Surely He Has Borne Our Griefs
By Pastor John Piper
“Behold, My servant
will prosper, he will be high and lifted up, and greatly exalted. Just as many
were astonished at you, My people, so his appearance
was marred more than any man, and His form more than the sons of men. Thus He
will sprinkle many nations, kings will shut their
mouths on account of Him; for what they had not been told them they will see,
and what they had not heard they will understand.”
“Who has believed our message? And to whom
has the arm of the Lord been revealed? For He grew up before Him like a tender
shoot, and like a root out of parched ground; He has no stately form or majesty
that we should look upon Him, nor appearance that we should be attracted to
Him. He was despised and forsaken of men, a man of sorrows, and acquainted with
grief; and like one from whom men hide their face, He was despised, and we did
not esteem Him. Surely our griefs He Himself bore,
and our sorrows He carried; yet we ourselves esteemed Him stricken, smitten of
God, and afflicted. But He was pierced through for our transgressions, He was
crushed for our iniquities; the chastening for our well-being fell upon Him,
and by His scourging we are healed. All of us like sheep have gone astray, each
of us has turned to his own way; but the Lord has caused the iniquity of us all
to fall on Him.” (Isaiah 52:13-53:6)
Nowhere in all the Old Testament
does the Gospel of Jesus Christ shine more clearly than in Isaiah
53. Seven hundred years before Jesus came into the world, God opened the eyes
of His prophet to see into the very heart of Christ's saving work. And the
heart of that saving work is substitution. The Messiah is pierced and crushed
in our place. The righteous in the place of the
unrighteous.
The Loving Shepherd in the place of the lost sheep. The
exalted king in the place of the rebel subjects.
So,
when we look at Isaiah 53 what we
have is not only a beautiful revelation of Christ's saving death in the place
of sinners, but a stunning validation of its truth. Christ not only died for
sinners so that we could be saved, He died for sinners in fulfillment of
explicit prophecy so that we could know more surely that we are saved. When you
read the story of your salvation in detail 700 years before it happened, you
have not only revelation, but validation.
And
so I invite you not only to revel in the great substitutionary work of Christ that takes away your
condemnation, but also to be strengthened in your confidence that this is no
myth, but the historical work of God Who told His story long before it
happened.
This
passage of scripture is about the "Servant of the Lord." Notice
52:13, "Behold my Servant will prosper . . ." (cf. v. 11).
Who
Is This Servant?
Sometimes
in the book of Isaiah the servant of
the Lord is the people of Israel. Isaiah
41:8,10: "But you Israel, my servant, Jacob whom
I have chosen . . . fear not for I am with you." Sometimes Israel is
pictured as the servant of the Lord.
Sometimes
the servant is the prophet Isaiah himself. Isaiah
49:5 "And now says the Lord, who formed me from the womb to be His
servant, to bring back Jacob to Him...." Here the prophet Isaiah serves
the people.
But
in Isaiah 53 the servant can't be the
prophet or the people because the servant is pictured as substituting himself
for both the prophet and the people. Verse 4: "Surely He (the Servant) has
born our griefs and our sorrows He carried."
Verse 5: "He was pierced through for our transgression,
He was crushed for our iniquities." "Our"
means "me Isaiah" and the people of Israel who will believe on this Servant
of the Lord. So the servant is not the people and not Isaiah, because He
is the substitute for Isaiah and the people. He is their servant.
Who
then was this Servant of the Lord? The New
Testament answer is that He was Jesus the Messiah. Peter, for example,
quotes Isaiah 53:5 ("by His
stripes we are healed" in 1 Peter
2:24) and applies it to Jesus. He says in 1
Peter 1:11, "The prophets sought to know what person or time the
Spirit of Christ within them was indicating as he predicted the sufferings of
Christ and the glories to follow."
And
in Acts 8 the Ethiopian eunuch was
reading Isaiah 53 when Philip joined
him in his chariot. The eunuch asked, "Of whom does the prophet speak, of
himself, or of someone else?" And Luke tells us that "Philip opened
his mouth and beginning from this Scripture he preached Jesus to him" (Acts 8:35).
In
all the history of Israel, no one comes close to fulfilling this prophecy
besides Jesus. He Himself said, "The Son of man did not come to be served,
but to serve (that is, to be the suffering servant) and to give His life a
ransom (a substitute!) for many" (Mark 10:45).
So
let me try to open this prophecy for you so that
you may enjoy its revelation of Christ, and be strengthened by its validation
as prophecy, and, I pray for some not yet persuaded, be drawn into the
salvation it offers.
Let
me try to take you with me through five stages of what Isaiah has seen.
1.
Rebel subjects
Chapter
53 begins, "Who has believed our message? And to whom has the arm of the
Lord been revealed?" The answer to those rhetorical questions is: scarcely
anyone. Why not? Why did Isaiah then, and why do we today, find such unbelief
when the message of salvation is preached?
One
answer is given in verse 6: "All of us like sheep have gone astray, each of us has turned to his own way." This is
the essence of rebellion and unbelief -- a people going their own way.
Just think of it! Think of the weight of it and the ungrateful rebellion
of it. God created all people for His glory (Isaiah
43:7). But how many today keep this before their eyes and ask each day, let
alone each hour: How shall I not go astray from the way of God? How shall
I escape the pride and presumption of going my own way when God made me for
His way and for His honor?
Not
many? In fact the easiest way not to feel like a rebel against the King is
not to think about the King (or the Shepherd). If you can manage to put Him
out of your mind, then nothing in the world seems more natural than to do
your own thing and go your own way. It doesn't feel like rebellion. It feels
like responsibility.
