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Dear radio friends, we open our
Bibles again to the book of Isaiah and the beautiful prophecy recorded
in Isaiah 52 verse 13 all the way through chapter 53 of the
Suffering Servant. It is a prophecy of Christ in
his suffering crucial to understanding why Jesus came and what Jesus
suffered. We know this passage is about
Jesus because in the book of Acts chapter 8 you have the story
of the Ethiopian eunuch who loved God and believed the Old Testament
Scriptures. This man who had just been up
to Jerusalem to worship God was traveling in his chariot back
to Africa and as he went along the way he was reading a part
of the Word of God that he had in his possession and the passage
he read was from Isaiah 53. You read about it in Acts 8 verses
26 and following. In verse 32, the place of the
Scripture which he read was this, He was led as a sheep to the
slaughter, and like a lamb dumb before his shearer, so he opened
not his mouth. And the eunuch asks Philip, I
pray thee, of whom speaketh the prophet this, of himself or of
some other man? And in response, Philip opened
his mouth and began at the same scripture and preached unto him
Jesus. This passage is about Jesus and
today I want to preach Jesus to you beginning at the same
place as Philip. Today we come to the fourth section
or stanza in this prophetic song, Isaiah 53, verses 7 through 9. Let me read those verses to you,
and as we do, take note especially of the first verse. It's the
key verse in this section. He was oppressed and he was afflicted,
yet he opened not his mouth. He is brought as a lamb to the
slaughter, and as a sheep before her shearers is dumb, so he openeth
not his mouth. He was taken from prison and
from judgment, and who shall declare his generation? For he
was cut off out of the land of the living, for the transgression
of my people was he stricken. And he made his grave with the
wicked and with the rich in his death, because he had done no
violence, neither was any deceit in his mouth." Now, the first
thing that you have in these verses is the amazing silence
of Jesus in his suffering. Verse 7 begins, He was oppressed
and he was afflicted, yet he opened not his mouth. In the
original Hebrew, the word oppressed has the idea of being hunted
down, a wild deer or some other animal being pursued and hunted
by a pack of wolves or by a group of hunters with their weapons.
The other word, afflicted, has the idea of being pressured,
and it's used in the Bible in connection with a wine press.
After the grapes had been picked, they would put them in a hard-sided
box with holes in the bottom, and someone would jump on them
and trample them in order to squeeze all the juices from them. This is how Jesus' suffering
is described. He was hunted, he was pursued,
and he was pressured, he was squeezed. And it's important
for us to remember that this happened to Jesus all his life
long. In verse 3, he's called a man
of sorrows. From the moment he was born,
there was a manhunt for him. Herod, when he was still an infant,
tried to kill him. From the moment he opened his
mouth to teach, the Jews wanted to kill him. After his first
sermon in Nazareth, they tried to push him from a cliff to his
death. How many times didn't they take up stones to kill him?
All his life long, the scribes and Pharisees were trying to
trick him in his words, so that they could bring an accusation
against him that would stick, so that he could be tried and
executed. He was pressured constantly.
Every direction he turned, the enemies met him. And all of this
came to a head at the end of his life. When you read the Gospel
accounts of the last week of Jesus' life, you can see this.
In Luke chapter 20, verse 20, They watched him and sent forth
spies which should feign themselves just men, so that they might
take hold of his words, that so they might deliver him unto
the power and the authority of the governor. They come with
hard questions to trick him, to try and get him to speak against
the Roman government, to get him to speak against their Jewish
laws. They ask him about Caesar, about
marriage, about the great commandment in the law, about the resurrection,
And when none of this works, they arrange for an inside job.
They make an agreement with one of his own disciples to betray
him. And they come in the dark of
the night with soldiers and they find him in the garden of Gethsemane
where he's quietly praying with his disciples. They put him on
trial that night. There are six trials in total.
He's dragged from the house of one high priest to another and
one governor to another and back again. They spend the night trying
to trump up charges against him. By the morning they have condemned
him. They beat him. They mock him. They weaken him
to the point that he doesn't even have the strength to carry
his cross. He was oppressed and afflicted. He is brought as a lamb to the
slaughter and as a sheep before her shearers. He is dumb, so
he openeth not his mouth. That's amazing. Just think what
Jesus could have done, what He could have said. Think of the
power of His voice. His voice was the voice that
called all things into being in the beginning. His voice sends
the storms and calms the seas. Today, His voice is the voice
that effectually calls sinners from their ignorance and from
darkness into life and knowledge. In Gethsemane, when Peter, in
defense of Jesus, pulls out his sword to fight, Jesus says, Put
up again thy sword into his place. Thinkest thou not that I cannot
now pray to my Father, and he shall presently give me more
than twelve legions of angels? Just think what Jesus could have
done. And certainly he was innocent.
He could have spoken up in his own defense before the high priest
and before the Sanhedrin, before Herod and before Pilate. Those
might have been the perfect opportunity for him to prove his own innocence
and sinlessness, to explain why he came and why he suffered.
