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THUMBNAIL
SKETCH - This poem reveals for the first time the servants suffering and
ill-treatment yet strangely, even mysteriously, woven within Gods purpose. We are
also introduced to the divine name Adonai (cf. 48:16) and which is repeated in four
of the six verses. God is thus the presence behind the teaching, preparation, and ultimate
vindication of the servant. [1]
NOT A LAMENT - The passage is similar to what we read of in the
laments of the psalms, though with a difference. Both describe suffering and affliction
but here the lament underscores Gods sustaining and upholding power within
suffering. Theres no attempt to wheedle God to give justice nor demands for God to
rectify the situation. The poem says that God has come to be faithfully present within the
servants suffering and in fact, that it is in the very act of Gods being
faithfully present that affliction arises in the first place. Thus the servant-with such
knowledge-bears all things, hopes all things, endures all things.
Whats the
first thing that you hear in the morning? Radio? Alarm? Kids? Dog? What is your knee-jerk
response?
Recall how you have been encouraged when you had just about given up.
What words restored hope and energy?
Describe the relationship between the servant and the Sovereign Lord in this passage.
What gives the servant confidence and hope in what appears to be dire circumstances?
Isaiah 50:4-9 might be what the
Triumphal Entry would look like from a Christ-viewpoint as a servant who is in deep
relationship with the Sovereign Lord. In the passage, Gods promise is to stand with
the oppressed and with those who serve God through troubling times. The servant is
vulnerable here and relies totally on God. While the passage has long been valued by
Christians as descriptive of Jesus suffering, the image itself reveals the meaning
of Jesus suffering. In its original setting this song affirms Gods
relationship to Israel and offers comfort to the suffering exiles of Isaiahs time:
God is there for the faithful. The encouragement is timeless-that could well be a
homilys point if using this first lesson. The promise of Gods enduring
presence extends to all who follow Jesus in risking humiliation and physical harm to
affirm Gods will for life.
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[1] The New Interpreters Bible VI (Nashville: Abingdon Press, 2001), page
436.
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