Overview:
Our culture lionizes the powerful, the aggressive, and the bold. Meekness is mistaken for weakness, and silence under pressure is seen as defeat. But centuries before the cross, Isaiah described a Servant who would be despised, rejected, and silent—and through whose wounds we would be healed.
Pastor Chuck Swindoll opens Isaiah 53:3–7 to show how Jesus fulfilled the portrait of the suffering Servant—the Lamb who went to slaughter in silence, bearing our griefs and carrying our sorrows as our substitute.
Find your hope in the Lamb who was slain for you. True strength is not the absence of suffering but the willingness to bear it for others.
Message Summary:
Message Key Facts:
- The Mascot Test: Swindoll illustrates the perceived weakness of a lamb by noting you will never see a "Cadillac Lamb" or a "New York Lambs" football team. The world values power, but God values the sacrificial nature of the lamb [10–11].
- Isaac’s Age: In analyzing Genesis 22, Swindoll points out that Isaac was likely a young adult, not a small boy, because he carried the wood for the offering up the mountain. This implies that the sacrifice involved not just Abraham’s obedience, but Isaac’s willing submission [16–18].
- The Balloon Analogy: To explain Paul’s warning in 1 Corinthians 5 about "a little leaven," Swindoll uses the image of a pin and a balloon. It only takes one pin to burst a balloon; similarly, a small amount of tolerated sin ("leaven") destroys the whole life [27–28].
- The "Butcher Shop" Defense: Quoting W.A. Criswell, Swindoll confronts liberal theologians who find the "preaching of the blood" offensive, labeling it "religion of the butcher shop." Swindoll argues that without the shedding of blood, there is no remission of sin, calling the blood of Christ "the greatest detergent ever known to humanity" [47–48, 51].
- The Unapproachable Professor: Swindoll shares a vulnerable story from his time at Dallas Seminary. Amidst a car wreck, a miscarriage, and his wife’s injury, he sought 10 minutes of comfort from a professor who cracked his door, claimed he was too busy, and shut it. Swindoll uses this to contrast human coldness with the approachability of the Lamb [63–67].
- Four Qualities of a Lamb: Swindoll lists four traits believers should emulate:
- Dependence: Like a lamb or baby, we cannot make it on our own.
- Approachability: Avoiding the intimidation of others as we grow in knowledge [59–60].
- Innocence: A lack of duplicity and a "naivety toward wickedness" [68–69].
- Sacrifice: A willingness to be "poured out" for God's purposes.
- The Silence of the Savior: Swindoll reflects on the movie The Passion of the Christ, noting that the most striking element was Jesus' refusal to scream in retaliation, fulfilling the prophecy: "Like a sheep that is silent before its shearers" [40–41].
Message References:
- Isaiah 53:3–7: The primary text prophesying the Messiah as a "man of sorrows" and a lamb led to slaughter who opens not His mouth.
- Genesis 22:1–8: The account of Abraham offering Isaac, where Abraham prophesies, "God will provide for Himself the lamb."
- Exodus 12:3–13: The Passover instruction requiring each household to take an unblemished lamb and apply its blood to the doorposts.
- 1 Corinthians 5:6–7: Paul’s declaration: "For Christ our Passover has also been sacrificed."
- John 1:29: John the Baptist’s announcement: "Behold, the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world!"
- 1 Peter 1:18–19: "You were not redeemed with perishable things... but with precious blood, as of a lamb unblemished and spotless."
- 2 Timothy 4:6: Paul’s final reflection: "I am already being poured out as a drink offering."