But he doesn't do those things. Instead, he is silent. In Matthew
26, verses 62 and 63, And the high priest arose and said unto
him, Answerest thou nothing? What is it which these witness
against thee? But Jesus held his peace. when
they mock him and blindfold him and smite him and say, prophesy,
who is it that smote thee? He says, nothing. When he was
before Pilate, we read in Matthew 27, verse 14, and he answered
him to never a word insomuch that the governor marveled greatly. What does it mean that Jesus
was silent like a lamb? Well, it doesn't mean that he
simply rolled over and played dead, that he never said a word,
no. There were times through all
his suffering when Jesus did speak. For one, all through his
life he challenged the self-righteous Pharisees and the empty religion
of his day. He also very clearly taught that
he was the Christ, the Son of God. And he did challenge his
captors and accusers at the end of his life. When they tried
to trap him in his words, He always had an answer for them.
When they came to arrest Him in the garden, He says, Are ye
come out as against a thief with swords and staves for to take
Me? I sat daily with you in the temple,
teaching, and ye laid no hold on Me. When the high priest demands,
Art thou the Christ? He says, I am, and ye shall see
the Son of Man sitting on the right hand of power and coming
in the clouds of heaven. When Pilate says, answer me,
don't you know it's in my power to crucify you or to release
you? Jesus says, thou couldest have
no power at all against me except it were given thee from above.
And he tells Pilate, my kingdom is not of this world, else would
my servants fight. Even in the face of his suffering
he spoke. In the garden of Gethsemane,
he cried out in agony, Father, if it be possible, let this cup
pass from me. Nevertheless, not as I will,
but as thou wilt. From the cross in his suffering,
he spoke seven times, expressing from the darkness, the agony
and depths of his suffering. So it's not that he said nothing.
What then does it mean that he was silent? The answer is that
Jesus spoke only when the glory of God mattered or when the salvation
of his people depended on his speaking. He never spoke in his
own defense. He never said a word to clear
his own name. He never spoke in order to lighten
the load of his suffering. He never spoke so as to avoid
the cross. He uttered no protest. He suffered
injustice in silence. 1 Peter 2 verse 23 says, When
he was reviled, he reviled not again. When he suffered, he threatened
not. When they spewed out vexations
against him, he uttered no threats in return. He said nothing about
their character back to them. He didn't respond in like manner
to those who provoked him and assaulted him. Why not? Why didn't he say something?
That's really the question that's asked here in verse 8 when it
says, He was taken from prison and from judgment, and who shall
declare His generation? The prophet is saying that when
Jesus was led from prison and from trial to Calvary to be crucified,
who in His generation could understand it and explain it? Who, when
Jesus was suffering, knew why? His silence confused the disciples. When he was cut off out of the
land of the living, who considered it and who understood it? What
was the reason for it? Why was he silent? The first
reason is this. He realized that he was the lamb
of God, the lamb pictured in the sacrifice of Abel, in the
Passover of Egypt, in the sacrifices of the Levitical law. In this
text and in the words of John the Baptist, Behold the Lamb
of God that taketh away the sin of the world. He knew that he
was appointed of God to be this Lamb, this substitutionary sacrifice
for sinners. He knew that he was the Lamb
of God slain before the foundation of the world, the Lamb ordained
and sent of God. That's why he was silent. That's
the first reason. He knew that he was the Lamb
of God that must be slain. The second reason for his silence
is to show his obedience to God and his willingness to suffer.
He went as a lamb to the slaughter and as a sheep before her shearers
is dumb. That figure is important. If
you grab a pig by its back leg, it will squeal and kick. If you
try to restrain a cow or a horse, they will buck and fight. But
if you grab a sheep by its wool, it stops, it surrenders. And notice here, it's a ewe and
not a ram, as a sheep before her shearers is dumb. The female
sheep is especially meek and submissive in captivity. Christ's silence was an evidence
of his submission to God. He understood when he was on
trial before men that this was all according to the will of
God. He says, I come to do the will
of Him that sent me. He is voluntarily silent. He chooses to be silent. He's
not silent because he doesn't know what to say, or because
he has no answer, or because he's powerless. but the silence
itself is a display of his power. By the power of his divinity
he chooses to be silent so that he may suffer and die. He says to the Jews of his life,
I have power to lay it down and I have power to take it again.
In his silence he exercises a power greater than you'll ever find
among men. Who could be silent like this
when His own name is mocked and blasphemed. And when he's completely
innocent, when Peter takes out his sword in the garden and Jesus
tells him to put it again in its place, he gives this reason.
But how then shall the scripture be fulfilled that thus it must
be? You see, he knew the will of
God and in his silence he is submitting. Third, he was silent. because He bore our sins. And
His silence shows His love. He did not bear the sins of all
mankind, but in verse 8, for the transgression of My people
was He stricken. He bore the sins of those whom
He and the Father loved from eternity. He was silent for them. Out of His commitment to them,
out of His love for them, He was quiet. He was silent because
He must die for them. His love for them constrained
Him to go to the cross. Isn't His silence beautiful?
For us sinners, He spoke not. He could have. He was innocent.
Even His silence proved His innocence. But He was willing to bear reproach
for us. A fourth reason He was silent?
