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This is the fifth and final lesson in the series on Isaiah 53, the 700 year old prophesy of the Lord’s tragedy and triumph. The chapter began by stating the Servant would be exalted in spite of His suffering now, the story ends by claiming He will be exalted because of His suffering. And He…
The world of the Ephesian Christians was filled with racial, social, financial, and religious barriers. Christ came with good news to break all barriers down so all could be one in Christ.
As we delve into this series of Encounters, we meet old ideas with new perspectives. In the Gospels, we see divinity in flesh, where Jesus, both man and Messiah, extended grace to the people He came in contact with, friend and foe. Tonight, we will look at how Christ’s actions ought to reflect on our…
In this, the fourth of five lessons from Isaiah 53, we continue to be amazed by the prophet’s portrait of the promised Messiah. In accepting all the abuse of the cross, the Lord, “like a lamb led to slaughter, did not open His mouth.”
In this, the third of five lessons on Isaiah 53, the Messianic prophet explains why Jesus had to die: “The Lord has laid on Him the iniquity of us all.”
This is the second in a series of five lessons on The Suffering Servant of God in Isaiah 53. Seven hundred years before Jesus came to earth, the Messianic prophet described Him as “a man of sorrows, acquainted with our grief.”
Tonight we begin a five lesson series from Isaiah 53, the Mount Everest of Old Testament prophesy. The last paragraph of chapter 52 is the introduction to this series on the Suffering Servant of God.
God designed worship for our good and to His glory. Today, as once again we celebrate our Lord of lords and King of kings, may we do so with spirit, in truth, and with greater joy for all that He is, and for what He can help us become.