Showing posts with label Easter Sermons. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Easter Sermons. Show all posts

Monday, March 30, 2026

Isaiah 52:1-12 - "The Lord’s Coming Salvation" (PALM SUNDAY)












As we focus on the  last week of Jesus’ earthly ministry, we begin with His triumphal entry into Jerusalem
This  event is described in all four gospels [1] and it  is  specifically prophesied  by the prophet Zechariah (Zech.9:9) and in so many other indirect ways  in the  Old Testament, such as this passage in  Isaiah, which precedes  the  famous Isaiah 53 passage  which we shall  consider on Easter Friday.

Today we remember the occasion   when Jesus,  the  chosen  servant of God[2] came riding on a humble donkey   to fulfil  the work that the Father  had given  Him to do in laying down His life for His people[3]
As He entered  the city, He was received  in the manner of  a conquering King, although “he had no  form or majesty  that we should look at him, and no beauty that we should desire him…”  (53:2), and yet the crowd  received Him  with  these words, 
"Hosanna[4] to the Son of David”. 
This   was tantamount to saying (and so  it was understood  by the Pharisees e.g. in Lk 19:39) that He was the long expected Messiah of Israel.    

In Luke’s account of the triumphal entry, Jesus  following His entrance into Jerusalem is deeply disturbed at what He sees. 
He weeps over Jerusalem  (see Lk  19:41- 44 ; and see  also  Lk  13:34 – 35).  
This is followed  by the famous  temple cleansing (Lk. 19:45-48; Matt 21:12-17)

It is particularly   Lk  13:34 – 35 that gives us an insight  into  the spiritual state of Jerusalem. 
It was this city  that  had killed the prophets. 
It was this city that would kill the Son of God, and amazingly, Jesus  knew that  this was going to happen! 
What was the purpose for which Jesus rode into Jerusalem to lay down His life?   It was  to hand Himself over to wicked men  to do what they had wanted to do all along, BUT  in this  atrocious act  He  would  also make atonement for the sin of the world! 
By His  death He would  secure  eternal life for  all his own people,  for all those “who did receive Him, who believed  in His Name” (John 1:12). It was  ultimately  to secure for them a  future, not in this earthly Jerusalem, but  in the new, the heavenly Jerusalem, the home of every true believer  which Jesus went to prepare in John 14:1-4  and of which  we read in   Revelation 21.

Now we know from the history of Jerusalem  that she had been  besieged and captured many times. In the days of  Israel’s  occupation of Jerusalem[5], this city was  sacked  eventually by the Babylonians in around  586 BC. She  was  burned and destroyed and her  people taken into exile in  Babylon, just as  Isaiah and Jeremiah and others had said. But before that, approximately 135  years  earlier,  in the days of Isaiah,  this city  was also threatened by the Assyrians  who did in fact capture the northern territory of Israel and with it 10 tribes, who were sent into  exile in 722 BC (2 Kings 17:5ff).   All prophets, particularly the  major  prophets such as Isaiah and Jeremiah, and later the Lord Jesus, God’s final Revelation (Hebr. 1:1-3) saw  that the continued rebellion  of this city  that had experienced  so much  of God’s favour, in terms of hosting  the temple of God, and therefore  the visible presence of God in Israel, that this city  would  face the wrath of God.  This leading  city  of the Jews   had lost the vision   of God in her midst.

Isaiah’s  prophecy  can be divided into two parts. 
The first part, chapters  1-39  focus on God’s judgement on Israel and the surrounding nations  for idolatry, injustice and reliance on foreign powers rather than on God
The second part in chapters 40 – 66,  is known as the 'book of the messianic  servant'. It offers  comfort to  the exiled people, and  the promise of the return of a remnant. 