He was silent because He stood before God the Judge with our
sins. Beloved, when you stand as a
sinner before God, you are silent. The reason He was silent was
that now He entered into judgment for sinners. His silence was
not merely before earthly judges and accusers. No, when He went
to the cross with our iniquities laid on Him, He was guilty before
God. And we read in Romans 3 verse
19 that in the last day before God the judge, every mouth will
be stopped and all the world will become silent before God
because of their guilt. When you stand before God the
judge as a sinner, you must not speak. You must not justify yourself. You must not hold up your own
righteousness, your own good works for God to look at. No,
you must be silent. In Matthew 22, we read about
a marriage supper and everyone who comes in was to put on a
white marriage garment that symbolized the righteousness of Christ.
But there was one there who said, I don't need that garment. I
don't need the righteousness of Christ. My clothes, my good
works are enough. and he was so out of place that
he was cast out to the place where there is weeping and gnashing
of teeth. We must not bring our righteousnesses
before God. No, we must be silent. We must confess our emptiness
and unworthiness. Only in Christ can we stand before
God. Christ was silent. because he
stood before God in our sins. He realized, as our sin-bearer,
that he deserved the wrath and the judgment of God, that he
deserved hell for our iniquities. And so he was silent. Isn't the silence of Christ beautiful? Isn't it marvelous? Verse 9 tells
us that it is. Some might look on his silence
as a sign of defeat, He was not a victim there that day. No,
he was the victor. The ungodly assigned him a grave
with the wicked. Given a choice between him and
the notorious criminal Barabbas, they say, crucify him, crucify
him. They perceive him to be an anarchist,
a man guilty of insurrection, a political rebel against Israel
and Rome. He was crucified between two
thieves and murderers. But he was the victor. This was
only the way it was perceived. Look in verse 9 what God did.
He made His grave with the rich in His death because He had done
no violence, neither was any deceit in His mouth. At this
point, the story changes. Every step of the story to this
point has been down and down and down, but now He has paid
the price for sin. He has declared, it is finished. His soul has been lifted up to
God in heaven. And now as they take Him down
from the cross, intending to give Him a grave with the wicked,
a dishonorable burial, now God reaches down and He is buried
with the rich. He is no longer the humiliated
servant, but our Savior. Isn't that beautiful? Shortly
He will be raised, but already in His burial, God gives him
a comparative place of glory. So this is the fourth section,
his silent submission. And as we close, let's move our
eyes from Christ to his disciples, to us. In Christ here, you have
a model for all believers of true submission to God, of suffering
unjustly in a God honoring way. An example of one who is willing
to be personally wrong for the glory of God and the good of
others. You know, there are some people
who go through life thinking that they have to correct all
the wrongs that others commit against them. Every time they
feel that they are hurt or wronged, they will go after the other
person. And they can put a very pious
coding on it. They will say, he has sinned,
so I'm doing this for the sake of his soul. And the truth is
that they have very little of the love that bears all things
and that covers a multitude of sins in others. There's very
little self-examination and personal repentance. What did Jesus do
when he was wronged? What was his concern? Jesus,
in his suffering, had every right to defend himself, to stand up
for his own innocence against the injustice of others. But
this is not what he did. His concern was not the clearing
of his own name. He was willing to die himself
so long as God was honored. And as Christians, we have to
follow him in this. Peter puts it down as one of
the outstanding characteristics of a Christian. In 1 Peter 2,
verse 21, he says that Christ left us an example that we should
follow in his steps. And what was that example? in
the previous verses, this is thankworthy if a man for conscience
sake toward God endure grief, suffering wrongfully. For what
glory is it if when ye be buffeted for your faults ye take it patiently?
But if when ye do well ye take it patiently, this is acceptable
to God. And in the following verses he
makes specific application of this to women This is what a
gentle and quiet spirit looks like. And it's not just to women,
but to parents and to children, to employees, to employers, to
the flock, to spiritual leaders, to men, to all of us in our relationship
to God. We are all to live this way,
not standing up for our own rights, intimidating others and reviling
in return. Jesus says you must turn the
other cheek, you must give your coat as well as your cloak, and
so on. How it glorifies God when we
are silent, when we are willing to suffer wrong, to not retaliate,
to live with a meek and quiet spirit. How prone we are to want
to get in the last word, to come out on top in the dispute, to
demonstrate our own righteousness, but you see, It's not about your
reputation. It's not about your name. But
it's about God and his honor. Does he does his glory shine
through you in your conduct? Is there a Christ likeness in
you, a willingness to be wronged as a Christian? In Christ, you
have the supreme example of humility. He was willing to suffer wrong
for our sakes. Oh, may we be able to do it too,
and may God use it for the sake of the spread of the glorious
gospel and the honor of His name in the earth. Let us pray. Father,
we thank Thee for such a Savior willing to suffer for us, silent
in the face of His accusers, so that our sins could be paid. Amen.
His Silence in Suffering (3511)
Series The Suffering Servant
| Sermon ID | 41710164786 |
| Duration | 23:59 |
| Date | |
| Category | Radio Broadcast |
| Bible Text | Isaiah 53:7-9 |
| Language | English |
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