2.
Rejected Servant
The
next glimpse into what Isaiah sees is a glimpse of the rejected Servant. Verse
3: "He was despised and forsaken of men, a man of sorrows, and acquainted
with grief; and like one from whom men hide their face, He was despised and we
did not esteem Him."
When
God sent His Servant to save the rebel subjects, we despised Him. Why? The
answer is given in verse 2: "He grew up before Him (God) like a tender
shoot, and like a root out of parched ground; He has no stately form or majesty
that we should look upon Him. Nor appearance that we should be attracted to Him."
In
other words, His whole demeanor, His style, His view of life and money and
possessions and lust and prayer and worship and pride and humility and fear and
faith -- none of it endorsed our own rebellion. We didn't feel endorsed around
Jesus. He was so lowly and unimpressive that our aspirations for power and
reputation felt evil. His happy poverty made our wanting more and more feel
foolish. His willingness to suffer for others made our craving for comforts
feel selfish.
And
so, to protect ourselves, we despised Him. We even hoped it was God that struck
Him. That would be a good endorsement of our rejection. And we rejected Him. He
was an offense. A rejected Servant.
3.
Ransoming Substitute
But
He knew that would happen. It didn't take Him off guard. He did not come to be
served, but to serve and to give His life a ransom for many. And so, the next
glimpse we get through Isaiah's eyes is a glimpse of the rejected Servant as a
ransoming Substitute.
Verse
4a: "Surely our griefs He Himself bore, and our
sorrows He carried . . ." Verse 5: "But He was pierced through for
our transgressions, He was crushed for our iniquities; the chastening for our
well-being fell upon Him, and by His scourging we are healed." And verse
6b: "But the Lord has caused the iniquity of us all to fall on Him."
This
is the heart of the Gospel of Jesus -- substitution. This is the great message
of good news that God has for rebel subjects who are willing to lay down their
rebellion. Instead of collapsing in grief over our rejection, He bears our griefs. Instead of increasing our sorrows, He carries our
sorrows. Instead of avenging our transgressions He is pierced for them in our
place. Instead of crushing us for our iniquities He is crushed for them as our
substitute. And all the chastisement and whipping that belong to us for our
rebellion He takes on himself in order that we might have peace and be healed.
You
don't have to understand all the intricacies of how this works in order to be
healed and forgiven any more than you have to understand how a computer works
in order to write poems on your word processor. God tells us what we need to
know. His rejected Servant is in fact a ransoming Substitute for rebel
subjects. That's the Gospel.
4.
Restored Sight
But
that's not all of it. There's more. The Gospel doesn't save unless we see it
and grasp it for our own. But rebel subjects don't do that. At
least not on our own. But Isaiah says that something will happen -- and
this is the fourth stage of Isaiah's message: there will be restored sight to
the rebel subjects.
Isaiah 52:15: "He (the Servant) will
sprinkle many nations, kings will shut their mouths
on account of Him; for what had not been told them they will see, and what
they had not heard they will
understand."
Even
though Isaiah 53:1 says that scarcely
any have believed Isaiah's message, because the arm of the Lord had not been
revealed, nevertheless 52:15 says that the arm of the Lord will be revealed.
God
will not let the work of His Servant be done in vain. He will bare His arm and
sprinkle the nations with the healing blood of His Servant (v. 15a) and the
kings of the earth will see and understand. Their eyes will be opened. Their
sight will be restored.
Paul
quoted this verse in Romans 15:21 to
justify his hope in the success of frontier missions. "I aspired to preach
the gospel not where Christ was already named . . . But as it is written, Those who had no news of Him shall see, and they who have
not heard shall understand" (cf. Acts
26:18).
In
other words, the gospel of Isaiah -- the Gospel of Jesus Christ is good news
not only because the heart of it is God's rejected Servant dying as a ransoming
substitute for rebel subjects, but also because God guarantees that He will
bare His arm and open the eyes of kings to see and believe. He will restore
sight.
5.
Reverent Silence
This
brings us to one last glimpse through Isaiah's eyes (again in 52:15). When God
sprinkles the nations with the blood of His Servant and grants the kings of the
earth to see what they had not been told and to understand what they had not
heard, the result will be reverent silence: "The kings will shut their
mouth on account of Him."
And why do they do this? Isaiah 52:13 gives the answer:
"Behold, my Servant will prosper, He will be high and lifted up, and
greatly exalted."
The
kings will be silent because the suffering Servant is the Sovereign of the
universe. He is high. He is lifted up. He is greatly exalted. This is what God
grants them the eyes to see -- the majesty of Jesus. The despised and rejected
servant is the Lord of glory. Let there be a reverent silence before Him.
Though
He was in the form of God, He did not count equality with God a thing to be
grasped, but emptied Himself, taking the form of a servant, being born in
the likeness of men. And being found in human form He humbled Himself and
became obedient unto death, even death on a cross. Therefore God has highly
exalted Him and bestowed on Him the name which is above every name, that at
the name of Jesus every knee should bow, in heaven and on earth and under
the earth, and every tongue confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory
of God the Father. Amen.
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John Piper is the Pastor for Preaching at Bethlehem Baptist Church in
Minneapolis, Minnesota. John is the author of more than 20 books and
his preaching and teaching is featured on the daily radio program Desiring
God. For more information regarding Desiring God visit their website at www.desiringGod.org
or call 1-888-346-4700.