Isaiah’s vision is big!  
Not only does he  include future events from his own perspective in about 722 BC;  Isaiah also  sees  the restoration of Israel  after the Babylonian captivity, much later in 520 BC, when he was long dead. 
But more  than that, Isaiah’s  prophecy anticipates  the  ministry and mission of the Messiah, the Lord Jesus Christ (whom we shall meet as the suffering servant in  Isaiah 53) more than 700 years later! 
And from our perspective Isaiah  foresees  even more than that. He foresees  the rule  and restoration  of all things under Christ  in  days to come, which,  even from our perspective is STILL  in the future!

From the present perspective  of Isaiah, and from Christ’s perspective, when He rode into Jerusalem, and also  from our own perspective, this earthly Jerusalem  was and is  anything but a holy city.   
But  Isaiah  sees  beyond that,  and he, like His Messiah, the Lord Jesus look  to the far future  when things will look very different. 
And it all began  on that day when Jesus rode into Jerusalem. 
On this day  He came to  Jerusalem  to  secure the future  of  the inhabitants  of a far greater Jerusalem. He came to  do this   in His death  and resurrection, described  in Isaiah 53. 

In preparation for that let's  take a look at  this text[6] which precedes the phenomenal  events of Isaiah 53,  and view it  just as the triumphal entry  precedes the phenomenal events of the week that lay ahead:

1.Awake, awake, put on your strength, O Zion; put on your beautiful garments, O Jerusalem, the holy city; for there shall no more come into you the uncircumcised and the unclean.

Obviously,  the prophet is not speaking here of  a political  entity  called  Jerusalem. He is speaking  of  that future city where  there  shall be no sin – the heavenly Jerusalem of  Revelation 21. That  is the city that Jesus ultimately  came to establish when He came riding into  this sinful Jerusalem, that killed the prophets, and therefore the prophet continues …

2. Shake yourself from the dust and arise; be seated, O Jerusalem; loose the bonds from your neck, O captive daughter of Zion. 
What did the Lord Jesus  achieve  in his death and resurrection?  He  purchased  freedom  for a people in the dust, a people enslaved by sin. He freed them  for citizenship in the new Jerusalem,  by the shedding of His blood.

3.  For thus says the Lord: “You were sold for nothing, and you shall be redeemed without money.” What does this   mean?  In context  this  would refer to the Babylonian captivity. Babylon acquired   Judah and paid nothing for  her when they took her captive in 586 BC. However,  roughly 70 years later under Cyrus  the Persian and then Artaxerxes [7]  she was freed  without the payment of money,  when men like Ezra and Nehemiah led the people back to Jerusalem  from captivity, being in fact supported by the Babylonians to rebuild Jerusalem[8]. But in a greater sense it would mean  that the sin which our  first father Adam committed, and of which we had borne the fruit, would now  be borne  by Christ in His death, BUT no  one has  to pay for their redemption. It was free for those who would take it.    
This  was the purpose for which  Jesus  came to ride into the city! 

4 For thus says the Lord God: “My people went down at the first into Egypt to sojourn there, and the Assyrian oppressed them for nothing. 
Israel’s first stint away from their   earthly Jerusalem in Canaan  was  experienced when they had lived  for 430 years in  Egypt, after which they returned under Moses and Joshua  to Canaan, their promised land.  Then  David  established the   physical Jerusalem  for Israel, but under  the often foolish rule of his  grandsons, substantial chunks of the kingdom were gradually lost – first under the  Assyrians, who   claimed the northern kingdom of Israel.  
In Christ’s day the  Jews were oppressed  by the  Romans, and the Jews hoped for  their Messiah  to return to  deliver them from the  Roman yoke. But was this ultimately the yoke  that  they needed to be  delivered from? Was not the yoke of sin their ultimate problem?  And who alone could effectively deal  with sin, if not the Son of God? And so Jesus rode into Jerusalem …
  
5 Now therefore what have I here,” declares the Lord, “seeing that my people are taken away for nothing? Their rulers wail,” declares the Lord, “and continually all the day my name is despised. Many a time when Israel was  attacked by her enemies (no doubt, due to their own foolishness, which resulted in the hand of God being lifted from them),  their enemies  were  blaspheming the  name of God  when they  taunted  Israel: “Where now is your God?”  (e.g. Ps 42:10;  115:2; Joel 2:17). In truth, this was also  the  general attitude of the Jews   to Jesus. When he hung on the cross they mocked Him, saying: “He saved others, let him save himself, if he is the Christ of God, his Chosen One.”(Lk. 23:35). The truth was that in continually  mocking Christ they were continually mocking the work of God. 
And so Christ rode into Jerusalem on  this day  to make a distinction between the righteous and the unrighteous!  

