The fifty-third chapter of the Book of Isaiah is generally called the Fourth Servant Song, the first three of which are found in chapter 42, chapter 49 and chapter 50.
The importance of the passage before us can scarcely be exaggerated.
From the earliest times Christian writers have found here a detailed
description of the sufferings and death of Jesus the Messiah and in this they
clearly follow the New Testament.
First: we will look at the context in which the
passage is set and show its importance in the light of the New Testament
teaching about the content of the gospel and then we will attempt a brief
exposition of the whole passage concentrating on those verses which explain the
meaning of the Servant's death, bringing out significant New Testament passages
as we go.
CONTEXT AND STRUCTURE
In his book, "What Saint Paul really said," Tom
Wright points out that Christians have generally failed to understand what the
Bible means by "Gospel" and "Justification" simply because
they have not grasped the background to these terms in the thinking of Paul.
The same can be said of Isaiah 53. To grasp its meaning, we must fit it into
its literary and prophetic context.
One of the greatest failings of historic Christianity has
been its failure to recognize the importance of eschatology in its proclamation
of what it calls its "gospel".
The message preached is usually only a message about the
death of Jesus and in such expositions, Isaiah 53 will be generously quoted.
But it’s setting, that of chapters 40-66 will be ignored. We will now attempt
an outline of the message of these chapters and examine the setting in which
Isaiah 53 appears.
The following is a summary of the main features of the
second half of Isaiah.
Because of its sins, the people of Israel have been taken
into captivity. Many find themselves in prison. Others have been scattered
throughout many nations and live in conditions of utter misery. The persecuting
power is explicitly identified as Babylon (Isaiah 43:14, 46, 47,)
Sometime during this period of captivity, a group of people
appear bringing a message of good news of deliverance to Israel and restoration
to their land, forgiveness of sins and the appearance of a deliverer sometimes
said to be God Himself, and later identified with a person known as the Servant
of Yehovah. The Servant himself is the bringer of the gospel in Isaiah 61.
The task of the Servant is to restore Israel and bring
light and salvation to the surrounding nations. A time of prosperity and
spiritual blessings ensue, called the Millenium - 1,000-year rule of the
Messiah Jesus over the nations. God's Spirit will be poured out freely. Israel
will send emissaries to their former captors and the world will unite in
universal worship of God - Yehovah. Those who refuse to submit will be dealt
with severely and the book closes with a somber view of Gehenna [the Lake of
Fire], where the wicked will be destroyed.
Now let us take a closer look at the more immediate context
of Isaiah 53. Chapter 52 contains a prophecy of the preaching of the gospel. Isaiah
52:7 shows that it is a message concerning the Reign of God, in New Testament
language, the Kingdom of God. The following verse describes the ending of the
captivity when "all the earth shall see the salvation of our God." A
striking feature of this entire section is that Paul quotes from it directly no
less than four times in the letter to the Romans. Isaiah 52:5 is quoted in
Romans 2:24. "My name is blasphemed continually every day."
Isaiah 52:7 appears in Romans 10:15 in order to prove that God has sent
messengers to preach the gospel. He quotes Isaiah 52:25 in Romans 15:21 and
finally Isaiah 53:1 is quoted in Romans 10:16.
Romans opens with Paul's introduction to the subject of
the gospel which he says, "was promised before through His prophets in the
Holy Scriptures concerning His Son Jesus the Messiah our lord who was born of
the seed of David according to the flesh and declared to be the Son of God with
power according to the Spirit of holiness by the resurrection from among the
dead." Although other prophets do predict the preaching of the gospel,
Isaiah has more to say about that any other. Paul is here identifying his
message with Isaiah 40, 52, 61 and other passages. Clearly the prophet Isaiah
is for him supremely important. And Paul's teaching on the sacrificial
sin-offering death of the Messiah can only be derived from Isaiah 53.
It should be clear from what we have said that we believe
that what has come to be called the futurist view of prophecy is the correct
way to interpret Isaiah. New Testament fulfillments do not exhaust the
meaning of any of these passages.
The passage we are considering is divided into five stanzas
consisting of three verses each. The first is found in Isaiah 52:13-15, the
second in Isaiah 53:1-3, the third in Isaiah 53:4-6, the froth in Isaiah 53:7-9
and the last in Isaiah 53:10-12.
