the SUFFERING SERVANT

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PREFACE Holy Week is week leading up to Easter, beginning with Palm Sunday and ending with Easter Sunday. The tradition of observing Holy Week began early in Christendom, when Christian pilgrims would travel to Jerusalem at Passover to reenact and participate in events of week leading up to Easter. It is a week devoted to commemorating Jesus Christ s triumphal entry into Jerusalem (Palm Sunday), Last Supper with His disciples (Maundy Thursday), His crucifixion (Good Friday) and His resurrection (Easter). This has historically been a time of introspection, repentance and contemplation, an opportunity to embrace what it looks like to live out Christ s suffering in our own lives, while looking forward to joy of resurrection, both His and ours. It is this sentiment death and new life that is at heart of Holy Week. We pray this devotional, created by faculty, staff and friends of Evangel family, will bless you. All scripture referenced in this devotional comes from ESV translation. Cover art by Ashtyne Nachtigal BFA (Studio Arts), Evangel 17 To Render, to Cross Oil paint on canvas, 16x20 2016 2017 by Evangel University. All rights reserved.

DAY 1: PALM SUNDAY FATHER, GLORIFY YOUR NAME BY LADONNA FRIESEN Assistant Professor of English READ: ISAIAH 52:13; JOHN 12:27 36 We are in crowd with John, listening to Jesus voice: Now is my soul troubled. Although we may not fully understand why He spoke se words, we are listening with our whole beings because we have known waves tossing our own souls. In that human utterance, Jesus is like us. Just a breath before, He said with authority, The hour has come for Son of Man to be glorified, and n spoke of a grain of wheat dying to bear fruit. How is this glorifying? This word meaning to exalt lifts one s countenance. Yet Jesus speaks of death and a troubled soul. His words are like David s: My soul is greatly troubled (Psalm 6:3). We can tell He is living se words in deep well of His being. Speaking to Himself and us, He asks, And what shall I say? Far, save me from this hour? But for this purpose I have come to this hour. Far, glorify your name. We sense His resolve, that He has spoken stillness to troubled waters, and y gar, moving forward by His will. He has spoken of glory again, and suddenly, His voice is echoed by one from above. Jesus is not alone, and God is not silent. John claims voice is from heaven: I have glorified it, and I will glorify it again. We are stirred by past and future of se words, spoken by Far Jesus has just named. Naming is more than just sounding letters; it is essence of identity, defining character and purpose. Later, we will remember this day and understand. Jesus strange paradox of death and glory were not only teaching. He lived this death, illumining name of God. I

DAY 2: HOLY MONDAY DESPISED AND REJECTED BY MEN BY DR. WILLIAM GRIFFIN Professor of Old Testament and Hebrew READ: ISAIAH 53:3; LUKE 4:16 30 I often tell my students that I love teaching Old Testament because it makes sense to me that God who revealed Himself as gracious, compassionate and forgiving, would become a human, live among us, teach us His ways, die for our sins, and rise from dead to bring eternal life to us. Yet throughout history people have often rejected Lord and even fought against Him. Isaiah 53:3 announces Jesus as one who was despised and rejected by men, a man of sorrows and acquainted with grief; and like one from whom men hide ir faces he was despised, and we esteemed him not. During His ministry Jesus was opposed for what He taught and rejected for who He was. When Jesus spoke in synagogue at Nazareth, He announced fulfillment of God s promises to reach down and help downtrodden. The people s initial reaction was favorable, but when He pointed out God s miracles for Gentiles in ancient times, people tried to throw Him off a cliff (Luke 4:16-30, esp. verses 28-29)! Jesus has sent us as His representatives to this world, and He wants us to tell m that God still offers good news to poor (physically or spiritually), release to captives, recovery of sight to blind and freedom to oppressed. Some will receive this message, just like some did back n. But if society rejects us when we proclaim His message, we are in good company Master Himself was rejected for that very message. II

DAY 3: HOLY TUESDAY A SERVANT IS THE ONE WHO CARRIES BY DR. GREG JOHNS Campus Pastor and Director of Spiritual Life READ: ISAIAH 53:4A; MATTHEW 8:16 17 I was arriving for an important meeting with general superintendent of a national church in Africa. He and his driver met me curbside as I came out of terminal with my bags. I was expecting driver to help me with my luggage. Instead, elder leader greeted me and took up my bags and carried m to waiting car. I was stunned. In his culture, things were carried by servants or by those with lower status as a sign of respect. But here he was carrying my bags! The message was clear: I was his guest. He was taking full responsibility for me during my stay. He was greater but he was serving lesser as a way of communicating his desire to see to my needs while I was in his care and under his authority. His authority only increased with his display of humility. Shouldn t I be stunned by fact that Jesus became Suffering Servant for me? When He comes to meet me at my point of need, He stoops low and takes up worst parts of my human existence. He carries my weaknesses and my diseases things I am powerless to carry in my own strength. He is infinitely greater, yet our relationship is based on Him taking responsibility for my burdens and pain. Matw 8:16-17 reveals that Lord s casting out demons and healing diseases fulfilled prophecy in Isaiah 53:4a, Surely, he has borne our griefs and carried our sorrows. Jesus earthly ministry was a forerunner to His work on Cross. It is re, on Cross, that He carried my painful baggage and served me by dying in my place. He took full responsibility for my sin, my weaknesses, my diseases and my sorrows. I am stunned by Suffering Servant Son of God! III