6 Therefore my people shall know my name. Therefore in that day they shall know that it is I who speak; here I am.” In the  historical context  the  release from Babylonian captivity and the rebuilding of Jerusalem would be  a true testimony  to the power of God.  Nehemiah confirms this in Neh.6:15,16  when he says, “… all the nations around us …perceived that this work  had been  accomplished with the help of our God !” But in a greater sense  the greatest work  would be the   establishment  of the  eternal city of God, the heavenly Jerusalem, which would be populated by  those who had been redeemed by the blood of Jesus.  
Jesus came riding  into  Jerusalem  to  declare that He would do this ON THE CROSS!   
This  is  therefore what gives rise to the next verse!  Here is the gospel  of the good news   for all the people… for all the nations !

7 How beautiful upon the mountains are the feet of him who brings good news, who publishes peace, who brings good news of happiness, who publishes salvation, who says to Zion, “Your God reigns.” Paul quotes this passage in Rom 10:15.  The point is that whatever historical situation brought  the good news  in Isaiah’s day, he was looking much further, when our  Messiah  made the gospel  terms  effective  by His death and resurrection.
For this reason Jesus came riding into Jerusalem.

8 The voice of your watchmen—they lift up their voice; together they sing for joy;  for eye to eye they see the return of the Lord to Zion.  In the  historical setting this  was accomplished  when God restore the Jews to liberty under the leadership of men  like  Zerubbabel, Ezra, and Nehemiah. Yet again,  and in a greater sense, these things were fulfilled in Christ’s coming into Jerusalem  for this purpose – that He might lay down His life for a great number of people  and to establish  for them a city whose foundations cannot be shaken.

9 Break forth together into singing, you waste places of Jerusalem, for the Lord has comforted his people; he has redeemed Jerusalem. 10 The Lord has bared his holy arm before the eyes of all the nations, and all the ends of the earth shall see the salvation of our God.  Historical deliverance happened  under Cyrus, (2 Chron. 36:22,23). The  Lord  displayed his power among the Medes and Persians, but afterwards he made it visible to all the nations. But again, see the ultimate fulfilment  in this  text. The Abrahamic covenant  is being fulfilled, as not only Jews but  gentiles  were participating in the salvation of God in Christ. 
All this began  to be fulfilled  in Christ riding into Jerusalem  to lay down His life for  Jews and gentiles. 

11 Depart, depart, go out from there; touch no unclean thing; go out from the midst of her; purify yourselves, you who bear the vessels of the Lord. 12 For you shall not go out in haste, and you shall not go in flight, for the Lord will go before you, and the God of Israel will be your rear guard. In context  this was a call to  all  the Jews to leave Babylon, and to leave the things of Babylon behind. Those  that were  carrying the vessels of the Lord ( i.e. the vessels  for the temple), the priests, these were to be  especially consecrated. 
The redeemed would not need to  leave in haste as they had done when they left Egypt in the Exodus. They were completely free. God would go before to lead them and behind to protect them as they journeyed to their Promised Land (cf. Exodus 13:21-22; Exodus 14:19-20). In our context, it is important that we need to leave the city of destruction and make sure that we are on the  road to the heavenly  Jerusalem. (Pilgrims Progress)  

Here then,  in this  part of  Isaiah’s prophecy  the dual implications of the prophet's promises are very clear.  
1. The Babylonian captivity  formed the background  to what  Isaiah  said, 
2. ... but  Isaiah  had the larger issue of  SIN SLAVERY  in mind.  Return to the land was in view, but even more so, the opportunity to return to the Lord through spiritual redemption was His greater focus. 

