Thursday, April 20, 2023

PT-2 "More on the Sufferings of Jesus"

 

SPIRITUAL DIARY FOR 4/20/2023 9:31 AM

 

My Worship Time                                                 Focus:  PT-2 “More of the Sufferings of Jesus”

 

Bible Reading & Meditation                                              Reference:  Matthew 20:17-19

 

            Message of the verses:  17 As Jesus was about to go up to Jerusalem, He took the twelve disciples aside by themselves, and on the way He said to them, 18 "Behold, we are going up to Jerusalem; and the Son of Man will be delivered to the chief priests and scribes, and they will condemn Him to death, 19 and will hand Him over to the Gentiles to mock and scourge and crucify Him, and on the third day He will be raised up.’”

 

            I want to continue quoting from a sermon by John MacArthur on the subject of the sufferings of Jesus.  I suppose that when I am done quoting from this sermon and I move onto looking at verses 18b-19 that some of the things will be similar to what is in this quotation, but I just think that it is a great thing for all of us to better understand the sufferings of our Lord.

 

            “So you have the plan of the sufferings and you have the prediction of His sufferings. Now that takes me to the heart of this passage which I’d like to call “the proportion of sufferings.” I don’t know that I’ve ever really thought this through to the extent that I did in looking at this passage; but the thing that hit me as I read over and over this little section of three verses was how in detail He talked about His suffering. It seemed more detailed than any other time that Jesus ever spoke about this. And I began to think about His sufferings, and tried to look through the Word of God and see what I could learn.

            “The first thing I found out was that when referring to sufferings, using that word, it appears in the plural. For example, in 2 Corinthians 1:5 it mentions the sufferings of Christ. In Philippians 3:10, the fellowship of His sufferings. First Peter 1:11, the sufferings. First Peter 4:13, the sufferings. Luke 24:26, “suffered many things.” Hebrews 2:10, His salvation was made perfect through sufferings.

            “In other words, I got the idea that it wasn’t just one dimensional suffering that the proportion of His suffering was beyond anything I’d ever thought about. I mean I don’t know how you’ve looked at it, but kind of growing up in the church, you sort of think of the suffering of Christ having to do with the nails, or the sphere, or the crown of thorns. The body has a way to deal with that kind of thing. That is a suffering, there’s little question about it.

            “But Josephus writes in one particular account of three men that were crucified: “They were left there until such a time as they should have been dead and taken down. Two of them lived, one died.” Which is to say that crucifixion in and of itself didn’t necessarily kill everybody. In fact, there’s a record even beyond those three of many who lived through crucifixion. That is why they scourge those that they especially wanted to die, because the tremendous loss of blood, exposure of the internal organs, and all the pain involved in that would speed up and make secure the death reality in crucifixion.

            “But there was much more to the suffering of Christ than just the nails on the cross. I mean the body shock system has a way to deal with that kind of trauma. And so I began to think about all of the facets of His suffering. And with that in mind, I want you to look at Isaiah 53 for just a brief moment, and see if I can’t show you how clearly this is revealed; and yet perhaps you have not thought of it in these terms.

            “The proportion or the dimensions of Christ’s suffering. Isaiah 53 obviously describes the suffering of Christ. And it starts out in verse 2, for our benefit, that, “He has no form or comeliness; and when we see Him, there’s no beauty that we should desire Him.” And you have the suffering of being ugly, the suffering of being rejected, the suffering of no form, no comeliness, people turning away. It says in verse 3, “We hid” – as it were – “our faces from Him,” so ugly. There’s a rejection kind of suffering.

            “And that’s what’s pointed out in verse 3, “He is despised,” – that’s hated – “rejected, filled with sorrow,” – the suffering of sorrow, the suffering of grief, the despising, the lack of esteem or regard or dignity or respect. So He was suffering the internal pain of knowing you’re ugly and having people gaping at you in your ugliness; the suffering of being despised, rejected, filled with sorrow and grief, and getting no esteem and no respect. And remember who this is. This is not one whose ever known this until the incarnation, and one who never was worthy of it.

