces the hope of human fellowship. The corresponding verb is used by Job when he complains of the estrangementof his friends: “my kinsfolk have failed” (ch. Isaiah19:14).
  • 42. For sorrows … grief, read pains … sickness.Although both words may be used tropically of mental suffering, it is plain that in the figure of this verse and the following they are to be takenin their literal sense. and we hid &c.]More literally, and as one from whom there is a hiding of the face;his appearance was suchas to cause men involuntarily to covertheir face from the sight of him. The expressionis similar to another phrase of Job’s:“I am a spitting in the face” (Isaiah17:6). For the idea cf. Job 19:19;Job 30:10. Leprosy is againsuggested. The rendering of LXX. and Vulg. “and as one who hid his face from us” is grammatically defensible, but conveys a wrong idea; the Servant“hid not his face from shame and spitting” (ch. Isaiah 50:6). esteemedhim not] (lit “reckonedhim not”), held him of no account. Pulpit Commentary Verse 3. - He is despised; rather, was despised(comp. Isaiah49:7 and Psalm 22:6). Men's contempt was shown, partly in the little attention which they paid to his teaching, partly in their treatment of him on the night and day before the Crucifixion (Matthew 26:67, 68; Matthew 27:29-31;Mark 14:65; Mark 15:18, 19, etc.). Rejectedof men; rather, perhaps, forsakenofmen - "one from whom men held themselves aloof" (Cheyne); comp. Job 19:14. Our Lord had at no time more than a "little flock" attachedto him. Of these, after a time, "many went back, and walkedno more with him" (John 6:66). Some, who believed on him, would only come to him by night (John 3:2). All the "rulers" and greatmen held alooffrom him (John 7:48). At the end, even his apostles "forsook him, and fled" (Matthew 26:56). A Man of sorrows.The word translated "sorrows" means also pains of any kind. But the beautiful rendering of our version may well stand, since there are many places where the word used certainly means "sorrow" and nothing else (see Exodus 3:7; 2 Chronicles 6:29; Psalm32:10; Psalm38:17; Ecclesiastes1:18;Jeremiah30:15; Jeremiah45:3; Lamentations 1:12, 18, etc.). Aquila well translates, ἄνδρα ἀλγηδόνωνThe "sorrows" ofJesus appearon every page of the Gospels.
  • 43. Acquainted with grief; literally, with sickness;but as aegerand aegritudo are applied in Latin both to the mind and to the body, so kholi, the word here used, would seemto be in Hebrew (see Jeremiah6:7; Jeremiah10:19). The translation of the Authorized Versionmay therefore be retained. We hid as it were our faces from him; literally, and there was as it were the hiding of the face from him. Some suppose the hiding of God's face to be intended; but the context, which describes the treatment of the Servant by his fellow-men, makes the meaning given in our version far preferable. Men turned their faces from him when they met him, would not see him, would not recognize him (comp. Job 19:13-17;Job 30:10). Despised. A repetition very characteristicof Isaiah(see Isaiah 1:7; Isaiah 3:12; Isaiah4:3; Isaiah 6:11; Isaiah14:25; Isaiah 15:8; Isaiah 17:12, 13, etc.). Keil and DelitzschBiblical Commentary on the Old Testament This salvationin its immediate manifestationis the liberation of the exiles; and on the ground of what the prophet sees in spirit, he exclaims to them (as in Isaiah 48:20), in Isaiah 52:11, Isaiah52:12 : "Go ye forth, go ye forth, go out from thence, lay hold of no unclean thing; go ye out of the midst of her, cleanse yourselves,ye that bear the vessels ofJehovah. Forye shall not go out in confusion, and ye shall not go forth in flight: for Jehovahgoethbefore you, and the God of Israel is your rear-guard." When they go out from thence, i.e., from Babylon, they are not to touch anything unclean, i.e., they are not to enrich themselves with the property of their now subjugated oppressors, as was the case atthe exodus from Egypt (Exodus 12:36). It is to be a holy procession, atwhich they are to appearmorally as wellas corporeally unstained. But those who bear the vesselsofJehovah, i.e., the vessels ofthe temple, are not only not to defile themselves, but are to purify themselves (hibbârū with the tone upon the last syllable, a regularimperative niphal of bârar). This is an indirect prophecy, and was fulfilled in the fact that Cyrus directed the goldenand silver vessels, whichNebuchadnezzarhad brought to Babylon, to be restoredto the returning exiles as their rightful property (Ezra 1:7-11). It would thus be possible for them to put themselves into the right attitude for their departure, since it would not take place in precipitous haste (bechippâzon), as the departure from Egypt did (Deuteronomy 16:3, cf., Exodus 12:39), nor like a flight, but they would go forth under the guidance of