God would deal with the result in Israel's case, captivity, but He would also and more importantly deal with the great cause of  every man's   problem, namely sin !

All this Jesus  came to do when he rode on that donkey  into Jerusalem on Palm Sunday.  
Hallelujah, what a Word! 
Hallelujah, what a Saviour! 
AMEN .




[1] Matthew 21: 1- 11 ; Mark 11:1-11 ; Luke 19:28-40; John 12:12-19
[2] Note the four servant   passages  in this regard :  42:1-9; 49:1-7 ; 50:4-11 ; 52:13-53:12
[3] i.e. as the Lamb of God for His sheep
[4]  Lit. “save now”
[5] This city was captured by David from the Jebusites  in  2 Samuel 5:6-10 , after which it was called “the city of David”
[6] The proper  parameters for this text is  Isaiah 51:1-52:12. The chapter division at 52:1 is unfortunate . Similarly  the chapter division should not begin with 53:1, as it does, but should start at 52:13.
Outline of Ch.  51:1- 52:12 : 1. A threefold  call  to listen :  i.e.  51 : 1; 4; 7   2. A threefold  exhortation to awake  : 51:9;17 & 52:1  
[7] Ezra 1:1; 4:7
[8]  Ezra 1:2ff ;Neh. 2:8

Monday, April 28, 2025

MARK 16 THANK GOD FOR RESURRECTION SUNDAY



The sequence of this Easter week has been...

(i) Palm Sunday - Jesus is received with Hosannas

(ii) Thursday - the night that He was betrayed, Jesus celebrated the Passover and instituted what we now know as the Lord’s Supper. 

(ii) Friday - the cross

(iii) Saturday - the silent day when Jesus rested  on the Sabbath day from His finished work on the cross

(iv) Sunday, the first day of the week (16:2) -the day of the Resurrection.

Everything happened, just as Jesus had said earlier in Mark 8:31, Mark 9:31 and Mark 10:33-34.  He had said that He would be killed and after three days He would rise again.  

THE ENDING OF MARK 16

I need to comment briefly on that note in your Bibles which says concerning the ending of Mark’s gospel, “Some of the oldest and most reliable New Testament manuscripts   do not include Mark 16:9-20”.  The oldest manuscripts referred to here are the Codex Sinaiticus and the Codex Vaticanus. The King James Bible of 1611 contains 16:9-20 without that footnote because the translators of this version used the Textus Receptus, the text handed down through the church ageSince 1611, however, older manuscripts have been discovered, notably in 1844 when the archaeologist Constantin von Tischendorf discovered ancient manuscripts at the Monastery of Saint Catherine on Mt. Sinai. These documents did not include 16:9-20. The conclusion was that these verses were added laterThis may disturb some and you may wonder perhaps whether there has not been more tampering with the Bible. We can put your fears to rest. When these more ancient documents were discovered by von Tischendorf in 1844, followed by the discovery of the Dead Sea scrolls in 1946 onwards, it was found that there were some discrepancies with the Textus Receptus, but these were not of a major nature. No major or even minor doctrine was affected by the differencesBut what can we say about what is taught in 16:9-20Apart from 16:17,18 there is nothing unusual or controversial here. It is entirely in harmony with the other gospels. So then, we are free to focus on the great theme of this chapter, namely the Resurrection of our Lord Jesus Christ.

In this chapter we see two repeated thoughts concerning the resurrection.

The first is, “They did not believe.

The second is, “He appeared“.

These two phrases dominate the content of Mark Chapter 16, and I want to use them to show us despite our unbelief how great the grace of God is to us  

1. The Ever - present Problem of Unbelief  

Think about thisNobody lived physically closer to Jesus than these people here mentioned in our textThey were privileged to see His real miracles and the evidence of His sinless life with their own eyes. They were privileged to hear His convicting preaching. They heard Him say on numerous occasions that He would be killed, buried and raised again. The sobering reality is that none   of Christ’s close associates really believed Him when He said that He would rise from the deadWhilst we take note of the recurring unbelief of all concerned, we must not read ‘unbelief’ here as something of a final factThese people all had loved Jesus deeply in life. And they were truly grieving and missing Him now. They mourned and wept after He had died (16:10). Let’s consider them....  

