As long as we contemplate the suffering of our Lord Jesus Christ as innocent
bystanders, deeply interested perhaps in that awful spectacle and even sympathetic,
we cannot hear the Word of God that comes to us through that suffering. Then
we fail to see in that sufferer the Son of God. All we see is a man in deep
distress, the innocent victim of his enemies, a man perhaps who had the misfortune
of being far in advance of his age, and who was; therefore, misunderstood,
rejected, hated without a cause, a stranger to his own kin, and filled with
reproach and shame. We feel no doubt that we would have taken His part against
His enemies and would have pleaded His cause. We are filled with indignation
at those wicked and miserable Jews who hated and constantly persecuted Him,
sought occasion against Him and finally nailed Him to the cross. In that case
the spectacle of the Man of Sorrows, of the passion and death of Jesus Christ
has an effect upon us which is precisely opposite to that designed by the
Word of God: in our blindness we exalt ourselves above the enemies of Christ,
we are hardened in our self-righteousness and fail to repent and to humble
ourselves under the mighty hand of God.
We must; therefore, understand that the passion of Jesus Christ is not the
suffering of a mere man among men in regard to which you and I are free to
determine our position, to take sides. It is the suffering of the Son of God
in the flesh, a suffering which, in as far as it was inflicted upon Him by
men, was motivated by hatred against God. Therefore, this suffering is wholly
unique. There never was, there never will be a sorrow like unto His sorrow,
and He stands entirely alone in His suffering. No mere man ever takes it up
for Him, or pleads His cause. All men are always against Him unless the power
of grace changes their hearts and opens their eyes to see. For "all we like
sheep have gone astray; we have turned every one to his own way." Isaiah
53:5; and "there is none righteous, no not one: there is none that understandeth,
there is none that seeketh after God... For all have sinned, and come short
of the glory of God." (Romans
3:10,11,23). In order then to fruitfully contemplate the passion and death
of our Lord, we must not look down upon the men that caused Him to suffer
from the heights of our self-willed religiousness, but we must understand
that by nature our place is among His enemies. That is our real position.
Nor must we flatter ourselves that it is in our own power to change that position,
for then we would deceive ourselves. Only the sovereign mercy of God can bring
about such a radical change. We rejected Him; we hated Him without a cause;
we are estranged from Him, and we reproached Him with the reproaches of them
that reproach the living God. All that men did to Jesus is clearly reflected
in the corruption of our own nature.
Once again we take our theme from that eminently Messianic sixty-ninth
Psalm. In verses
nine to twelve we hear the Christ complain before the face of God: "For
the zeal of thine house hath eaten me up; and the reproaches of them that
reproached thee are fallen upon me. When I wept, and chastened my soul with
fasting, that was to my reproach. I made sackcloth also my garment; and I
became a proverb to them. They that sit in the gate speak against me; and
I was the song of the drunkards." There can be no doubt that it is the Christ
who is the real subject of this complaint for the apostle Paul refers to this
passage in Romans
15:3: "For even Christ pleased not himself, but as it is written, The
reproaches of them that reproached thee fell on me."
Let us analyze this passage for a moment, and consider its different elements
in their proper relation to one another in order then to consider how they
are fulfilled in Christ.
First of all we notice that the poet speaks of his zeal for the house of
God as the deepest cause of all his suffering and of the reproach that is
heaped upon him. The house of God is the sanctuary of Jehovah and all it represents:
God's covenant and kingdom, the fellowship of His friendship, the glory of
Him that sits enthroned between the cherubim, His cause, His righteousness
and, holiness, His people and their redemption through the blood that was
sprinkled upon the horns of the altar and upon the mercy seat in the inner
sanctuary. He is zealous for this house of God. So overpowering is this zeal
that it is like a fire in his bones that consumes him.
Secondly, it is evident that the poet beholds that house of God in a deplorable
state. The sanctuary is defiled. The altar is profaned. The dwelling place
of God has become a den of thieves, and because of this deplorable condition
of Jehovah's sanctuary, the psalmist suffers. He weeps his soul out. He goes
in sackcloth and ashes. He chastens his soul with fasting. His zeal for the
house of God in its deplorable state causes Him to suffer.
Finally, in this suffering and evident sorrow and distress because of God's
cause, he becomes the object of hatred and is filled with reproach and ignominy,
for he dwells in the midst of the enemies of the house of God. They are not
at all concerned about Jehovah's sanctuary. In fact, they are the cause of
its being defiled. Hence, they hate him, and the more he reveals his zeal
for God's cause and his distress because of the defilement of the house of
God, the more they express their hatred. They heap reproach upon his head.