  • 44. Jehovah. ‫םכפּסאמ‬ (with the ē changedinto the original ı̆) does not man, "He bringeth you, the scatteredones, together,"but according to Numbers 10:25; Joshua 6:9, Joshua 6:13, "He closes yourprocession," -He not only goes before you to lead you, but also behind you, to protect you (as in Exodus 14:19). For the me'assēph, or the rear-guardof an army, is its keystone, and has to preserve the compactnessofthe whole. The division of the chapters generallycoincides with the severalprophetic addresses.But here it needs emendation. Mostof the commentators are agreedthat the words "Behold my servant," etc. (hinnēh yaskı̄l ‛abhdı̄) commence a new section, like hēn ‛abhdı̄ (behold my servant) in Isaiah42:1. END OF BIBLEHUB RESOURCES Man of Sorrows —Isaiah53 This lessoncomes from what may well be regardedas the chief chapter of the book of Isaiah. Chapter 53 is the prophecy of the suffering servant. We'll begin where the chapter should really begin, at the words, "Beholdmy Servant..." (Isaiah52:13), and continue through all of chapter 53. We won't attempt to gleaneverything these 15 verses offer, but will concentrate onthe key statement, He was despisedand forsakenofmen, a man of sorrows and acquainted with grief" (Isaiah 53:3). This statementrefers to Christ’s suffering on the cross, where "his appearance was marred more than any man..." (Isaiah52:13-14). Our passageends with the statement, "He poured out himself unto death and was numbered with the transgressors —yethe himself bore the sins of many and interceded for the transgressors (Isaiah53:12).
  • 45. Christ suffered death to atone for our sins. Atonement means to make “at one” with God those who are separatedfrom him by sin (1John2:1-2). He rose to intercede for us as our greatHigh Priestwho ever lives. Intercessionmeans being our advocate with God, representing us before God. (Romans 8:34 Hebrews 7:25-27). This is the focus of our lesson. Man of sorrows acquaintedwith grief Isaiah53:1-3 In the hearts of unbelievers, Christ "has no form or majesty... that we should be attracted to him". As believers, however, he does attract us, because like us he is "a man of sorrows and acquainted with grief". The very thing that makes some people despise him, makes us turn to him, because he understands our struggles and hurts and sorrows. In him we see Godnot as a remote and incomprehensible Being, but as "a man..." who is truly one of us. Moreover, as "a man of sorrows" he has been through the same sorrows andtemptations as we experience and therefore is able to understand and sympathise with us (Hebrews 4:14-16). 1 He has power to overcome tribulations Isaiah53:4 Christ is pictured as one who "bore our griefs and carriedour sorrows. This is more than just understanding and being acquainted with our sorrows and griefs;it's shouldering those troubles and lifting the burden from us. When Matthew points to the fulfillment of this prophecy, he shows Jesushealing the sick and casting out demons. Jesus has power to overcome tribulation. (Matthew 8:16-17). We cancome to Christ not only for understanding but for overcoming. He'll listen to our troubles and be sympathetic; but better still he'll empower us to overcome and conquer. 2 He dealt with our deepestneeds Isaiah53:5-6,10
