K-Ville at Home! | Sunday, January 10, 2021

 

Parents,

The Book of Isaiah contains four Servant songs—poems about the servant of God. (See Isa. 42:1-4; 49:1-6; 50:4-9; 52:12–53:13.)

In these poems, the prophet Isaiah describes God’s plan of redemption. We see a vision of the promised Messiah, the innocent substitute who would suffer for the sake of sinners. Through Jesus, God brings sinners back to Himself.

The fourth and final Servant song is found in Isaiah 53. In this passage, Isaiah provides an answer to these questions: How can a just God justify the ungodly? How can He declare innocent those who are guilty? How can He treat bad people as though they are good? How can He love people like us?

A just God can’t just look the other way. He doesn’t say, “Don’t worry about it,” or “No big deal.” That’s cheap grace. Sin against a big God is a big deal. God didn’t just forgive our sins, He dealt with them. And this grace was costly. The price? God’s own Son.

Jesus fulfilled Isaiah’s prophecies of a Suffering Servant. People assumed God had cursed the Suffering Servant for His own sins. But no; Jesus was sinless. So why did He suffer? Isaiah wrote that He was pierced because of our transgressions and crushed because of our iniquities. His punishment is what brought our peace. The Suffering Servant died the death we deserve. When we trust in Jesus, our sins are wiped away—paid for by His blood—and His righteousness is credited to us.

When Christ’s work on the cross was finished, God rewarded Him. “For this reason God highly exalted Him and gave Him the name that is above every name, so that at the name of Jesus every knee will bow—of those who are in heaven and on earth and under the earth—and every tongue should confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father” (Phil. 2:9-11).

God planned all along that Jesus would die on the cross for our sin. Seven hundred years before Jesus was born, the prophet Isaiah wrote that this would happen! Jesus is the Servant who suffered so that those who trust in Him would be forgiven.

Help your kids appreciate what Jesus endured during His earthly ministry. Talk about how Jesus hurt and died because of His love for people and His desire to please His Father. Because of Jesus’ suffering and death, our sin punishment has been paid and because of His resurrection, we have victory over death.

 

Watch


 

Isaiah Preached about the Messiah

Isaiah 53

 

 

The Story

Isaiah was a prophet. He gave the people of God special messages from God about what was going to happen in the future. Isaiah said that God had a plan to send someone—the Messiah—to rescue people from sin. The Messiah would be a servant of God.

Isaiah said, “God’s servant grew up, and He looked very ordinary. No one paid attention to Him, and they did not want to be His friend. They stayed away from Him. God’s servant hurt.”

Isaiah said that people saw God’s servant, but they looked the other way. They did not care about Him or love Him. But God’s servant still did what God wanted Him to do. He came to help people and save them from sin.

The servant was punished. People thought that He was punished because He had done something wrong, but He did not do anything wrong! We were supposed to be punished, but instead of punishing us, God punished Him!

Then Isaiah said that the Messiah was hurt and treated badly. “But He did not say anything,” Isaiah explained. “People were unfair to Him, and they took Him away. He was treated like a criminal, but He is not a criminal.”

But even though bad people did this to God’s servant, God planned this. When the servant died, He took away people’s guilt so God could look at them and say, “Not guilty!” God even said, “You’re good!”

God’s servant did not stay dead. God brought Him back to life! God’s good servant will see all the people He saved, and He will be happy.

“Then God will give Him a reward,” Isaiah said. “God will give Him honor for doing the right thing and for saving people from sin. God will welcome His friends who once walked away from Him.”

Christ Connection: God’s servant Isaiah wrote about Jesus. God planned all along that Jesus would die on the cross for our sin. Many years before Jesus was born, Isaiah wrote these words. Jesus is the Servant who died to save people from sin.

 


Scott O'Donohoe