DAY 4: HOLY WEDNESDAY THE WOUNDED CRIMINAL BY STARLA GOOCH Coordinator of Student Ministries and Discipleship READ: ISAIAH 53:5, JOHN 19:31 37 There I sat at bottom of our family stairwell, eyes fixed on a timer, awaiting screeching ring that would end my time of suffering. I was three years old and imprisoned in time-out for stealing a container of Tic-Tacs. Shame ravaged me. Perhaps this was first time I felt wounding of a fallen world, deeply tarnished from God s original design. Yet somehow, it was not outside wounds that marred me; my afflictions came from selfish soul within. Throughout years, like every or human on our planet, I have gared more and more wounds. Some have come from hands, words or neglect of ors, but most incognito wounds were self-inflicted: my hidden secrets and deepest shames. When God implemented His plan to heal wounds of humanity, many could not receive Him; for Jesus assumed most shameful position by choosing to die as a criminal. Hanging on an erected cross was so lowly that even a criminal by Jesus side derided him. Indeed, even His most loyal disciples rejected this Jesus. So what makes Jesus so hard to accept, let alone love? As Stanley Hauerwas describes, We would prefer a savior not wounded, not wanting our own wounds exposed. Following Jesus requires each of us to expose truth about ourselves to world, that each of us is a wounded criminal. Our hands and tongues drip with assaults we have forged on ors, and our hearts boil inside with secret injuries. But when we choose path of courage to assume same posture of Christ, intentionally exposing our shame, n we can begin to heal. Only through broken embrace of His piercing, crushing and chastisements can Suffering Servant make us whole. IV

DAY 5: MAUNDY THURSDAY SILENT BEFORE HIS ACCUSERS BY AUDREY ADKINS Advancement and Annual Fund Associate READ: ISAIAH 53:7; MATTHEW 27:11 14 For most of us, our sense of justice is strong. When someone is accused of having committed a crime, we expect m to be tried. If y are found guilty, we expect that ir sentence will be of a similar severity to crime. And usually, when we are being accused of a wrongdoing, our sense of justice is elevated particularly if we did not commit wrongdoing in question. Yet in this passage in Isaiah, we read, he opened not his mouth. Jesus knew that He was innocent. After all, He s Son of God all-knowing, all-seeing. Pilate also knew that Christ was innocent (John 18:28-38). Referencing accusations that were coming against Jesus by chief priests and elders, Pilate asks Him, Do you not hear how many things y testify against you? But Jesus, knowing His innocence, remains silent before His accusers (Matw 27:14). His was an all-knowing silence. He knew more than His innocence. He knew greatness and depth of our need of a Savior. He knew that only way was forward to Golgotha, to depth of a grave not His own (Isaiah 53:9a). And so He was silent for us, for our salvation. Just as governor was greatly amazed at His silence, so we too, should be greatly amazed at His silence on our behalf. V

DAY 6: GOOD FRIDAY BURIED WITH THE RICH BY DR. VINCE MEDINA Professor of Old Testament READ: ISAIAH 53:9; MATTHEW 27:57 61 The man who said, Foxes have holes, and birds of air have nests, but Son of Man has nowhere to lay his head, (Luke 9:58) did not own a burial plot at time of His death. In Jesus day common people were buried in trench graves. Since Jesus died late in afternoon, just before beginning of Sabbath at sundown, re was no time to dig a grave for Him. Instead, a rich follower named Joseph of Arimaa begged Pilate for body of Jesus and laid Him in his own family tomb. Since Joseph was a rich man, he owned a new tomb freshly cut from limestone bedrock upon which city of Jerusalem was situated. According to customs of day, dead would be wrapped in cloths with aromatic spices inserted into folds and n laid on a shelf inside tomb. At some later date, when body had decayed sufficiently, bones of dead were gared up and placed in a small stone box called an ossuary or bone box. Often name of deceased would be inscribed on outside of box. Garing bones and depositing m into ossuary was typically duty of eldest son. It was a service of love on behalf of deceased. No doubt Joseph of Arimaa thought that he would one day perform this service for Jesus since He died childless. Little did he know that Jesus would not be needing an ossuary. He would only be borrowing tomb from Friday to Sunday. A few years ago a documentary film-maker claimed to have found an ossuary with an inscription reading Yeshua bar Yosef, Jesus son of Joseph. Scholars have rejected notion that this is ossuary of Jesus of Nazareth. However, greatest refutation of such a claim is Easter. Yes, He once lay in a borrowed tomb, but it was not His tomb! He is risen! VI

