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Octavius Winslow

Isaiah 53:4

Isaiah 53:4
Octavius Winslow April, 22 2016 3 min read
709 Articles 90 Sermons 35 Books
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April, 22 2016
Octavius Winslow
Octavius Winslow 3 min read
709 articles 90 sermons 35 books
What does the Bible say about Jesus bearing our sorrows?

Isaiah 53:4 teaches that Jesus bore our griefs and carried our sorrows, emphasizing His role as our High Priest who sympathizes with our suffering.

Isaiah 53:4 profoundly reveals that Jesus not only bears our sins but also carries our sorrows. This verse underscores His identification with our suffering and His perfect understanding of human grief. Jesus, as our High Priest, was made 'perfect through sufferings,' highlighting that His experience of sorrow was essential for Him to effectively intercede for us. His deep familiarity with pain means He can truly empathize with us during our times of trouble, providing solace and support as He intimately understands the hardships we face.

Moreover, the personal relationship believers have with Jesus is enhanced by His shared experience of suffering. Unlike earthly friends who may fail to fully grasp our struggles, Jesus, having walked through grief and pain, responds with genuine compassion, ready to provide comfort and healing. When we approach Him in faith, we can confidently disclose our sorrows, knowing He has walked the very path we tread.

Isaiah 53:4, Hebrews 5:8, Hebrews 2:10

How do we know Jesus sympathizes with our suffering?

Jesus sympathizes with our suffering because He experienced it Himself, making Him a compassionate High Priest as stated in Hebrews 4:15.

The truth that Jesus sympathizes with our suffering is rooted in His own experiences. Hebrews 4:15 affirms that we have a High Priest who can empathize with our weaknesses, having been tempted and tested in every way, yet without sin. This enables Jesus to fully understand the depth of our sorrows and the reality of our struggles. He was 'touched with the feeling of our infirmities,' which means that He genuinely cares for our condition and knows our heartaches intimately.

In the context of Isaiah 53:4, we see that Jesus took on our griefs and sorrows, illustrating His personal investment in our suffering. His role as the bleeding Sacrifice illustrates that He did not merely observe our pain from a distance but rather participated in it, thereby becoming the ultimate source of comfort for those in distress. Therefore, we can approach Him in our times of need, confident that He understands and is ready to embrace us in our pain.

Hebrews 4:15, Isaiah 53:4, Hebrews 2:14-17

Why is Jesus important for Christians in times of sorrow?

Jesus is vital for Christians in times of sorrow because He empathizes with our pain and provides comfort as our compassionate High Priest.

For Christians, Jesus is the cornerstone of comfort during times of sorrow. His unique position as our High Priest allows Him to intercede on our behalf, having fully experienced the weight of human grief and suffering. Isaiah 53:4 reveals that He has borne our sorrows, indicating a deep understanding and acquaintance with the pain we endure. This assurance transforms our sorrow into a sacred space where we can find solace in Him.

Furthermore, the biblical narrative teaches us that Jesus not only suffered for our sins but also to equip Him to understand and sympathize with our trials. This means that in our darkest hours, we are not alone; we can bring our burdens to Him with the confidence that He intimately understands our suffering. His response to our grief is characterized by compassion and tenderness, providing us with both solace and strength to endure the trials we face. By turning to Jesus in sorrow, Christians find the hope and encouragement needed to press on.

Isaiah 53:4, Hebrews 2:17, Romans 8:26

“Surely he has borne our griefs, and carried our sorrows.”

— Isaiah 53:4

In order to the perfection of His character as the High Priest of His people, as the Brother born for adversity, in order to be "touched with the feeling of our infirmities," He must Himself suffer. He must know from painful experience what sorrow meant- what a wounded spirit and a broken bleeding heart, a burdened and a beclouded mind, were. In this school He must be taught, and disciplined, and trained; He must "learn obedience by the things which He suffered;" He must be made "perfect through sufferings." And oh, how deeply has He been taught, and how thoroughly has He been trained, and how well has He learned thus to sympathize with a suffering Church! You have gone, it may be, with your trouble to your earthly friend; you have unfolded your tale of woe, have unveiled every feeling and emotion. But, ah! how have the vacant countenance, the wandering eye, the listless air, the cold response, told you that your friend, with all his love, could not enter into your case! The care that darkened your brow had never shaded his- the sorrow that lacerated your heart had never touched his- the cup you were drinking he had never tasted. What was lacking? Sympathy, growing out of an identity of circumstance. You have gone to another. He has trod that path before you, He has passed through that very trouble, His spirit has been accustomed to grief, His heart schooled in trial, sorrow in some of its acutest forms has been His companion; and now He is prepared to bend upon you a melting eye, to lend an attentive ear and a feeling heart, and to say, "Brother, I have known all, I have felt all, I have passed through all- I can sympathize with all." That Friend of friends, that Brother of brothers, is Jesus. He has gone before you; He has left a fragrance on the brim of that very cup you are now drinking; He has bedewed with tears and left the traces of His blood on that very path along which you are now walking; He has been taught in that very school in which you are now learning. Then what encouragement to take your case, in the sweet simplicity of faith, and lay it before the Lord! to go and tell Jesus, confessing to Him, and over Him, the sin which has called forth the chastisement, and then the grief which that chastisement has occasioned. What a wonderful High Priest is Jesus! As the bleeding Sacrifice, you may lay your hand of faith upon His head, and acknowledge your deepest guilt; and, as the merciful Priest, you may lay your head on His bosom, and disclose your deepest sorrow. O my precious Savior! must You sink to this deep humiliation, and endure this bitter suffering, in order to enter into my lonely sorrow!

From Morning Thoughts by Octavius Winslow.
Octavius Winslow
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