The women: Mary Magdalene  (Jesus had cast out 7 demons from her 16:9), Mary the mother of James and Salome bought spices, after the Sabbath was past, and early on Sunday morning they went to the tomb to anoint the dead body of Jesus. That is actually a sign of unbelief. If Jesus (being who He said He was) said that He would rise from the dead on the third day, then there was actually no need to buy and apply these funeral spices. All they needed to do was to wait for the resurrection! But they clearly did not expect the resurrection. So, when they came to the tomb the next day (the first day of the week) they saw that the tomb stone had been rolled away, but still they made no connection. John records that Mary Magdalene had run back to tell Peter about this. She reported (note the language of unbelief) … “They have taken the Lord out of the tomb, and we do not know where they have laid Him.” (Jn. 20:2,13). No thought of the resurrection here! Even when Jesus appeared to her, she thought that He was the gardener (Jn. 20:15). She genuinely thought that he might have carried the body of Jesus away. Only when Jesus addressed her by her name, “Mary, did she recognize Him.   This is the power of unbelief! There are none as blind as those who will not seeA closed mind chooses to see what it wants to see and hearThis is the truth about usHowever, as I have reminded you, in this case this is not cynical unbelief- and yet we shall see that it is still sinful unbelief. 

The disciples:  The angel at the tomb confirms the fact of the resurrection to the women: “Do not be alarmed, you seek Jesus of Nazareth, who was crucified. He has risen; he is not here … but go and tell his disciples and Peter that he is going before you into Galilee. There you will see him, just as he has told you” (16:6,7). When the women told the grief-stricken disciples, they too would not believe her. Even though they have heard the Lord Jesus speaking to them plainly about His resurrection they did not hear HimObserve the power of the closed mind, the stuck mind, the power of unbelief! We all engage in selective hearing. We all choose to hear what we want to hear! Jesus repeatedly challenges us to consider carefully how we hear, e.g. Mk 4:9,23,24; 8:18  

The two walking in the country (16:12) were according to Luke 24:13-35 talking about these things on the road to Emmaus. It is clear that they were depressed at this thought,  that Jesus had been crucified and buried in a grave. They had no expectation of His resurrection. The language of the text reveals thisNow again, this has nothing to do with cynical unbelief. In their minds they were simply not able to bring themselves to believe that Jesus would come back from the dead, even though He had proven that He had the power over death in the raising of Lazarus in John 11. Later He opened their eyes to recognize Him (Lk.24:31)For the first time we are helped to see the remedy for unbelief,… they were helped to see! 

The 11 disciples: In 16:14 we find   the 11 disciples in Galilee, when Jesus suddenly joins them. We read, “...and he rebuked them for their unbelief and hardness of heart, because they had not believed those who saw him after he had risen.”  This is an important insight. Jesus categorizes this unbelief as a sinful hardness of heart! 

What about you? Now, you may say, “I believe in the resurrection of Jesus with all my heart“We modern New Testament believers, having been exposed to the Easter story for so many years find it easier to believe in the resurrection than the women and the disciples, because we have become so used to hear this familiar story 

So, let’s see whether we cannot find nother avenue to test our own tendency to unbelief.

If you believe in the resurrection of Christ and do not question this because the resurrection is now an established, historical fact, then do you also believe in the second coming of the Lord JesusTo get personal: are you living in the constant anticipation of His appearing, whether by your death or by His personal appearing in the clouds? And does it make a difference to the way in which you live now and make decisions now? Do you get the point?  