EXPOSITION
THE MESSIAH AND HIS SUFFERINGS REVEALED TO THE NATIONS
The first stanza in verses 13-15 of Isaiah 52 forms a
summary of what follows in Isaiah 53. The servant is introduced with the
words "Behold, My Servant shall deal prudently." The word
translated "deal prudently" primarily means to "act
wisely" and also "prosperously" because prosperity is the
result of acting wisely. The exaltation of the Servant predicted in the second
half of the verse has been taken by some to refer to the resurrection and
ascension of the Messiah but is more likely referring to his Second Advent. He
is not now exalted as far as the kings of the earth are concerned; indeed the
world generally despises the things of the Messiah but the thrust of this
passage is that the leaders of the earth will come to acknowledge him. We
may note here the passage in Philippians in which Paul speaks of the Messiah
receiving a "name which is above every name, that at the name of Jesus
every knee should bow, of those in heaven and of those on earth and of those
under the earth and that every tongue should confess that Jesus the Messiah is lord,
to the glory of God - Yehovah the Father (Philippians 2:9-11).
Isaiah 52:14: gives us a summary of the sufferings;
sufferings which cause astonishment to many. The verb which is translated
"astonished" means to desolate or waste, to be thrown by anything
into a desolate or bereaved condition; to be startled, confused as it were
petrified by paralyzing astonishment. Many will realize then for the first time
the extent of his sufferings as he is openly revealed in the sight of the
nations. His sufferings were greater than that of any man and were not
simply physical. Many men have undergone intense physical pain and even
died heroic deaths, but the death of God's servant was more than just a
physical death, as the next chapter will bring out. The sprinkling of many
nations in Isaiah 52:15 has overtones of the sacrificial system and the
sprinkling of blood with the finger on the mercy seat and the altar of incense
on the Day of Atonement. It is also used in relation to sprinkle the
water of purification on a leper (Leviticus14:7) and of the ashes of the red
heifer on those defiled by a corpse. (Numbers 19:18). It is the Servant
himself who sprinkles the nations, a hint of his priestly functions fully
explained in the epistle to the Hebrews. The word sprinkle ought not to be
excluded on grammatical grounds and in fact anticipates the central theme of
the song."
The kings of the nations so sprinkled will have nothing
to say reminding us of Habakkuk 2:20, "But Yehovah is in His holy temple:
let all the earth keep silence before Him." The last part of Isaiah
52:15 is a sober reminder of the ignorance that will exist at the time of the
Messiah's Second Coming. This is also mentioned in Isaiah 61:1-2 "Arise
shine for your light has come and the glory of the Lord Yehovah is risen upon
you. For, behold, the darkness shall cover the earth and gross darkness the
people: but Yehovah shall arise upon you and His glory shall be seen upon
you."
THE MESSIAH'S RECEPTION
The second stanza contained in Isaiah 53:1-3 continues and
expands on the theme of ignorance and unbelief summarized in Isaiah 52:15. Isaiah
53:1 is quoted in John 12:38. Paul quotes the same passage in the same
sense in Romans 10:16 where it forms part of his explanation of why Israel has
apparently not believed the gospel. The unbelief with which the lord [Jesus]
has been received down through the ages is something foreseen long ago and is
part of the purposes of God.
As early as the time of Moses Scripture declares that "
Yehovah has not given you a heart to perceive and eyes to see and ears to hear,
to this very day." (Deuteronomy 29:4) Isaiah was told to proclaim the
spiritual blindness and deafness of the people of Israel (Isaiah 6:9-10). He
was told that this condition would last "Until the cities are laid waste
and without inhabitant, the houses are without a man, the land is utterly
desolate, Yehovah has removed men far away and the forsaken places are many in
the midst of the land." (Isaiah 6:11; 12).
This plainly
refers to a captivity which has not yet taken place for the blindness of Israel
and the nation in general continues to this day. We are very close to the end
of this age.
The speakers in verse one of chapter 53 are a group of
believers at that time and what follows represents their confession as they
look back at the sufferings of the Messiah now made plain to them for the first
time. This is the time described in Zechariah 12:10-14 when Israel will look on
him whom they have pierced and there will be a great mourning for him, because
their decedents rejected him as their Messiah 2,000 years before.
The "arm of Yehovah" is a reference to divine
power. The arm of Yehovah is mentioned as part of the great promise of
deliverance in Isaiah 40. The remnant of Israel prays for it to be
manifested in chapter 51:9. "Awake, awake, put on strength, O arm of
Yehovah; awake as in the ancient days in the generations of old. Isaiah 52:10
says "Yehovah has made bare His holy arm in the eyes of all the nations.
and all the ends of the earth shall see the salvation of our God."
