The Exaltation and Suffering of "My
Servant." Acts
What we essentially see in this
passage in Acts chapter eight is one of numerous situations in the book of Acts
where we have personal evangelism. There has been some group evangelism that
has taken place previously in terms of Peter preaching, proclaiming the gospel
to large audiences in the temple precincts in
One of the most important
things to have in personal evangelism is wisdom, and often wisdom in person al
evangelism only comes from experience. We have all made lots of mistakes and
errors when we have tried to communicate the gospel to others. That is how we
get challenged to do better next time, to learn a little more. Ultimately we
recognise that it is never up to us. We have to realise that the most well
crafted intellectual, historically supported, evidentially supported argument
is not going to win the day. This is because it is not about logic per se, not
about evidence per se, not about how clearly we articulate the gospel per se;
it is about God the Holy Spirit who is working in and through that. That does
not excuse ignorance of apologetics or sloppy presentations of the gospel, and
it is not a justification for doing drive-by evangelism. We are to be involved
with other people and ninety per cent of the time personal evangelism in our
lives is going to be done in the context of developing relationships with
people. The more our culture around us has become biblically ignorant and
illiterate the more time it is going to take to communicate the gospel to
people because they are so ignorant of a lot of things. They are not like the
Ethiopian eunuch.
Some studies, done by talking
to believers and asking them how many times they heard the gospel before they
trust in Christ as saviour, is that the average is about four or five times.
That would stand to reason because like anything else in life we have to come
to understand something in order to believe it. Understanding can be a trap for
some people. It is not the understanding of a theologian with a Ph D in
systematic theology; it could be the understanding of a child. It is just basically understanding the basic facts of the
gospel. But there must be understanding, you can’t
have a misunderstanding. You can’t really believe something is true if you
don’t understand what the something is that you are believing.
That doesn’t mean that you understand it comprehensively or exhaustively, but
it does mean that you understand it to the point where you grasp the essential
meaning of it.
Today when we hear some
people talk about evangelism this is what they would call pre-evangelism.
Before we can talk to somebody and tell them that Jesus died for their sins
they have to have some understanding of sin and what it is, some understanding
of Jesus and who He is, and as soon as we get into identifying who Jesus is and
use phrases like Son of God and God, in the mish-mash between the ears of so
many people in our culture today due to the dumbing down of education, there
are lot of people who just have extremely nebulous, extremely erroneous and
extremely fuzzy concepts of deity, of God, of the Bible, of the Ten
Commandments.
There is this portrayal of
the Bible and Christianity by those who are antagonistic to both
Orthodox Judaism or Judaism based on the Old Testament Scriptures, and Christianity,
that wants to make the God of the Old Testament into this horrible, mean,
self-righteous, vindictive being who doesn’t want anybody to enjoy life at all.
That is a complete distortion and misrepresentation of Scripture.
We can’t just jump into a
circumstance like Philip did because a lot of ground work has been already laid
in that case. Paul talks about it using an agricultural metaphor in 1
Corinthians that one person comes along and plants, another person waters, but
it is God who gives the increase. There are many different things that have to
come together in terms of believing and understanding the gospel and it doesn’t
come together apart from the work of God the Holy Spirit in a person’s life. We
always have to remember when we are talking to people that they may not have a
very clear understanding of what it means to believe in God.
If unbelievers do have a
concept of God it is probably not a biblical creator God of Abraham, Isaac and
Jacob, a God who is righteous and just and love and there is not a
contradiction in those attributes. We live in a world today that has
front-loaded the thinking of many people with the idea that a God who is
righteous can’t be loving and a God who is loving
can’t be righteous. So many people who start hearing the gospel look at us and
say that we are putting together ideas that are mutually exclusive. But wait a
minute, we have to go back and learn to think all over again. We live in a post
Christian world today where there has been at least 150
if not 200 years of sophisticated development in anti-Christian arguments that
have filtered their way into and permeated the culture. People growing up have
heard these things so many times that they have shaped their thinking. So we
have to explain what righteousness is, what justice is, and what love is
patiently and humbly, and recognise that the God of the Bible is not a God who
sort of overlooks people’s flaws and peccadillos. That is how most people think
of sin: Well, we all have our flaws and failures but we are not really sinners.
This is because they identify sin as certain kinds of horrendous action. That
is what is embedded within the thinking of many people.
We live in a world today
where few people believe in the legitimacy of biblical predictive prophecy.
Over and over again they have been told that these people who wrote prophecy in
the Old Testament wrote after the fact and they just claim to have been written
by people who lived before the event.
A lot of people don’t believe
in sin or total depravity. They don’t believe that we are born corrupt, that
everybody is a sinner. That doesn’t mean that you always commit evil things.