  • 46. It's bad enough that life is so uncertain, and ever so short —death comes to us all, and always too soon. But worse still, we have sins to condemn us when death thrusts us before our Maker. Oh for a way to make death not the end of life but the beginning of a far more wonderful life that never ends! Oh for a wayto getrid of our guilt and make us worthy to enter into that life! There is such a way, and Christ is it (John 14:2,3,6, Romans 3:23-26). The prophecy "He shall see seed, he shall prolong days" speaks ofthe everlasting life and joy that Christ gives us because he became "a guilt offering" on our behalf (Isaiah 53:10). 3 He set us an example to follow his steps Isaiah53:6-7 The manner in which Jesus lived, and died, causes us to follow him. If we would walk in someone’s steps,we canhave no better example and shepherd than Jesus. "All we like sheephave gone astray". He who himself was "led as a lamb to the slaughter" is able now to be our shepherd. He'll be our spiritual guide along the right path and lead us to green pastures of eternal life (1Peter 2:20-25, Psalms 23). https://simplybible.com/f055-isaiah53-man-of-sorrows.htm Man of Sorrows Author: Ray C. Stedman Readthe Scripture: Isaiah53
  • 47. It has become evident through this prophecy that Someone is coming. That dim and shadowyFigure which appears occasionallyin the opening chapters is emerging ever more clearly as we move through this book. Here in the 53rd chapter the Messiahsteps out into full and glorious view. It is hard to understand how anyone can read this greatchapter and not see Jesus in it. We have already commented on the factthat, through the centuries, Jewishpeople have held that it does not refer to Jesus ofNazareth, but rather that the nation of Israel is the "Servant of Jehovah." The primary reasonfor their feeling is that they expecteda different kind of Messiah. The Jews had done like many of us do with Scripture -- they had selectedverses that appealedto them and formulated from them a vision of a Delivererwho would come with military might and power. He would overcome the Roman tyrants, they thought, setIsrael free, and fulfill the promises of God to make it the chief of the nations of earth. Because ourLord did not fulfill those promises, they have maintained that this prophecy does not apply to him. Yet here in this greatchapter it is clearthat God's suffering Servant is brought before us. The passageactuallybegins in the closing verses ofChapter 52, which belong with Chapter 53. Takentogetherwith it, these verses constitute five stanzas that depict various foreviews of the work of the Messiah, eachone bringing out a different aspectofhis work and life. Beginning in Verse 13, Chapter 52, we have God himself announcing the presence ofthe Servant. Behold, my servant shall prosper, he shall be exalted and lifted up, and shall be very high. As many were astonishedat him -- his appearance was so marred, beyond human semblance, and his form beyond that of the sons of men -- so shall he startle many nations;
  • 48. kings shall shut their mouths because of him; for that which has not been told them they shall see, and that which they have not heard they shall understand. (Isaiah 52:13-15 RSV) This section, which describes the remarkable impact that the Messiahwould make upon mankind, opens with a declarationthat he would be successfulin all that he did: "Behold, my servant shall prosper." That success wouldbe accomplishedin three specific stages, describedhere:"He shall be exalted; he shall be lifted up; he shall be very high." Commentators see in this the events that happened to Jesus afterthe crucifixion: First, in the words, "He shall be exalted," there is a reference to the resurrection. Jesus was brought back from the dead, stepping into a condition of life that no man had ever enteredbefore. Lazarus had been resurrected, in a sense, but he merely returned to this earthly life. Jesus, however, becamethe "firstborn from the dead," (Colossians 1:18). He was thus exalted to a higher dimension of existence. Then, "he shall be lifted up." After his resurrection, Jesus took his disciples to the Mount of Olives and while he was speaking to them he ascendedinto the heavens until a cloud receivedhim out of sight. So he was physically and literally "lifted up." Thirdly, the passagesays, "He shallbe very high." The Hebrew puts it rather graphically: "He shall be high, very." We cannotbut recallthe words of the Apostle Paul in the letter to the Philippians. Speaking of Jesus, he says, "Wherefore Godhas highly exalted him and given him the name which is above every name, that at the name of Jesus everyknee shall bow and every tongue confess thatJesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father," (Philippians 2:9-11). Thus by his resurrection, his ascension, and his kingly exaltation the Messiahhas made tremendous impact upon humanity. Further, it is said of him here that "many were astonishedat him." This happened in two different ways. First, as Verse 14 implies, many were "astonished" athis death: "His appearance was so marred, beyond human