DAY 7: HOLY SATURDAY THE INNOCENCE OF CHRIST BY DR. DIANE AWBREY Professor of English READ: ISAIAH 53:9B; JOHN 18:28 40 How quick we are to assign responsibility for our misdeeds to anor! The Jews speaking in John 18:31 have been pressing Romans to stop Jesus. Their logic in face of Pilate s questions is that Jesus is already a criminal or y would not have bored him. So Pilate hands Jesus back and says, Finish job. Instead, y claim y cannot because of Law. The rules say we must behave a certain way. It s not our responsibility. Meanwhile, an innocent man is shoved into maw of Roman government and, on or end, is thrown unceremoniously into a grave with wicked and rich not good and memorable, or upright and righteous, but wicked and rich. But Isaiah (Isaiah 53:9) highlights contrast between those he shares a grave with and man himself: some translations say but, some say although, and some say because. Because He had done no wrong, He was treated with disdain and disrespect. Because He had spoken no lies, authorities wanted to be rid of Him. Because He had never done evil, His elimination was necessary. Humans may stand on eir side of this equation. Some of us have condemned innocent, because ir purity challenged our comfort. Some have bypassed normal procedures of investigation to accomplish an agenda that benefits our political viewpoint. Some have shoved responsibility for proof onto someone else to maintain an illusion of inevitability. On or hand, falsely accused innocent have watched slow progress of human perversity destroy truth and condemn m to company of failures and outcasts. Jesus sees in this moment accuser and condemned. He suffers false accusation, torture and abandonment, not only for falsely accused, tortured and abandoned, but also for accuser, torturer and deserter. VII

DAY 8: EASTER SUNDAY LIFE THROUGH DEATH BY NATHANIEL ADKINS Friend of University READ: ISAIAH 53:10, JOHN 12:24 Easter is a season of joy and thanksgiving. In Easter we rejoice that God has redeemed us from sin and death, that he has given us new life through His Spirit and in promise of eternal life with Him. Yet re is always danger that we would forget or ignore price of our joy. Our salvation from death came through nothing less than God dying in our place. We don t often speak or think in such stark terms as we find in this verse of Isaiah. We often struggle to face harsh reality that Far sent Son to die death of a criminal, mocked and scorned by world, and that Jesus embraced way of cross to bring life to world. But message of Isaiah 53 is that God s servant will bring life to His people, not through usual paths of strength and power, but through way of suffering, mockery and death. The mystery of Easter is that God has given gift of infinite life through embracing death for our sake. And so joy of Easter is a costly joy that ought to lead us all more to thanksgiving and praise for depths to which God came in love for us. VIII

ISAIAH 52:13 53:12 (ESV) Behold, my servant shall act wisely; he shall be high and lifted up, and shall be exalted. As many were astonished at you his appearance was so marred, beyond human semblance, and his form beyond that of children of mankind so shall he sprinkle many nations. Kings shall shut ir mouths because of him, for that which has not been told m y see, and that which y have not heard y understand. Who has believed what he has heard from us? And to whom has arm of LORD been revealed? For he grew up before him like a young plant, and like a root out of dry ground; he had no form or majesty that we should look at him, and no beauty that we should desire him. He was despised and rejected by men, a man of sorrows and acquainted with grief; and as one from whom men hide ir faces he was despised, and we esteemed him not. Surely he has borne our griefs and carried our sorrows; yet we esteemed him stricken, smitten by God, and afflicted. But he was pierced for our transgressions; upon him was chastisement that brought us peace, and with his wounds we are healed. All we like sheep have gone astray; we have turned every one to his own way; and LORD has laid on him iniquity of us all. He was oppressed, and he was afflicted, yet he opened not his mouth; like a lamb that is led to slaughter, and like a sheep that before its shearers is silent, so he opened not his mouth. By oppression and judgment he was taken away; and as for his generation, who considered that he was cut off out of land of living, stricken for transgression of my people? And y made his grave with wicked and with a rich man in his death, although he had done no violence, and re was no deceit in his mouth. Yet it was will of LORD to crush him; he has put him to grief; when his soul makes an offering for guilt, he shall see his offspring; he shall prolong his days; will of LORD shall prosper in his hand. Out of anguish of his soul he shall see and be satisfied; by his knowledge shall righteous one, my servant, make many to be accounted righteous, and he shall bear ir iniquities. Therefore I will divide him a portion with many, and he shall divide spoil with strong, because he poured out his soul to death and was numbered with transgressors; yet he bore sin of many, and makes intercession for transgressors.