The Servant of Yehovah is therefore the arm of Yehovah
manifesting God's power in deliverance and salvation. The Messiah stands as it
were in the place of God, acting as His vice-regent. In Isaiah 4:2;
11:1,10; Jeremiah 23:5, 33:15 the Messiah is referred to as a Branch. These
terms refer to the origin of the Servant in the House of David, in the land of
Israel characterized by barrenness whose people despise him seeing nothing of
beauty in him.
The gospels amply testify to the truth of verse three. Jesus
was despised by the leaders of the people and Jews have consistently down
through the centuries considered that Jesus was an apostate who was smitten by
God. The Christian Jewish writer David Baron has this to say about Jewish
reaction to Jesus: "No person in the history of the Jews has provoked
such deep-seated abhorrence as He who came only to bless them, and who even on
the cross prayed, "Father, forgive them for they know not what they
do." When on earth, at the end of His three-and-a half years of
ministry among them, they finally rejected him. Their hatred was intense and
mysterious. "Away with this man; release unto us Barabbas ...Crucify him,
crucify him" was their cry. And all through the centuries no name has
provoked such intense abhorrence among the Jews as the name of Jesus.
"I have known personally most amiable, and as men,
lovable characters among the Jews; but immediately that Jesus was mentioned, a
change came over their countenances and they would fall into a passion of
anger. In the course of my missionary experiences these past thirty-five or
forty years, how often has it been my lot to witness some of my people almost
mad with rage - clenching their fist, gnashing their teeth, and spitting on the
ground at the very mention of the name which to the believer "is as ointment
poured forth!"
It is likely that the term "rejected of men"
has particular reference to men of high rank, leaders of the people rather than
the generality of mankind. Paul can say that not many of the world's
mighty men or nobility have believed; God has rather chosen people who are
generally despised by the world's intelligentsia with the ultimate aim of
shaming the so-called wise amongst men. "Have any of the rulers believed
on him, or of the Pharisees," was the contemptuous sneer of the leaders of
the Jews and it remains the attitude of the majority of opinion formers in our
world today, many of whom are deliberately reviving ancient pagan beliefs under
the guise of scholarship while they are at the same time attacking the Bible.
THE SIN BEARER
Isaiah 53:4-6: six forms the middle section of this chapter
and of the entire prophecy. Its teaching is of central importance as it sets
out the reasons for the sufferings of the Servant. David Baron translates verse
four literally as follows "Verily they were our griefs (or sicknesses)
which he bore, and our sorrows (or pains) with which he burdened himself, but
we regarded him as one stricken smitten of God, and afflicted"
Baron goes on to state that "No plainer or stronger
words could be used to express the thought of vicarious suffering than those
employed in the original of this verse." Here we confront the important
issue of what has come to be called "penal substitutionary
atonement." That means in plain language that the Messiah was punished
for our sins and took our place so that by virtue of hs sin-offering sacrifice
which he gave on the cross, God may forgive us our sins.
The idea of bearing sin or bearing iniquity occurs quite
frequently throughout the Old Testament and it always means to be punished for
the iniquity. It is used in this sense in Numbers 14:34 when Israel was told by
God that they would bear their iniquity for 40 years. That is, their punishment
for their unbelief would last for that period of time. Aaron was to "bear
the iniquity of the holy things "(Exodus 28:38,43) meaning that he would
be punished for any sin committed in relation to the tabernacle ritual. A
person would "bear his iniquity" if he witnessed an offense and
refuses to disclose it under oath. (Leviticus 5:1) The idea of bearing
iniquities occurs in Isaiah 53:4, 6,11, and 12 of this chapter.
If to bear sin means to be punished for the sin, then it
is clear that for the Servant to bear the sins of others means that he was
punished for their sins. There seems to be no way of avoiding the
conclusion that the Messiah died as a substitute for our sins. The
Substitutionary language of this passage is well recognized even by those who
do not accept the idea of substitution. The apostle Peter quotes the fifth
verse in I Peter 2:24 saying plainly "He bore our sins in his own body on
the tree"
Further evidence for substitution if found in Matthew 20:28
and Mark 10:45. This important statement by Jesus reflects the language of
Isaiah 53:11. Jesus said, "The Son of Man did not come to be served,
but to serve, and to give his life a ransom for many." The
substitutionary preposition anti is translated "for" in this passage.