  • 49. semblance, and his form beyond that of the sons of men." This is descriptive of the face of Jesus afterhe had endured the terrible Romanscourging, the beatings, the blows to his face with the rod, which the soldiers mockingly calleda king's scepter, and the crushing of the crown of thorns upon his head. By the time he was impaled on the cross, his face was a bloody mess. This is what the prophet sees:our Lord's appearance was so marred that those who passedby were "astonished" athis visage. But Verse 15 describes another form of astonishment: "so shallhe startle many nations." This refers to the tremendous accomplishments he achieved, not only during his ministry, but through the intervening centuries since. Many have commented on the remarkable achievements of Jesus. Kenneth ScottLatourette, a wellknown historian, has said, As the centuries pass, the evidence is accumulating that, measuredby his effecton history, Jesus is the most influential life ever lived on this planet. G.K. Chesterton, that remarkable English Christian novelist and literary critic, has written, There was a man who dwelt in the Eastcenturies ago, and now I cannot look at a sheep or a sparrow, a lily or a cornfield, a raven or a sunset, a vineyard or a mountain without thinking of him. If this be not to be divine, what is it? Truly, our Lord has made an astonishing impact upon our world. He is the Man who cannot be forgotten. The first three verses ofChapter 53 describe the Messiah's strange rejection. These words express the feelings of the repentant nation when at last they recognize him at his return. The prophet cries out as the voice of the nation, Who has believed our report? And to whom has the arm of the Lord been revealed? For he grew up before him like a young plant, and like a root out of dry ground; he had no form or comeliness that we should look at him,
  • 50. and no beauty that we should desire him. He was despisedand rejectedby men; a man of sorrows,and acquainted with grief; and as one from whom men hide their faces he was despised, and we esteemedhim not. (Isaiah53:1-3 RSV) These remarkable words are felt by any person who comes to Christ and remembers how lightly he regardedhim when he first learned of him. Here the nation asks, "Who has believed our report, that which we have heard. The arm of the Lord was revealedto us, but we did not understand who he was." Looking back, they cansee how he fulfilled these words. He grew up before Jehovah as a "young plant." That speaks ofthe hidden years at Nazareth when, in the obscurity of the carpenter's shop no one knew who he was excepthis Heavenly Father. He was the "root out of dry ground." We have alreadyseenIsaiah's prediction that a root would rise up from the stem of David, from whom Josephand Mary were both descended. But the House of David had fallen on evil days. The royal line had become impoverished and no one recognizedits claims to leadership within Israel. When our Lord came he was indeed a root out of very dry ground. The passagecontinues, "He had no form or comeliness that we should look at him, and no beauty that we should desire him." Again, these are words that refer to our Lord's appearance as he hung upon the cross. He was a pitiful figure to behold, hanging naked, blood covering his face, worn and shattered by suffering. Indeed he had "no beauty that we should desire him." He was truly "a man of sorrows, andacquainted with grief." There is no record in Scripture that Jesus everlaughed. I think he did laugh, for you cannot read some of his parables, or some of the things he said to his disciples, without sensing a smile on his face or hearing a chuckle in his voice. But there is no accountthat he everlaughed. He was "a man of sorrows and acquainted with grief."