Many times they do good things, and they have a very weak view of what sin is.
They don’t have a concept of the need for atonement for sin. This is in
contrast to the Ethiopian who knew clearly there had to be atonement for sin.
People today don’t have any sense of that. They don’t believe in a
substitutionary payment for sin or they reject is as a concept that is totally
unfair and completely fraudulent in jurisprudence.
They certainly don’t believe
animal sacrifice is a good thing. They think that this is evil and cruel, and
all that Old Testament religion was such a bloody thing and there were all of
those poor animals that were just slaughtered. They don’t understand what any
of that is related to. They don’t understand anything about the need for a
substitutionary atonement and that they are incapable of providing a solution
themselves and so someone else needs to provide it. They may not at this point
in time have God the Holy Spirit illuminating their minds to the truth of
Scripture. They may just be completely negative and just don’t want to
hear.
Establishing the truth of
many of the points of the gospel may take time, depending upon where a person
is in their prior understanding. 1 Peter
In Acts chapter eight we have an exampled
of an individual who has already put into place most of the ideas in the gospel
and he accepts those as true. He just didn’t have that final piece of
information that Jesus of Nazareth was the incarnation of the eternal second
person of the Trinity and that His entire life was a fulfilment of well over a
hundred prophecies about the Messiah from the Hebrew Scriptures. There are more
than 400 prophecies in the Old Testament related to the Messiah. Some of those
have not been fulfilled yet because there is a distinction that must be made in
the career of the Messiah. He is a suffering Messiah and He is a ruling
Messiah. There is a glorious aspect to the messianic rule and there is a suffering
aspect, and Isaiah 53 focuses on that.
In Isaiah 52:13ff the question is: who is
the servant? According to Isaiah there are many different people identified as
a servant. But a shift takes place by Isaiah 49 that the Jewish people have
failed in their servant function. They cannot redeem themselves because they
are spiritually blind and disobedient and they have pursued the idols of the
Babylonians. So part of the problem that Isaiah is dealing with is a problem
that Zechariah has to deal with after the exile. Isaiah is focusing on it ahead
of time, i.e. if you get the Jews out of
This passage starts off by identifying who
the servant is, and there clearly are passages like Isaiah 41:8, 9 that
identify Israel as the servant, and Isaiah 44:2, 21 identify the servant as
Jacob or Israel. But there are also passages all through Isaiah that indicate
Isaiah 52:13 NKJV “Behold, My
servant shall deal prudently…” The word prudently really should be translated
with the idea of success. It has the idea of wisdom when it is prior to
application, success when it is after application. It is parallel with Jeremiah
23:5, “…And He will reign as king and act wisely [be successful]…” So it is a
proclamation that the servant will be successful in accomplishing the mission
that God gives Him.
Isaiah 52:14 NASB “Just as many
were astonished at you, {My people,} So His appearance
was marred more than any man And His form more than the sons of men.” There is
a lot of debate over the meaning of the word “marred.” A clue before we deal
with this next time, we think marred is a correct translation. The problem is
there are words in the Hebrew text that aren’t used a lot and so there is good
scholarly debate over the meaning of some of these words. But the evidence is that
this is best understand and translated as “marred.” Verse 15: “Thus He will
sprinkle many nations.” “Sprinkle” is a second word where there is a lot of
debate. There is a cognate word and a form of that word used that does indicate
being startled, and there are those who will translate this, “He will startle
many nations”—because of His presence; He surprised them. So a case could be
made for that but that doesn’t mean it is legitimate.
What does in mean in verse 14, “Just as
many were astonished at you”? In English we say they were amazed, it is a
wonder. But this is not the case. That word translated “astonished” is the Hebrew
word which means to be desolate or appalled. It is used in that well-known
phrase “the abomination of desolation” in Daniel chapter nine. It is a word
that is used of divine judgment and the consequences of divine judgment, and it
is also applied to those who witness the horrors of divine judgment and are
just appalled at what they have seen. So the translated “many were astonished
at you” doesn’t convey the right nuance. When we understand it as “many were
appalled at you” it does shape where this passage is going. “His appearance was
marred.” If that is translated as “anoint” it doesn’t fit with the first line
where a word is used that is setting up judgment. There is a remote possibility
of translating it “anoint” (and some do want to translate this “anoint”—He was
anointed more than any man) but it is the idea that there has been a
disfigurement that has taken place of His face. And that fits with what we read
in Isaiah 53, that there is no form or comeliness when we see Him, no beauty
that we should desire Him, we hid our faces from Him, we esteemed Him not. Then
we get into that last verse where it talks about Him sprinkling many nations.
This is foundational for understanding the setup. He is going to provide cleansing
for the nations.