The Divine Servant Took Our Place
Isaiah 52:13-53:12
God does not keep silent.
He finds many creative ways to speak to his children. Scripture says: “He guides his people with his
eye.” (Psalm 32:8) Back in ancient
times one of the ways God spoke to the people of Israel , was through the
prophets. The Israeli people understood
this and they recorded the prophecies (or messages) that God spoke to them
through their prophets. And now those
prophecies can be found in the Old Testament and are there for all of Gods’
children to read. A prophecy is a
message from God.
A prophet was a man or woman who God chose to speak out His
message (or prophecy) to the people of Israel . God would speak to the person and tell him
that he had been chosen to be a prophet and deliver God’s Word to the people. Then God would pour His Holy Spirit out onto
the prophet and give him the ability to see and hear the words and messages
that God wanted given to the people. God
would often give the prophet visions and allow the prophet to see events that
would be happening far off into the future.
God gave his people many prophecies about the Messiah or
Savior that He had promised to send to save them. And most Bible scholars agree that the
prophecy found in Isaiah 52:13-53:12 is the most sublime messianic prophecy in
the Old Testament. This passage relates
to Jesus’ dying to save or redeem us and then rising from the dead. Matthew and Peter quoted from it. This passage in Isaiah was written eight
centuries before Christ. And Isaiah,
with the Holy Spirit speaking through him, in this prophecy and others, made
incredibly accurate statements concerning the facts of Jesus’ crucifixion. Isaiah also spoke of how the Servant Savior
would die for the sins of the people. Isaiah was a major prophet in Jewish
history.
The prophecy in Isaiah 52-53 begins by introducing a
“Servant” to us. It reads: “Behold, My
Servant will act wisely. He will be
raised and lifted up and highly exalted.
Just as there were many who were appalled at Him, his face and
appearance was so disfigured beyond that of any man and his form marred beyond
human likeness”: (Isaiah 52:13-14) Christ’s amazing victory through humiliation
is presented here. The “disfigurement” of
Jesus’ face and appearance could have come from His maltreatment at the hands
of Pilate’s soldiers. Scripture says
that Jesus was beaten so badly that He fell under the weight of the cross while
He was carrying it. And Simon of Cyrene was
ordered by the Roman soldiers to come along side and carry the cross part of
the way for Jesus.
These verses in
Isaiah show the “Servant” going through astonishing humiliation. But after that
- an astonishing exaltation! Jesus went
through this humiliation on the cross for us.
And Jesus’ exaltation came when He was resurrected and then we will all
see Him exalted when He comes again at the end time. Scripture says that Jesus will come again in
glory at the end time and He will be highly exalted and every knee will bow
before Him. Philippians 2:9-11 reads: “Therefore
God has highly exalted Him and given Him the name which is above every
name. That at the name of Jesus every
knee shall bow, of those in heaven and of those on earth, and of those under
the earth. And that every tongue shall
confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father.”
Isaiah’s prophecy continues with: “So He will sprinkle many
nations, and kings will shut their mouths because of Him. For what they were not told, they will see,
and what they have not heard, they will understand.” (Isaiah 52:15) The phrase “sprinkle many nations” means that
the Servant’s atoning sacrifice on the cross – his blood - will cleanse many
Gentile nations. Scripture says:
“Without the shedding of blood, there is no remission of sin.” (Hebrews 9:22)
Gentile kings would
be astounded at the forgiveness offered with the gift of eternal life. That
which had not been told to the kings of the Gentile nations would now be the
Gospel message of salvation through the cross.
Perhaps when scripture says that the gentile kings had not been told but
were now amazed and surprised with the gift of salvation, it may mean that the
gentile nations did not have the law and the prophets to tell them ahead of
time that God would send a Messiah or a Savior.
All of God’s Word (the Old Testament) had been given to the people of Israel before
Jesus came.
Next we read: “Who has believed our report? And to whom has the arm of the Lord been
revealed?” (Isaiah 53:1) Even though the Jewish people were given the report
– and many prophecies concerning the coming Servant who would suffer for them,
it still defied their imagination. “The
arm of the Lord” is a phrase always used in Scripture to designate God’s
intervention into human affairs. When
the Israelites were suffering terribly as slaves in Egypt , God performed miracle after
miracle to free the Israelites from their Egyptian captors. When these miracles took place in Egypt for the
Jewish slaves and on their way to the promised land , Scripture stated that
“the arm of the Lord” performed them. So
when Christ freed us from the slavery of sin and Isaiah states that “The arm of
the Lord has been revealed” this would be God’s greatest miracle being done for
humankind! .
The next verse of this Isaiah prophecy reads: “For He (the
Servant) shall grow up before God as a tender plant. And as a root out of dry ground, He has no beauty
or majesty to attract us to him,: and when we see Him, there is nothing in his
appearance that we should desire Him. He
is despised and rejected by men. A Man
of sorrows and acquainted with grief.
