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No Man Comforted Our Lord Jesus

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Everyone longs for a comforter in times of trouble. Not just words, but someone to come along beside us, and help carry the load with us, or at least to understand and sympathize with our trouble.

The great irony of the suffering and sacrifice of our Lord Jesus is this: in order to comfort us by saving us, it was necessary that Christ have no man to comfort Him!

This was foretold by the Spirit of Christ to the Psalmist David in Psalm 69. There it was said of Christ, that He would suffer rebukes, and shame, and dishonor, and false accusations from wicked men. He would take upon Himself the sins of His people, and treat them as His very own, suffering for them in our place.

The Psalmist denounced those wicked men: "For they persecute him whom thou [God] hast smitten; and they talk to the grief of those whom thou [God] hast wounded."

The great composer George Frederic Handel, in his oratorio "Messiah," put it this way:

Thy rebuke hath broken His heart;
He is full of heaviness.
He looked for some to have pity on Him,
but there was no man,
neither found He any to comfort Him.
Behold, and see if there be any sorrow
like unto His sorrow.

It was, of course, God's rebuke, and God's strokes against Jesus. It was the reproach of our sins that fell on Jesus.

There was no man anywhere to comfort Him, because nobody understood the travail of Christ's soul that day.

No man could come along side Jesus, to help bear His heavy load.

In that crucial sense, the Lord Jesus was quite alone. There was no other human being who could understand what He was suffering, much less help Him endure it!

12224215206573
35:25
Jan 21, 2024
Sunday Service
Mark 14:32-50; Psalm 69
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