It is used in other passages in such a way as to indicate that its meaning is
"instead of" or "in place of". Thus, Archelaus reigned over
Judea in place of (anti) his father Herod." (Matthew 2:22) Jesus asked, "What
father among you, if his son asks for a fish, will instead of (Anti) a fish
give him a serpent?" (Luke 11:11).
Another Greek preposition that is relevant to our subject
is huper. This word can have several meanings and can often be rendered
"on behalf of". In some passages however, such as 2 Corinthians 5:14
and Galatians 3:13 it clearly has the meaning "instead of". This
last passage is one of a number where a substitutionary interpretation is
obvious even in English translations. Those who are of the works of the law are
under a curse, but the Messiah has taken the curse upon himself so that the
covenant promises to Abraham might come upon us. Another passage in 2
Corinthians 5:14 is likewise explicitly substitutionary. "If one died
for all, then all died; and he died for all, that those who live should live no
longer for themselves, but for him who died for them and rose again."
The word translated "smitten" or
"stricken" at the end of verse four is used in 2 Kings 15:5 where it
is stated that King Uzziah was stricken with leprosy by God for his presumption
in entering the Temple. Because of this connection some Rabbis in ancient times
called the Messiah "the leprous one". There is certainly no
need to follow this interpretation, but a problem does arise in this verse in
connection with disease and the Messiah. The words translated
"griefs" and "sorrows" are the ordinary Hebrew terms for
sicknesses and disease. Matthew quotes this verse in this connection to
prove its fulfillment by Jesus in His healing miracles. (Matthew 8:17)
Two different errors have arisen from a misunderstanding of
these terms. One error following the Rabbis mentioned earlier sees the Messiah
Himself as actually suffering from some unspecified diseases. According to this
view Jesus not only bore sin, but also was afflicted with disease himself. Luke
4:23 has been quoted in support. Jesus said to the synagogue audience,
"You will surely say unto me,' Physician heal yourself'."
A more common error is the belief that since believers can
expect forgiveness of sins because Jesus has borne them, so they can also
expect divine healing of all their illnesses because Jesus has borne them too.
Healing is therefore as much a part of the atonement as is forgiveness of sins.
Since is it obvious that believers do suffer illnesses and die, implicit in
this view is that such people are lacking in faith to be healed.
It is therefore essential to understand why sicknesses and
diseases are used here. Throughout the Old Testament disease is often used
as a synonym for sin. One of the best examples is found in Isaiah 1:4:
"Alas, sinful nation a people laden with iniquity, a brood of evildoers,
Children who are corrupters! They have forsaken Yehovah, they have provoked to
anger the Holy One of Israel, They have turned away backward. Why should you be
stricken again? You will revolt more and more. The whole head is sick, and the
whole heart faints. From the sole of the foot even to the head there is no
soundness in it but wounds and bruises and putrefying sores; they have not been
closed or bound up or soothed with ointment." (verses 4-6)
It is obvious from the context here that literal diseases
are not in view since the subject matter concerns the body politic of the whole
nation. David also in some of the Psalms speaks of his sins as if they were
diseases. In the great penitential Psalm 51:8; he refers to God having broken
his bones something that literally did not happen. Healing is sometimes used
as a synonym for forgiveness (Isaiah 57:19)
David Baron has this to say about the miracles of healing.
"The miracles of healing not only served to certify him as the
Redeemer, and as "signs" of the spiritual healing which he came to
bring, but were, so to say pledges also of the ultimate full deliverance of the
redeemed, not only from sin but from every evil consequence of it in body as
well as in soul. Hence our full salvation included not only the perfecting of
our spirits, but the "fashioning anew of the body of our humiliation that
it may be conformed to the body of His glory."
The second half of verse four graphically describes the
terrible suffering as the believing remnant continues to look back at the
sufferings of the Messiah. The word "nagua" means one stricken or
smitten with a dreadful shocking disease and is particularly applicable to
leprosy as we noted earlier. He was "smitten by God" and afflicted,
i.e. He is one bowed down by suffering.
That Jesus was so punished is true, but the punishment
was for our sins and not for his own. Yet the Jewish people, in striking
fulfillment of this prophecy, have taught for centuries that Jesus deserved to
die the death he did. They have called him Poshe - the transgressor - who well
deserved the violent death he suffered. The Talmud puts Jesus in the grave
along with Titus and Balaam. Imagine how they will answer to him at the
Judgement Seat.
