The Smitten Shepherd
"Awake, O sword, against My shepherd, and against the man that is My fellow, saith the LORD of hosts." -Zechariah 13:7 [KJV]
Would we see, feel, and realise the exceeding sinfulness of sin, it is not by viewing the lightnings and hearing the thunders of Sinai's fiery top, but in seeing the agony and bloody sweat, and hearing the groans and cries of the suffering Son of God, as made sin for us, in the garden and upon the cross. To look upon Him whom we have pierced will fill heart and eyes with godly sorrow for sin, and a holy mourning for and over a martyred, injured Lord. To see, by the eye of faith, as revealed to the soul by the power of God, the darling Son of God bound, scourged, buffeted, spit upon, mocked, and then, as the climax of cruel scorn and infernal cruelty, crucified between two thieves,—this believing sight, this fellowship of the sufferings of Christ, will melt the hardest heart into contrition and compunction.
But when we see, by the eye of faith, that this was the smallest part of His sufferings, that there were depths of soul trouble and of intolerable distress and agony from the hand of God as a consuming fire, as of inflexible justice and righteous indignation against sin wherever and in whomever found, and that our blessed Lord had to endure the wrath of God till He was poured out like water, and His soft, tender heart in the flames of indignation became like wax, melted in the midst of His bowels (Psalm 22:14),—then we can in some measure conceive what He undertook in becoming a sin offering.
For as all the sins of His people were put upon Him, the wrath of God due to them fell upon Him. Separation from God, under a sense of His terrible displeasure, and that on account of sin, that abominable thing which His holy soul hates,—is not this hell? This, then, was the hell experienced by the suffering Redeemer when the Lord laid on Him the iniquities of us all (Isaiah 53:6).
-J.C. Philpot (1802-1869 A.D.)
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