  • 51. We must remember that all through his boyhood, and even into his manhood, he was pursued by nasty cracks abouthis birth, inferring that he was an illegitimate son, born to a faithless maiden who had broken her vow of betrothal. His brothers misunderstood him and did not believe in him. They were embarrassedat some of the things he said and did. It was not until after the resurrectionthat they believed in him. He was calleda drunkard and a glutton, and was said to be possessedby a devil. He was called a Samaritan, a disparaging term. He had no home to go to. He said himself, "Foxes have holes, birds have their nests, but the Son of Man has nowhere to lay his head," (Matthew 8:20, Luke 9:50). Sometimes his disciples left him alone to go about their business, but he had to go out to the Gardenof Gethsemane and sleep alone beneath the o lives trees. He became at one point "Public Enemy No. 1." In the weeks before his crucifixion the Phariseesoffereda rewardto anyone who would turn him in. Surely he was rejectedof men! In the words of the Apostle John, "He came unto his own, and his own people receivedhim not," (John 1:11 RSV). The next stanza portrays our Lord's substitutionary sacrifice: Surely he has borne our griefs and carried our sorrows; yet we esteemedhim stricken, smitten by God, and afflicted. But he was wounded for our transgressions, he was bruised for our iniquities; upon him was the chastisementthat made us whole, and with his stripes we are healed. All we like sheephave gone astray; we have turned every one to his own way; and the Lord has laid on him
  • 52. the iniquity of us all. (Isaiah 53:4-6 RSV) This, of course, is the very heart of the gospel, the goodnews. Jesus took our place. As Peterputs it, "He bore our sins in his own body upon the tree," 1 Peter2:24). He took our sins and paid the price for them. He had no sins of his own and Scripture is very careful to record the sinlessnessofJesus himself. He was not suffering for his own transgressions, but for the sins of others. One writer has put it rather well, It was for me that Jesus died, For me and a world of men Just as sinful and just as slow to give back his love again. And he did not waituntil I came to him. He loved me at my worst. He needn't ever have died for me If I could have loved him first. That is the problem, isn't it? Why do not we love him first? Why is it that we can only learn to love our Lord when we have beheld his suffering; his excruciating agony on our behalf? Why is it we find such difficulty in obeying the first commandment, "Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart and all thy soul, and all thy strength," (Deuteronomy 6:5 KJV). It is because of our transgressions, as this passage declares.Theyhave cut us off from the divine gift of love that ought to be in every human heart. Sin is a disease thathas afflicted our entire race. We cannot understand the depth of human depravity until we see the awful agonythrough which our Lord passed;behold the hours of darkness and hear the terrible orphaned cry, "My God, my God, why hast Thou forsakenme?" (Matthew 27:46, Mark 15:34 KJV). All this spells out for us what we really are like. Mostthink of ourselves as decentpeople, goodpeople. We have not done, perhaps, some of the terrible things that others have done. But w hen we see in the cross of Jesus the depth of evil in our hearts we understand that sin is a disease that
  • 53. has infiltrated our whole lives. Man, who was createdin the image of God and once wore the glory of his manhood, has become bruised and marred, sick and broken, his conscienceruined, his understanding faulty, his will enfeebled. The principle of integrity and the resolve to do right has been completely undermined in all of us. We know this to be true. No wonder, then, this verse comes as the best of news: He was wounded for our transgressions.The bruising that he felt was the chastisementthat we deserved, but it was laid upon him. There is no way to read this and fail to see that our Lord is the greatdivine Substitute for the evil of the human heart. We can lay hold of this personally by the honest admissionstatedin Verse 6: "All we like sheep have gone astray; we have turned every one to his own way." How true that is of eachof us! Who canclaim anything else? I grew up in Monta-a-a-a-na, andI know something about sheep. Sheepare very foolishand willful creatures. Theycan find a hole in the fence and get out, but they cannotfind it to getback in. Someone must go and get them every time. How true are the words, "We have turned every one to his own way." Frank Sinatra made a song popular a few years ago, "I Did It My Way." When you hear that it sounds like something admirable, something everybody ought to emulate. How proud we feel that we did it "our way." But when you turn to the recordof the Scripture, you find that that is the problem, not the solution. Everyone is doing things "their way," so we have a race that is in constantconflict, foreverstriving with one another, unable to work anything out, because we all did it "our way." The way to lay hold of the redemption of Jesus is to admit that "All we like sheephave gone astray. We have turned every one to his own way"; and then to believe the next line, "But the Lord has laid on him the iniquity of us all." One Christian put his testimony in a rather quaint way. He said, "I stooped down low and went in at the first 'all,' and I stoodup straight and came out at the last." Notice that this verse begins and ends with the word "all": "All we like sheephave gone astray." This man said, "I stoopeddown low and went in at that 'all.'" In other words, "I acknowledgedthat I, too, was part of that crowdthat had gone astray." Ah, "But I stoodup straight and came out at the