Those who adhere to more modern versions of the view that
Jesus deserved to die should consider carefully what they are teaching in the
light of this passage. It is contrary to the whole thrust of this passage to
claim, as do the Christadelphians that the Messiah dies for his inherent sin
nature. They have God punishing Jesus for something that was inherent within
himself. Talk of a "sin-nature" in the Messiah is foreign to this and
all other scriptures. Isaiah 53:5 again re-iterates the substitutionary
nature of the Messiah's sufferings. It was for "our transgressions",
"our iniquities". The chastisement, which resulted in our peace, was
upon Him.
We note here the important word "peace", a common
theme in this section of Isaiah. "There is no peace to the
wicked." is the message of Isaiah 48:22 and Isaiah 57:21. Isaiah 57
foresees times when God will speak peace "to him who is far off and to him
who is near". Paul refers to this verse in Ephesians chapter 2 when he
explains that God has made Jews and Gentiles as part of the one body of the
Messiah through the cross. Surely Isaiah 53:5 is in the forefront of his
thinking here.
Isaiah 53:6 shows the necessity of the vicarious sufferings
of the Messiah. Mankind in general, both Jew and Gentile have become totally
alienated from God - Yehovah. There is no thought here or elsewhere that man
by his own efforts can turn back to God - Yehovah of his own accord. The
image of a flock of sheep without a shepherd graphically illustrates what men
have done in relation to the things of God. Sheep will wander all over the
place without a shepherd to guide them and such has been the experience firstly
of the Jews, but also of Gentile so-called believers.
All of these iniquities have been "laid on him"
by God - Yehovah. The term "laid on him" is more literally rendered
"caused to alight on him" and is in Hebrew a term of some violence.
It is used in I Samuel 1:15 "Go near and fall upon him; and he smote him
that he died." B.W.Newton comments on this expression, "In other
passages our iniquity is spoken of as resting on the Holy One, and He bearing
it. Here it is spoken of as coming upon him like a destroying foe and
overwhelming him with the wrath that it brought with it." The word
avon rendered "iniquity" denotes firstly the transgression itself,
secondarily the guilt which arises as a result and thirdly to the punishment
which it incurs.
THE MESSIAH'S GENTLENESS, DEATH AND BURIAL
Isaiah 53:7-9 set forth the attitude of the Messiah
towards his sufferings stressing the voluntary nature of them and describe the
judicial process by which He was executed and the nature of his burial. It
is the passage which the Ethiopian eunuch was reading when Philip was directed
to join him and from which he preached the gospel. The New Testament always
applies this chapter to Jesus something which modern liberal commentators are
loath to do.
Isaiah 53:7 and 8 are beset with translation difficulties
beginning with the first part of verse 7. The Hebrew term niggas (rendered
"he was oppressed") sometimes means the rigorous exaction of debts.
It is used in this sense in Deuteronomy 15:2,3. "Every creditor that lends
aught to his neighbor shall (on the seventh year) release it; he shall not
exact it of his neighbor or his brother, because Yehovah's release has been
proclaimed. Of a foreigner you mayest exact it again." The word is also
used of the Egyptian taskmasters exacting the full quota of bricks from the
Israelites. (Exodus 3 and 4) The oppression then is oppression of a judicial
nature and was amply fulfilled in the trials of Jesus before Caiaphas and
Pilate.
All of this suffering was entered into voluntarily by the
Messiah emphasized by the second half of Isaiah 53:7 "Yet he opened not
his mouth." The gospels record that Jesus did not make any replies in
his defense and only responded to the High Priest's questions when he was put
under oath to do so. He was completely non-resistant. We should point out
that the apostle Peter clearly brings out the non-resisting character of the lord
Jesus and urges the followers of the lord Messiah Jesus to follow the same
example (I Peter 2:21-25) Suffering and persecution should be borne patiently
following the Messiah's own example. The Sermon on the Mount enjoins the
same attitude on disciples (Matthew 5:38-42) as does the Apostle Paul in Romans
12:17-21. A violent follower of the lord Messiah Jesus is a contradiction in
terms. We simply must not offer violence or hostility of any kind when we meet
with persecution.