2.   He appeared ....  

Following His resurrection, we read that He appeared

Why did He appear?   This was a sheer act of grace. He appeared to deal with their unbelief! He appeared - this phrase is repeated 3 times in 16:9-20

(i) 16:9 “he appeared first to Mary Magdalene”

(ii) 16:12 “he appeared in another form to two of them”

(iii) 16:14 “Afterward He appeared to the Eleven themselves...”.

These were not the only instances of Christ’s appearance following the resurrection

In 1 Corinthians 15:3-8 the apostle Paul speaks of many more resurrection appearances, he appeared to Peter, and then to the Twelve. After that, he appeared to more than five hundred of the brothers at the same time, most of whom are still living, though some have fallen asleep. Then he appeared to James, then to all the apostles, and last of all he appeared to me also, as to one abnormally born.”  Paul wrote these words about 20 years after the resurrection. Many of those who met the risen Jesus Christ were still alive at that time. From Paul’s perspective the evidence for the resurrection is utterly overwhelmingAnd the resurrection appearances were not that of a ghost. This was a physical ChristHe spoke to Mary. He spoke to the men on the Emmaus road. He had a meal with his 11 disciples  The apostles ate fish that Christ had caught and prepared at the seaside. Ghosts don’t do breakfast for their friends!  

He appeared says Mark three times.

He appeared, says Paul 4 times in the letter to the Corinthians just quoted

Peter says the same thing in Acts 10:39-41 in the home of a Roman soldier: “We are witnesses of everything he did in the country of the Jews and in Jerusalem. They killed him by hanging him on a tree, but God raised him from the dead on the third day and caused him to be seen. He was not seen by all the people, but by witnesses whom God had already chosen – by us who ate and drank with him after he rose from the dead... This is what we also affirm today on this Resurrection Sunday. He appeared! And He will appear again at the second coming.    

When He appeared He came to deliver His beloved people from the power of unbelief by His resurrection appearances. This is Grace Truly God is patient with His people. 

We have to settle the fact that we are hard work

Even plain speech and plain logic is easily  lost on us.

It is hard for us to grasp spiritual truth.

The Bible teaches us to incorporate far bigger thinking into our ordinary thoughts. We must get over the fact that the supernatural is not irrational! Yes, we do not understand how a man can die and live again, but are we saying and assuming that we can know everything? Surely our own experience tells us that we don’t know everything!   There is the planet Mars, and we have a rover there, but the truth is that we know very little about Mars. But we know that Mars is there, and we trust that we will see more of it in years to comeSo too, the resurrection of Jesus is a fact. The evidence is there, and Jesus took care to present the evidence in His post resurrection appearances. He knows how weak and unbelieving we are, and so He took care to strengthen our faith by His appearings.   

Don’t be slow to believe all that is written in the Scriptures  And thank Him that He works even this day to overcome our unbelief with Grace. Thank God for the gift of the illuminating work of the Holy Spirit given to us at Pentecost   

Where does the knowledge of the Resurrection leave us   

The resurrection leaves us with an evangelistic duty.

He said to them, “Go into all the world and proclaim the gospel to the whole creation. Whoever believes and is baptized will be saved, but whoever does not believe will be condemned (16:15,16).

Go and tellDo not be unbelieving, tell people about His life, death and resurrection.

16:20 tells us ...and they went out and preached everywhere.” Soon there were believers everywhere – in Rome, in Corinth, Ephesus …in every major city in Asia minor in the Roman and the Greek world spreading into North Africa and Europe and into the Far East. Many of them experienced persecution and sufferings. Many lost their lives doing this work. They endured it all. Would they have done this if they weren’t convinced that Jesus Christ had risen from the dead and had commanded them to go? What else can explain the fact of the growth of the church in the world todayDo not be unbelieving… Grace has been given to you not only to believe but to be active in the sharing of your faithDoes your neighbour know about Jesus?  

Thank God for Resurrection Sunday! His resurrection is the guarantee of ours.  

Isaiah 52:1-12 - "The Lord’s Coming Salvation" (PALM SUNDAY)

A s we focus on the  last week of Jesus’ earthly ministry, we begin with His triumphal entry into Jerusalem .  This  event is described in...