Meditations
for Seeking the Life in Christ
The Gospel of John
October 1, 2024
Through His Bruises We Get Healed
“Away with him,” they yelled. “Away with him! Crucify him!”
“What? Crucify your king?” Pilate asked.
“We have no king but Caesar,” the leading priests shouted back.
Then Pilate turned Jesus over to them to be crucified.
John 19:15-16
The irony of the conspiracy to murder Jesus increases yet again. Pilate, who had absolute authority over Israel, vacillated. He was indecisive and fearful. At first, he toyed with the priests; if they wanted to crucify Jesus, he would let Jesus go, just to spite them. Then Pilate sensed there was more being played out than he understood, and he wanted to distance himself from the proceedings. Enter the ultimate irony. The priests, who were completely under the authority of Pilate, manipulate Pilate to do their bidding. Pilate capitulates, but the cost to the priests and the crowd was expensive beyond measure. They had repudiated their God by claiming they had no king, but Caesar. They crucified the First Commandment: “I am the Lord your God, who rescued you from the land of Egypt, the place of your slavery. “You must not have any other god but me” (Exodus 20: 2-3).
Thus the words of the Prophet Isaiah were fulfilled:
“. . . it was our pains he
carried—our disfigurements, all the things wrong with us.
We thought he brought it on
himself, that God was punishing him for his own failures.
But it was our sins that did that
to him, that ripped and tore and crushed him—our sins!
He took the punishment, and that
made us whole.
Through his bruises we get
healed.
We're all like sheep who've
wandered off and gotten lost.
We've all done our own thing,
gone our own way.
And God has piled all our sins, everything we've done wrong, on him, on him.
He was beaten, he was tortured, but
he didn't say a word.
Like a lamb taken to be
slaughtered and like a sheep being sheared, he took it all in silence.
Justice miscarried, and he was
led off—and did anyone really know what was happening?
He died without a thought for his
own welfare, beaten bloody for the sins of my people.
They buried him with the wicked, threw
him in a grave of a rich man,
Even though he'd never hurt a soul or said one word that wasn't true.
Isaiah 53: 4-9
(The Message)
My Takeaway: O Lamb of
God, that takest away the sins of the world, have mercy upon us.
Sē’lah
My book on
prayer,
First Think, Then
Pray
is now available
on Amazon Kindle.
(Selah is a word that appears in the
Book of Psalms that I often use as the Complimentary Closing in my correspondence.
Its meaning, as I use the word, is to pause and think about these things.)
These
meditations are written by Alex M. Knight as he seeks the life in Christ as his
way of life. The meditations are
published on the BLOG, http://seekingthelifeinchrist.blogspot.com/
and they are also distributed on the Constant Contact email server. You may
subscribe to this email service by sending an email to: amkrom812@gmail.com.
Copyright © 2024 by Alex M. Knight
Unless
otherwise indicated, all Scripture quotations are taken from the Unless
otherwise indicated, all Scripture quotations are taken from the Holy Bible,
New Living Translation, copyright © 1996, 2004, 2015 by Tyndale House
Foundation. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, Inc., Carol Stream,
Illinois 60188. All rights reserved.
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