Commentators emphasize the difficulties of translating
Isaiah 53:8, which reads in the KJV, "He was taken from prison and from
judgment." The NASB reads ""By oppression and judgment he was
taken away" while the NEB has "Without protection, without justice,
he was taken away." The same version adds a footnote, "After arrest
and sentence, he was taken away." David Baron comments: "The idea
that is most prominent in the word luqqach ("taken away"), is that of
being snatched or hurried away. The word otser (rendered "prison")
primarily means a violent constraint Here, as in Psalm 107:39, it signifies a
persecuting treatment which restrains by outward force, such as that of prison
or bonds...The word mishpat (judgment) refers to the judicial proceedings, in
which he was put upon his trial, accused and convicted as worthy of death - in
other words, to his unjust judgment... Hostile oppression and judicial
persecution were the circumstances out of which He was carried away by
death."
The phrase "and who will declare his generation?"
is also difficult and is variously rendered by different translations. The NASB
renders this "And as for his generation, who considered that he was cut
off out of the land of the living, for the transgression of my people to whom
the stoke was due." The word translated "generation" usually
means "an age" or "the men living in a particular age" and
by extension a group of people bound together by similarity of circumstances or
moral character. In this latter sense a generation can be coeval with the
present evil age. Baron points out that the words rendered "declare"
in the KJV can also mean to speak to complain or lament and is also used in a
few passages to describe prayer (Psalm 55:17). He suggests that the meaning of
this passage is "As for His generation - who (among them) poured out a
complaint" (i.e. at his treatment); or "who among them uttered a
prayer?" (i.e. on his behalf.) This could be an allusion to a Jewish
custom in capital trials of calling upon all who had anything to say on behalf
of the accused to come forward and "declare it" or "plead"
on his behalf. If this is the case, it means that no one was called upon to
speak for Jesus at his trial as would normally be the case and ties in well
with the first part of the verse.
The substitutionary nature of his death is again mentioned
at the end of the verse. The stroke that was properly due to the people fell
on him. To be cut off is a biblical expression meaning to be executed. It is
found in Daniel 9:26 where it is again used of the cutting off of the Messiah.
The burial of the Messiah is the subject of the first part
of Isaiah 53:9. The word "grave" here is not the Hebrew word
"sheol" meaning the general grave of mankind but rather refers to a
sepulcher or tomb. It was the custom of the Jews to give criminals an
ignominious burial as Josephus records. "He that blasphemes God - Yehovah
let him be stoned and let him hang upon a tree all that day, and let him be
buried in an ignominious and obscure manner." Since the Jews
condemned Jesus as a blasphemer this would no doubt have been His fate had not
God miraculously intervened. The time of the Messiah's humiliation and
sacrifice were now over, and God honors his Son by providing a rich man, Joseph
of Arimathea to arrange for His burial in his own new tomb.
The sinless nature of the Messiah is the subject of the last
part of Isaiah 53:9. Peter quotes this verse giving it a different rendering.
"Because he had done to violence, for was any deceit in his mouth"
becomes in I Peter 2: 22 "Who committed no sin, nor was guile found in
his mouth."
THE MESSIAH'S EXALTATION
The last section of this great prophecy begins with a review
of his sufferings and sacrifice. The word translated "bruise"
means literally "to crush". "He has put Him to grief"
means to afflict with sickness and reminds us again of verse 4. Two
translations of the phrase "When you shall make his soul an offering for
sin" are possible. The first is to translate as above and takes the phrase
as a statement made to God. The second view renders it as "When his soul
shall make an offering". The NASB prefers this rendering and in addition
takes the word "soul" as equivalent to the personal pronoun
"himself". Members of this audience will not need to be reminded that
this is a legitimate and commonly used of the word "nephesh"
throughout the Old Testament. Nephesh refers to the whole person and not to a
supposed immortal substance which survives in a conscious state after death. It
is closely connected with the blood in Leviticus 17:11 and verse 10 links the
idea of the blood of the sacrificial animals with the common New Testament
references to "the blood of the Messiah." The offering for sin
referred to here is the trespass offering, the asham, the law concerning which
is found in Leviticus 5:1-13 and Leviticus 7:1-10. The verse provides the
important basis for the common New Testament doctrine that Messiah was a
sin-offering sacrifice.