They make him a byword, a proverb, an example of whatever is worthless. In
the assembly of the drunkards he is the theme of their song, and those that
sit in the gate, the judges of his people, speak against him as if he were
an evil doer. He complains to God about his distress, for he realizes that
in him they mean to revile the living God. The reproaches of God's enemies
are fallen upon him.
All this was true for the author of this psalm. He speaks of his own experience,
and what is more it may be applied to all the prophets of Israel, and in fact
to all the saints. But it is applicable to them only because Christ is in
them, and becomes revealed through them, and besides, it is applicable only
in a limited sense. But in Christ the words of the psalmist are completely
realized. He bore the reproach of men as no other man did. Never did He bear
any other reproach than that which was directed against the living God.
Of Him alone it is literally true that the zeal of God's house consumed Him.
The disciples were reminded of this when they witnessed His first cleansing
of the temple, when He drove out those that made His Father's house a den
of robbers (John
2:17). Yet this act was performed only in the earthly sanctuary and was
typical of what He had come to do. For He came to build the real temple of
God, to establish the eternal covenant of God with His people. That covenant
of friendship had once been established in Paradise with the first Adam, but
man had violated the covenant by rejecting the Word of God and heeding the
lie of the devil. He had defiled the house of God. However, God would give
His glory to no other. He maintained His covenant, and according to His eternal
good pleasure purposed not only to restore His house and to cleanse it from
all the pollution of sin, but also to raise it through the deep way of sin
and death and grace to the higher level of heavenly perfection and glory.
Unto that end He had from all eternity ordained His only begotten Son to be
the Head over the whole house of God, in order that He might destroy the works
of the devil and build the eternal house of God's covenant. For this purpose
He came into the world. There was no other purpose for His coming. In that
one purpose, to establish God's everlasting tabernacle with men, His whole
existence and life were bound up. He had no other interests. Only the zeal
for God's house motivated Him. He represented God's cause, God's glory, the
honor of God's name, God's righteousness and holiness and justice, and He
came to destroy the defiled temple of Man, to build the temple of God in all
its heavenly glory. That house of God was to be realized in His people, those
whom the Father had given Him from before the foundation of the world.
Because of this zeal for God's house, He became the Man of Sorrows. For only
on the basis of righteousness (God's righteousness) and in the way of His
justice could God's house be founded and built. We had sinned and had become
worthy of death and damnation. We were children of wrath. We had no right
to dwell in God's fellowship. If His house was to be rebuilt and perfected
in those whom the Father had given Christ in His eternal good pleasure, the
guilt of their sin must be blotted out, and they must be clothed with an everlasting
righteousness. This required the sacrifice of perfect obedience even unto
death. This sacrifice we could never bring. We could only defile and destroy
the house of God: never could we cleanse it and rebuild it. But Christ came
to satisfy the justice of God, to take all the sins of His own upon Himself;
and in their stead to stand in the place of judgment, bear all the wrath of
God, bring the perfect sacrifice in tasting all the horrors of death, and
thus to lay the foundations of the house of God in His own precious blood.
Hence, He was the Man of Sorrows. He came to suffer and to die. The zeal
of God's house caused Him to make sackcloth His garment, for He came in the
likeness of sinful flesh, and He partook of the flesh and blood of the children.
In that likeness of sinful flesh He fasted and wept, He "offered up prayers
and supplications with strong crying and tears unto him that was able to save
Him from death." (Hebrews
5:7). His soul became exceedingly sorrowful even unto death, so that His
sweat became as it were great drops of blood. He was troubled in soul and
spirit until the amazing cry was wrung from His breast: "My God, my God, why
hast thou forsaken me?"
Because of all this He was filled with reproach!
Reproach is itself a keen form of suffering, and a cause of more suffering.
One that heaps reproach upon you hates you, and expresses his hatred by attacking
your good name, usually by making it an object of contempt and scorn. Every
man has a name, a reputation with his fellow men. By that name he is known
from different aspects and in different capacities and relationships, as a
father in relation to his family, a workman in the shop, a teacher in the
school, a citizen among his fellow citizens, a member of the church. His name
denotes what he is, how he is known among men, from the viewpoint of his ability
and moral character. To attack one's name; therefore, is to attack his person,
his honor, his very place in the world. To heap reproach on one is to besmear
his name, to make him of ill repute among men, to present him as a worthless
fellow, an object of contempt, one that is unworthy to have a place in decent
society. The result, if the attack is successful, is that the victim becomes
an outcast, who meets with scorn and disdain everywhere, and cannot find a
place in the world.
