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Welcome to the Daily Blade. The word of God is described as the sword of the spirit, the primary spiritual weapon in the Christian's armor against the forces of evil. Your hosts are Joby Martin and Kyle Thompson, and they stand ready to equip men for the fight. Let's sharpen up.
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Welcome back. This week we've been digging into Isaiah 53 in order to understand what is being prophesied in that chapter. We established what was written in the first 52 chapters of the book. And yesterday we got into the first three verses of Isaiah 53. And with those first three verses, we see that humanity was disabused of their notion of what a savior king would look like and be like. And now the rubber really starts to meet the road with the next three verses. So Isaiah 53, 4, 6. I mean, guys, these can accurately be called the theological center of gravity for the entire Bible. And I swear I'm not being hyperbolic at all. And I mean, you probably heard of substitutionary atonement at this point, right? And nowhere is that theological concept, that reality described in more plain language and with more surgical precision than with these three verses. So we're going to go and read them here again. Isaiah 53, verses 4 through 6. Surely he has borne our griefs and carried our sorrows. Yet we esteemed him stricken, smitten by God and afflicted. But he was pierced for our transgressions. He was crushed for our iniquities. Upon him was the chastisement that brought us peace. And with his wounds we are healed. All we, like sheep, have gone astray. We have turned everyone to his own way, and the Lord has laid on him the iniquity of us all. So again, the prophet Isaiah wrote this under divine inspiration. And the structure here is not accidental. It's very deliberate in every line. The moral category belongs to us as humanity, and the suffering belongs to him, the servant, the Messiah. So with verse four, we actually see a correction. So the. The crowds who actually watched the servant suffer assumed, as everyone else would have at that time, that he was being punished by God for his own sins. So that was standard ancient theology, which has actually carried through to today, if we're being honest. And it's this suffering equals divine punishment for personal sins. So we even see this in the oldest book of the Bible, the book of Job. That's exactly what his friends did. That's the exact argument that they made to Job. But then Isaiah drops the hammer in verse five. He was not stricken for his own sin. He was Pierced for our transgressions. He was crushed for our iniquities. And this didn't happen by accident for no reason, right? His wounds were not in vain, as we see in verse 5. It is by his wounds that we are healed. And this sentiment is echoed all over the New Testament. So Matthew talks about how Jesus took our illnesses and bore our diseases. Peter talks about how he bore our sins in his body on the tree, that we might die to sin and live to righteousness. And then the apostle Paul argued that for our sake, he made him to be sin who knew no sin, so that in him we might become the righteousness of God. I'm sure a lot of that should sound familiar to you. And then in verse 6 of Isaiah 53, it's a confession that really seals the deal. All we, like sheep, have gone astray. We have turned everyone to his own way, and the Lord has laid on him the iniquity of us all. So, guys, this isn't flattering language. This isn't just, you know, ancient poetry of some kind. I mean, sheep are dumb animals, right? They're followers. They're wanderers. They have no predatory instincts. They're not noble animals. They are entirely dependent on the shepherd for life and protection. And without a shepherd, they have no defenses and no hope. And I try to tell people all the time that the Bible is for us and not about us. And I typically caution people from trying to find who they are in whatever Bible event or Bible story that they're reading. But in this case, that's absolutely what we have to do, because we are the sheep. I am a sheep, Joby's a sheep. Like, all of us have gone our own way. And the results in, you know, in the last phrase of verse six, and the Lord has laid on him the iniquity of us all. So, you see, there's this idea that comes from our secular culture that a substitutionary atonement, which is what this is, seems really, really mean that, you know, most people say things like, you know, what's the big deal with sin? Why couldn't God just, you know, wave his hand and all the sin just go, well, God created the system, so God gets to set the standards for how it works. And here's the thing. God didn't look away. God did not lower his standard. God did not. And you would not simply decide that sin doesn't matter anymore. You see, there's this attitude of modernity towards the substitutionary atonement, that it's, you know, just cruel and unnecessary. But you know, this idea that God should have just done something else. Like, I don't really understand why people would even go there. Again, we have to go, go back to this idea that how could God be just and righteous if he just changes his mind all the time, if he's not constant, if he's not, you know, the thing that we can tether ourselves to, Right? So what he did and what he decided to do as God was to take on the punishment himself. He sent his son down to this planet to take on every ounce of human iniquity and to pay the debt that is owed to a holy and just God. This is not a story about God forgetting what we've all done. It's a story about God deciding to absorb the full consequence of what all of us have done wrong and for the sins of all of humanity. So there are a lot of different theologies in the Bible, but this is the most demanding one. The creator God of the universe bore what we deserved in the person of his son. And he did so so that we could have peace with him. And that reality is worth staking your entire eternity on.
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Date: May 6, 2026
Hosts: Joby Martin & Kyle Thompson
In this thought-provoking devotional episode, Joby Martin and Kyle Thompson deeply explore Isaiah 53:4–6, unpacking the foundational doctrine of substitutionary atonement—the idea that the suffering servant (Messiah) bears the consequence of humanity’s sin. The discussion is both theological and practical, equipping Christians to internalize and apply the reality that Jesus was "crushed for our iniquities." The conversation powerfully frames the gravity of Christ’s sacrifice and examines cultural objections to the atonement.
The tone is pastoral, forthright, and deeply reverent, aiming to “sharpen” men spiritually and call listeners to sober reflection on the weight of Christ’s sacrifice. The episode challenges cultural assumptions while anchoring every point solidly in both Old and New Testament scripture.
Summary:
This episode delivers a concise yet profound meditation on the heart of Christian faith—Jesus' substitutionary suffering for humanity’s sin as foretold in Isaiah. The discussion functions both as teaching and as a rallying call to embrace the seriousness and the astonishing love demonstrated at the cross.