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Isaiah 53:3
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Articles, Bible studies, and sermons that contain Isaiah 53:3:

Isaiah 53:1-12
Excerpted from: Peace, Peace (Part One): Peace with God

These two passages that I have just read may be the clearest statement of Christ's redemptive mission in the whole Bible. Once you connect Christ with the suffering Servant, it becomes so clear. So many prophecies were fulfilled in what He did at Golgotha. Isaiah 53 focuses on the suffering and His sorrow leading to His death, along with taking on Himself the wrath of God in the form of our sins and bearing them and making intercession for us.

I want to draw your attention to verse 5, the phrase, "the chastisement for our peace was upon Him." Just kind of single this out. It may be a little bit unclear what is being spoken about here and I thought I would try to clarify it. We can paraphrase (I was going to say translate) this particular clause to mean or to read, "God disciplined Him to bring us peace." Or we could say, "God chastised Him," God spanked Him, God gave Him discipline for our well-being. Or another way to think of the concept of peace here is that He was chastised. He was given the sentence in our stead and made to suffer to restore us to wholeness. It is parallel to the next clause, "by His stripes, we are healed." It really gets to the point that when we sin, we are wounded, we are sick and we need healing. And God allowed Jesus Christ to be the object of His wrath to help restore us to good health, to well-being.

So He did not just restore sinners to legal innocence, if you will, and remove their guilt. But He did the major work of restoring their ability to have a relationship with God. See, that was the missing part of it. They can have peace but only when Jesus took their sins and God granted that sacrifice, the ability by grace to cover our sins.

The Creator God's blood shed for all of us was worth more than what was required to cover the sins of mankind. And so God said, "Okay, I am satisfied. We can have peace now. The guilt is removed. But only for those who believe."

Isaiah 53:3
Excerpted from: Psalm Genres (Part Four): Laments

The Bible too has a lot to say about woe and grief because life is indeed full of sorrows. Here are just a few verses to whet your appetite. Isaiah 53:3 describes our Savior as "a Man of sorrows and acquainted with grief." If you would think that anybody would be happy and joyous throughout His life, you would think it would be God Himself. But when He was here on earth, He had to go through quite a lot of suffering.


Articles

David the Prophet  
Jesus' Final Human Thoughts (Part One)  
Light Affliction?  
The Beatitudes, Part Three: Mourning  
The First Prophecy (Part One)  
The First Prophecy (Part Two)  
Why the Transfiguration?  

Bible Studies

Basic Doctrines: Going On to Perfection  

Essays

A Man of Sorrows  
Life Doesn't Work on a Balance Sheet (Part Two)  
Pre-Passover Traditions  
Rejection Hurts  
The Role of the Outcasts (Part Three)  

Sermons

Approaching God Through Christ (Part 2)  
Jesus in the Feasts (Part Four): Atonement  
Forgiveness and the Perpetual Covenant of Peace  
Back to Life (Part Four)  
To Do Your Will, O God!  
The Book of Joel (Part One)  
You Are My Witnesses That I Am God  
Looks Fair, Feels Foul  
Created to Do God's Will and Work  
The Plan of Salvation in Genesis 3:15  
God's Special Presence and Direct Intervention  
Jesus Christ's Trial (Part Two)  
Hands That Hang Low  
Do You Recognize This Man? (Part 1)  
Anointing With Oil  
Magic Doesn't Work (Part 1)  
Purpose-Driven Churches (Part 4)  
The Father-Son Relationship (Part Three)  
Faith and Healing (Part 2)  
Childrearing (Part Two)  
Why Are We Afflicted?  
Trial by Fire  
The Trial of Jesus  
The Providence of God (Part 1)  
Persecution  
Intimacy with Christ (Part 4)  
Lonely, But Not Forsaken  
The Intercessory Character of Christ  
Strategies for Escaping Babylon (Part Three)  



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