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Octavius Winslow

Isaiah 63:9

Isaiah 63:9
Octavius Winslow March, 17 2016 4 min read
709 Articles 90 Sermons 35 Books
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March, 17 2016
Octavius Winslow
Octavius Winslow 4 min read
709 articles 90 sermons 35 books
What does the Bible say about Christ's sympathy in suffering?

The Bible teaches that Christ sympathizes with our sufferings, being intimately acquainted with grief Himself (Isaiah 63:9).

Isaiah 63:9 reveals the deep level of Christ's identification with our suffering. As a 'man of sorrows and acquainted with grief,' Jesus experienced profound sorrow that allows Him to sympathize with His people. He took upon Himself our humanity and the heaviness of our afflictions, making Him uniquely fitted to understand our struggles. Through His own experiences, He offers comfort and support in our trials, inviting us to find solace in His shared suffering—He bears our sicknesses and sorrows, offering both empathy and strength.

Isaiah 63:9

How do we know Christ is with us in our trials?

We know Christ is with us in our trials because He has walked through suffering Himself and promises to be present through our pain (Isaiah 63:9).

In Isaiah 63:9, we see that Jesus not only shares in our humanity but also in our afflictions. This compassionate identification indicates that He does not remain distant amid our trials. He experienced His own sufferings, which allows Him to provide genuine comfort and support to us as He walks with us through our challenges. The promise of His presence is a source of immense encouragement, reminding believers that Christ understands the weight of our burdens and sympathizes with our pain.

Isaiah 63:9

Why is understanding Christ's suffering important for Christians?

Understanding Christ's suffering is vital as it reassures Christians of His empathy and the depth of His sacrificial love for us (Isaiah 63:9).

For Christians, the significance of Christ's suffering lies in the rich theological implications of His empathy. Isaiah 63:9 encapsulates the truth that Jesus did not only endure the physical pains of life; He demonstrated emotional and spiritual connections with the experiences of His people. This understanding fosters deeper faith, recognizing that Jesus knows our struggles intimately and provides grace in our time of need. Acknowledging His suffering compels Christians to draw near to Him for comfort and strength, as He walked the path of affliction before us and invites us to trust in His sustaining power.

Isaiah 63:9

“In all their a action he was afflicted.”

— Isaiah 63:9

HERE is open the true and blessed source of comfort, in the hour and the circumstance of sorrow. The Lord's people are a tried people—Jesus was a tried Savior. The Lord's people are an afflicted people—Jesus drank deep of its bitter cup. The Lord's people are a sorrowing family—Jesus was a "man of sorrows and acquainted with grief." He brought Himself down to a level with the circumstances of His people. He completely identified Himself with them. We are not however to suppose that in every peculiarity of trial there is an identity with our dear Lord. There are trials growing out of peculiar circumstances and relations in life, to which He was a stranger. But Jesus took upon Him pure humanity in its suffering form, was deeply acquainted with sorrow as sorrow; and from these two circumstances, became fitted in all points to support, to sustain, and to sympathize with His afflicted, sorrowing people, whatever the cause of that affliction or sorrow was. It is enough for us that He was "bone of our bone, and flesh of our flesh." It is enough for us that His heart was composed of all the tenderness, sympathy, and gentleness of our nature, and that, too, freed from everything growing out of the infirmity of sin, that could weaken, and impair, and blunt His sensibilities. It is enough for us that sorrow was no stranger to His heart, that affliction had deeply furrowed His soul, and that grief had left its traces upon every line of His countenance. What more do we require? What more can we ask? Our nature?—He took it. Our sicknesses?—He bore them. Our sorrows?—He felt them. Our crosses?—He carried them. Our sins?—He pardoned them. He went before His suffering people; trod out the path; left His foot-print; and now invites them to walk in no way, to sustain no sorrow, to bear no burden, and to drink no cup, in which He has not Himself gone before. It is enough for Him that you are a child of grief, that sorrow is the bitter cup you are drinking. He asks no more. A chord is in a moment touched in His heart, which vibrates to that touched in yours, whether its note be a pleasing or mournful one. For let it be ever remembered that Jesus has sympathy for the joys, as for the sorrows, of His people. He rejoices with those that rejoice, and He weeps with those that weep.

But how does Jesus sympathize? Not in the sense in which some may suppose—that when we weep He actually weeps, and that when we suffer He actually suffers. This may at one time have been so, but we no more know Christ in the flesh, as He was once known. Ah! there was a period when "Jesus wept"! There was a period when His heart was wrung with anguish, and when His body agonized in pain. That period is no more. There yet is a sense, and an important one, in which Jesus feels sympathy. When the believer suffers, the tenderness of Jesus is drawn forth. His sustaining strength, His sanctifying grace, His comforting love, are all unfolded in the experience of His child, while passing through the furnace. The Son of God is with him in the flames. Jesus of Nazareth is walking with him on the billows. He has the heart of Christ. And this is sympathy—this is fellowship—this is to be one with Christ Jesus.

From Evening Thoughts by Octavius Winslow.
Octavius Winslow
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