Literally, this was done to Christ. He too had a name, and His name was ordained
and given Him of God. He was Jesus, that would save His people from their
sins; the Lamb of God that taketh away the sin of the world, the Son of God,
the Christ, the promised Messiah that would reign over the house of Jacob
for ever, and that would restore and build the temple of God. That was His
name, and that name He revealed in His public ministry, for he taught the
people. By the very content and character of His instruction, as well as by
direct declarations, He made Himself known as the prophet that was to come,
as the Messiah, the anointed of God, that was sent of the Father into the
world to establish the kingdom of heaven and to realize the everlasting tabernacle
of God with men. He corroborated His teaching and sustained His claim by His
mighty works. For He went throughout the land doing good: He opened the eyes
of the blind, the ears of the deaf; He made the lame to walk; he cleansed
the lepers, and He raised the dead! He made it very plain that He came to
destroy the power of darkness, and to maintain the cause of the righteousness
of God in the way of suffering and death.
Men attacked His name. They destroyed His reputation among men. They called
Him a sinner, a liar, a deceiver, a friend of publicans and sinners, a subject
of Beelzebub, a blasphemer, a revolutionary. They heaped scorn and derision
upon Him, and the astonishing feature of this reproach is that the more He
suffered, the more vehement became their attacks upon His name, the more furious
they became in their contempt and scorn and bitter hatred. Even when He was
in their power they mocked Him, blindfolded Him, spit their contempt upon
Him, put Him to nought by means of a purple mock-robe, a cruel crown of thorns,
a reed scepter, and mock obeisance. Yea, even when He was nailed to the cross,
and at the time when even the lowest and vilest criminal would have been an
object of commiseration, their fury knew no bounds. Still they heaped their
reproach upon Him, challenged Him to come down from the cross and with satanic
hatred suggested that even God had forsaken Him!
Was ever man reproached as He? Indeed, He became a byword and a proverb.
His name was the theme of the song of drunken revelers, and those that sat
in the gate spoke against Him. No man ventured to defend His name. So reviled
He was that even His foremost disciple publicly disavowed any connection with
Him!
What was the reason? Why did they so furiously rage against His name, and
heap scorn and contempt upon it? Principally, and in its deepest sense, because
they meant to reproach the name of God! For thus He complains: "the reproaches
of them that reproach thee are fallen upon me." He represented the cause of
God, they stood for the cause of man against God. He defended the honor of
God, they sought the honor of men. He maintained the righteousness and justice
of God, they exalted themselves in self-righteousness against the living God.
He came to destroy the temple of man which they loved; He came to build the
house of God, which they hated and defiled. In their reproach of Christ they
revealed themselves as utterly profane, as hating and despising the holy things
of God and His covenant! Because the zeal of God's house consumed Him they
filled Him with contempt! In Him they, reproached the living God! That is
the condemnation of the world!
That is our condemnation! For by nature, as mere men apart from grace, we
belong with that profane, scorning, contemptuous, God-reviling world that
heaped reproach on Christ. Let us not shed a religious, self-righteous tear
of sympathy at the cross of Christ, let us rather confess that we heaped that
reproach upon His head. Let us not weep over Him, let us rather weep over
ourselves and over our children. Let us not condemn those wicked Jews that
so despised their Messiah, let us rather sign our own condemnation before
the terrible tribunal of God. Let us, as we contemplate His reproach, not
put on a mask of righteous indignation. Let us rather mirror ourselves in
it to discover what foul profanities there are lurking in the depth of our
sinful nature.
Then there is hope. Otherwise we must needs be damned with that God-reproaching
world.
Then there is a way out. Not, mark you, because we have the power to
change ourselves, or the will to abandon our profane, God-reviling attitude,
for we are slaves of sin. But then there is hope, first of all because
He bore the sin of our reproach upon that very tree to which we finally
spiked Him; because He brought the perfect sacrifice that blotted out
the guilt of our iniquity and obtained for His own the perfect righteousness,
and secondly because He was raised from the dead and became the quickening
Spirit and has the power to deliver us from our profanity and so to
change us, that instead of heaping reproach upon the name of God, we
prostrate ourselves before Him in humble adoration with the prayer on
our lips: Hallowed be Thy name! Such is the marvel of His wondrous grace!