And we hid, as it were, our faces from Him: He was despised, and we did
not esteem Him.” (Isaiah 53:1-3)
“A root out of dry ground” I believe expresses the obscurity
of Jesus’ origin. Instead of being born
in a king’s palace, He was born in a stable for animals. In other words, the Servant (Jesus) would
lack the earthly grandeur or the trappings of royalty that attracts the
admiration of the world. If Jesus had
been born into a wealthy prestigious family and if He had known all of the
important people of the day, most likely the religious leaders would not have
rejected Him. But Jesus grew up as a
poor boy in the little town of Nazareth ,
and when He became a man He spent His time with ordinary sinners. He was humble and the men of distinction were
not his supporters. Did God send Him
into the world as a humble servant so that we would not to be attracted to Him
for the wrong reasons?
We continue on with Isaiah’s Servant song. Jesus’ work here as a Servant is to take away
our sins. Isaiah’s prophecy describes
this: “Surely He has borne our griefs, and carried our sorrows: Yet we esteemed Him stricken, smitten by God,
and afflicted. But He was pierced for
our sins and He was crushed for our iniquities. The punishment that brought us
peace was upon him, and by his wounds we are healed.” (Isaiah 53:4-5)
Everyone’s sins were laid heavily upon Jesus. Isaiah
foretold that the Servant would suffer terribly and die for our sins. Isaiah uses the word “pierced” when he writes
that Jesus will be “pierced” for our sins.
Indeed, Jesus’ hands and feet were pierced all the way through by the
nails when he was so cruelly nailed to the cross. Peter writes: “Jesus, who Himself bore our
sins in His own body on the tree (wooden cross), that we, having died to sins,
might live for righteousness – by whose stripes we are healed. For you were like sheep going astray, but have
now returned to the Shepherd (Jesus) and Overseer of your souls. (1 peter 2:24-25)
This magnificent prophecy from antiquity continues: “All we like sheep have gone astray: We have turned, every one, to his own
way: And the Lord has laid on Him the
iniquity of us all.” (Isaiah 53:6) Each of us has preferred our own way to God’s
way: this is the essence of sin or of “going astray.” And our sins along with all the others have
been laid on Jesus who took it on Himself and carried the burden and paid the
price.
Isaiah’s prophecy continues:
“He was oppressed and afflicted, yet he did not open his mouth. He was led like a lamb to the slaughter, and
as a sheep before her shearers is silent, so he did not open his mouth. By oppression and judgment he was taken
away. And who can speak of his
descendants? For he was cut off from the
land of the living: for the sins of my people he was stricken. He was assigned a grave with the wicked and
with the rich in his death, though he had done no violence, nor was any deceit
in his mouth.” (Isaiah 53:7-9)
These passages in Isaiah say that the Servant Savior will
not open his mouth and argue or stand up for himself when he is being judged
and sent away to be killed. And this
prophecy was fulfilled when Jesus was put to death. Jesus did not speak up in his own defense
when he was brought before Herod or Pilate.
When the Isaiah prophecy foretells that his grave will be “assigned with
the wicked and with the rich in his death,” this passage was looking forward to
when Jesus would be murdered on a cross between two criminals (the wicked) (Matthew
27:32-56) and then after he died, his body would be placed into a rich man’s
tomb. Both of those prophecies were fulfilled.
And this magnificent prophecy ends with these last thoughts: “Yet it was God’s plan to bruise Him, God has
put him(the Servant) to grief. When You (God) make His soul an offering for
sin. He shall see his seed, he shall
prolong his days. And the will of God
shall prosper in his hand. He (the
Servant) shall see the labor of his soul and be satisfied. By his knowledge my righteous Servant shall
justify many. For He shall bear their
sins. Therefore I will divide Him a
portion with the great.” (Isaiah
53:10-12)
These last verses of Isaiah’s prophecy say that all along it
was God’s plan to allow the Servant (Jesus) to suffer for the salvation of
sinners and to triumph over death. Verse
10 says: “When You, God make His soul an offering for sin.” This is addressed to God directly, as the One
who alone has the prerogative of appointing Jesus’ life to be an offering for
sin. Next Isaiah prophesies: “He shall see his seed, he shall prolong his
days. And the will of God shall prosper
in his hand. He shall see the labor of his soul and be satisfied….”
His (Jesus’) seed is believed by Bible scholars to refer to
his children by faith, - born-again Christians- the Church. And Isaiah goes on to prophecy that “He shall
prolong his days.” What does this
mean? Does this not refer to a time after
his death and burial? Only his bodily
resurrection could serve to fulfill such a prediction as this!
This prophecy from Isaiah about the suffering Servant and Savior,
written back in antiquity some 2,800 years ago, was one of God’s descriptions or
pictures of what our Messiah and Savior would be like or look like. For the Jewish people and for all Christians
in every age this prophecy and many others were signs along the way pointing us
to Jesus as the promised Messiah.. It is
just one more proof that Jesus Christ is Lord and Savior. One more piece of evidence that we can rely
on. And one more confirmation that He is
our Redeemer! .
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