Bible Commentary

Isaiah 53:4

The Pulpit Commentary on Isaiah 53:4

The Pulpit Commentary · Joseph S. Exell and contributors · Public domain

Surely he hath borne our griefs; or, surely they were our griefs which he bore. The pronouns are emphatic. Having set forth at length the fact of the Servant's humiliation (, ), the prophet hastens to declare the reason of it.

Twelve times over within the space of nine verses he asserts. with the most emphatic reiteration, that all the Servant's sufferings were vicarious, borne for him, to save him from the consequences of his sins, to enable him to escape punishment.

The doctrine thus taught in the Old Testament is set forth! with equal distinctness in the New (; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; , etc.

), and forms the hope, the trust, and the consolation of Christians. and carried our sorrows. The application which St. Matthew makes of this passage to our Lord's miracles of healing () is certainly not the primary sense of the words, but may be regarded as a secondary application of them.

Christ's sufferings were the remedy for all the ills that flesh is heir to. Yet we did esteem him stricken, smitten of God. They who saw Christ suffer, instead of understanding that he was bearing the sins of others in a mediatorial capacity, imagined that he was suffering at God's hands for his own sins.

Hence they scoffed at him and reviled him, even in his greatest agonies (). To one only, and him not one of God's people, was it given to see the contrary, and to declare aloud, at the moment of the death, "Certainly this was a righteous Man" ().

Recommended reading

More for Isaiah 53:4

Continue with other commentaries and DiscipleDeck content connected to this verse, chapter, or topic.

Other commentaries

The Pulpit Commentary on Isaiah 53:1-12Isaiah 53:1-12 · The Pulpit CommentaryEXPOSITION THE PASSIONAL, OR THE GREAT PROPHECY OF THE SUFFERINGS OF CHRIST, AND OF HIS LATER EXALTATION. Polycarp the Lysian calls this chapter "the golden passional of the Old Testament evangelist." Delitzsch says of…The Pulpit Commentary on Isaiah 53:2-11Isaiah 53:2-11 · The Pulpit CommentaryThe sufferings of Jesus. It is the great object of Isaiah, in this chapter, to declare to his countrymen I. THE MESSIAH A SUFFERING MESSIAH. Hitherto Isaiah had looked upon the promised Redeemer on the side of his glori…Matthew Henry on Isaiah 53:4-9Isaiah 53:4-9 · Matthew Henry Concise CommentaryIn these verses is an account of the sufferings of Christ; also of the design of his sufferings. It was for our sins, and in our stead, that our Lord Jesus suffered. We have all sinned, and have come short of the glory…The Humiliation of the Messiah. (b. c. 706.)Isaiah 53:4-9 · Matthew Henry's Commentary on the Whole BibleTHE HUMILIATION OF THE MESSIAH. (B. C. 706.) In these verses we have, I. A further account of the sufferings of Christ. Much was said before, but more is said here, of the very low condition to which he abased and humbl…The Pulpit Commentary on Isaiah 53:4-6Isaiah 53:4-6 · The Pulpit CommentaryThe suffering Servant of Jehovah. I. THE DESCRIPTION OF THE SUFFERING. It depicts, by simple force of language, its extreme intensity—not a suffering springing from internal weakness of nature, and so withering and dyin…