            “And then you have the suffering, in verse 4, of bearing others griefs, of carrying others sorrow. Sometimes we suffer as much when we carry the pain of someone else as we do with our own. And then the suffering of being stricken, smitten and afflicted by God Himself, having God smash His fist of wrath against you; blows from God where you find Him crying out, “My God, My God, why hast Thou forsaken Me?”

            “And then you have the suffering of being wounded and being bruised – and here it’s more physical – and having stripes against the body, the suffering of physical pain, as well as inherent in that the wound of transgression, the bruise of iniquity, and feeling the chastening of God to accomplish peace for someone else.

            “And then in verse 6 you have that lonely, lonely statement, “All we like sheep have gone astray. We’ve turned everyone to his own way, and the Lord’s laid on Him the iniquity of all of us.” Here He is all alone, bearing all the sins of all the world – a cosmic kind of divine loneliness.

            “And then in verse 7, you have the tremendous suffering of oppression, affliction, and silence. He can’t even speak. He can’t even defend Himself. He can’t push them away and say ,“Stop, I’m the Son of God. I will not have this.” He has to suffer in absolute silence. He has to keep His mouth closed. The suffering of knowing you’re right, knowing you’re just and holy and pure and good, and not being able to say it.

            “And then there’s the suffering of prison, the suffering of a false judgment in verse 8, the suffering of death – that’s what it means to be cut off from the land of the living – the suffering of being stricken by God to bear sin, the suffering of burial and being counted as a common criminal. And then the suffering of knowing that you hadn’t done anything and you didn’t deserve any of this – no violence, no deceit. And then the suffering of knowing it pleased God to do this to you, to put you to grief.

            “And then the suffering of verse 11, the pain of the soul. And then in verse 12, the pouring out of the soul to death, being numbered or counted with transgressors, bearing the sins of many, and so forth. I mean if you look at that that way, it’s just overwhelming to conceive of the proportion of the suffering of our Lord. And I think that’s what’s in His heart this day as He goes up the hill to Jerusalem. I think this is what’s in His heart, I really do.

            “Let me show you what He says here. First of all, I believe that when He talks about being handed over to the chief priests, He is suffering the pain of disloyalty. Now remember this: He suffered all of this in anticipation. Because He knew it was going to happen, He could suffer the pain even now. And the first pain I see here, the first area of suffering is the suffering of disloyalty.

            “What the psalmist said in Psalm 41:9, “Mine own familiar friend has lifted up his heel against Me, the one who ate bread with Me.” Here was one He loved, one that He walked with and talked with; one who affirmed to Him love, and intimacy, and care, and trust, and all of that; and He was betrayed by Judas. And He was not only betrayed, He was betrayed with a kiss. The suffering of betrayal, the overwhelming suffering when someone close to you violates that intimacy and seeks to destroy you; the ugly sin, the deep pain of being betrayed by a friend.

            “And then I believe He suffered the suffering of rejection. He was turned over to the chief priests and the scribes, and they condemned Him to death. John put it very simply: “He came unto His own and His own” – what? – “received Him not.” “And He sat over the city of Jerusalem,” – the Bible says – “and He wept.” He said, “How often I would have gathered thee as a hen gathers her brood, and you would not.” They just rejected Him. Isaiah said, you remember we just read it, “He was despised and rejected of men. He was the stone the builders rejected.” They didn’t want a thing to do with Him.

            “And so those He loved, His own people, those that He worked with and healed and taught, they rejected Him. The heartbreak is enough to crush you. Here He’s been betrayed by a friend, and rejected by His own people. And I believe in all of this He suffered a broken heart; and that’s why when the spear went in, out came a combination of blood and water. I think the anxiety had already crushed Him, burst Him.

            “And then to add to that, “My God, My God, why hast Thou forsaken Me?” not only is He rejected by men, He’s rejected by God, rejected by God. It says in Matthew 26:56 that all the disciples forsook Him and fled. He didn’t have anybody: rejected by the people, rejected by the disciples, rejected by God. So disloyalty and rejection.”

            One more to go and then I don’t know if I will continue to write more about this or not.

            Spiritual meaning for my life today:  I am thankful to better understand the sufferings of Christ, and the truth is that He did this for me.

My Steps of Faith for Today: I desire to walk more closely to the Lord after learning more about the sufferings that He did for me.

4/20/2023 10:00 AM

 

 

 

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