"He shall see His seed", has been taken by some
Jewish interpreters in its natural sense of posterity or offspring and used to
refute the idea that it is fulfilled in Jesus of Nazareth who had no natural
offspring. This section of Isaiah, however, recognizes the important
theological concept of the seed of Abraham (41:8,43:5, 44:3, 48:19), and the fulfillment
of the covenant blessings. Paul shows in Romans 9 that Abraham's seed does not
mean descendants according to the flesh; rather those who have the faith of
Abraham are the children or seed of Abraham. The Messiah himself is the seed as
stated by Paul in Galatians 3:16, a truth which is also found in the Old
Testament. Psalm 72 applies the wording of the Abrahamic covenant to the
Messiah (verse 17). Those who have been baptized into the Messiah are the seed
of Abraham.
Seeing his seed occurs after he became a sin-offering, in
other words after his death. The seed then does not refer to literal
descendants but to the spiritual seed of Abraham. Psalm 22:30 is parallel
with this verse in describing his seed as one of the blessings following his
sufferings and death. The last part of verse 10 could only refer to the
resurrection. It is reminiscent of Psalm 16 and Psalm 21:4, "He asked
life from you, and you gave it to him, length of days forever and ever."
Jewish writers have commented that the phrase length of days refers to the life
of the age to come. Following his resurrection God's will, will prosper in his
hands.
The Jewish commentator Abrabanel paraphrases the first part
of verse 11 thus. "He shall see the travail of his soul, i.e. his seed;
he shall be satisfied, i.e. with length of days." One of the results
of his travail is found in the second part of verse 11. David Baron translates
this as follows, "By his knowledge shall make many righteous (or, bring
righteousness) the Righteous One (My Servant)." It is possible to take
"his knowledge" in both the subjective sense of the knowledge that he
himself has, or in the objective sense of the knowledge of Him on the part of
others. If the former is correct then it could well mean that those who are
made righteous, are made so through the knowledge that Jesus himself had, in
other words, they will believe what He believed. This seems incorrect, however,
and more likely refers to the fact that the righteous must know him. Knowledge
then would be synonymous with faith, a meaning which it seems to have in a
number of passages. (Hosea 4:6, John 17:3) The construction "the Righteous
One, my servant" is unusual in placing the adjective before the noun
contrary to normal Hebrew practice. The definite article is also omitted from
both words, the whole construction emphasizing the unique character of the
Servant.
We have already referred to Baron's translation of Isaiah
53:11. Contrary to the impression given in most translations, justification is
not the subject here. It is the righteousness which springs from that
justification and forgiveness which is being spoken of. The Bible requires that
God's people are actively righteous. Indeed, as Paul says in Romans 8:4
it is in them alone that the righteousness of the Law can be fulfilled. It
is clear that this verse was in Paul's mind as he was writing Romans as he
virtually quotes it in Romans 5:19."For as by one man's disobedience
many were made sinners, so also by one man's obedience many will be made
righteous."
The "many" referred to here are the mass of
mankind and not just the Jews. We encountered this word in chapter 52:14,15
and it appears in significant New Testament passages bearing on the atonement. The
Lord Jesus uses in Matthew 20:28 in what it really a commentary on this passage
and Paul uses it extensively in Romans 5:12-21.
The word "many" occurs again in the Hebrew of
verse 12 where it is rendered "great" in English translations. They
are those who share with him in his inheritance as described in Psalm 2.
"Ask of me and I will give you the nations for your inheritance and the
ends of the earth for your possession. You shall break them with a rod of iron
you shall dash them in pieces like a potter’s vessel." The
application to the Messiah in clear but he himself makes this same promise to
those who overcome. (Revelation 2:27) They will be partners with him in
the glory of the Kingdom of God. This is because "He poured out his soul
unto death and bore the sins of many." The blessings of the Kingdom would
be impossible without the death of the Messiah as our sin-offering sacrifice.
The final statement of the chapter returns to the priestly
theme hinted at in chapter 52. There the Messiah sprinkled all nations. Now
he makes intercession for transgressors, standing between them and God. The
priestly function of the Messiah is mentioned also in Psalm 110:4 and Zechariah
6:13 and is fully developed in the letter to the Hebrews.
SUMMARY
In conclusion, the Message of this chapter is closely
intertwined with the gospel of the Kingdom. A summary of the gospel
preached by the apostolic church is given in Acts 8:12 and Acts 28:23,31 as the
Kingdom of God and the Name of Jesus the Messiah. We could paraphrase this
as "The Kingdom and the Cross". This must be message that we preach
to the world, for until the sin question is dealt with, none of God's blessings
are remotely possible. Only the sin-offering sacrifice of the Messiah can
deal with the sinfulness and give us a right standing with God so that we can
inherit the blessings of the Kingdom.
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