4. Surely . . . our griefs--literally, "But yet
He hath taken (or borne) our sicknesses," that is,
they who despised Him because of His human infirmities ought rather to
have esteemed Him on account of them; for thereby "Himself took
OUR infirmities" (bodily diseases). So
Mt 8:17
quotes it. In the Hebrew for "borne," or took, there is
probably the double notion, He took on Himself vicariously (so
Isa 53:5, 6, 8, 12),
and so He took away; His perfect humanity whereby He was bodily
afflicted for us, and in all our afflictions
(Isa 63:9;
Heb 4:15)
was the ground on which He cured the sick; so that Matthew's quotation
is not a mere accommodation. See Note 42 of ARCHBISHOP MAGEE, Atonement.
The Hebrew there may mean to overwhelm with darkness;
Messiah's time of darkness was temporary
(Mt 27:45),
answering to the bruising of His heel; Satan's is to be eternal,
answering to the bruising of his head (compare
Isa 50:10).
carried . . . sorrows--The notion of substitution strictly.
"Carried," namely, as a burden. "Sorrows," that is, pains of the mind; as "griefs" refer to pains of the body
(Ps 32:10; 38:17).
Mt 8:17
might seem to oppose this: "And bare our sicknesses." But he
uses "sicknesses" figuratively for sins, the cause of them.
Christ took on Himself all man's "infirmities;" so as to remove them;
the bodily by direct miracle, grounded on His participation in human
infirmities; those of the soul by His vicarious suffering, which did
away with the source of both. Sin and sickness are ethically
connected as cause and effect
(Isa 33:24;
Ps 103:3;
Mt 9:2;
Joh 5:14;
Jas 5:15).
we did esteem him stricken--judicially
[LOWTH], namely, for His sins;
whereas it was for ours. "We thought Him to be a leper"
[JEROME, Vulgate], leprosy
being the direct divine judgment for
guilt
(Le 13:1-59;
Nu 12:10, 15;
2Ch 26:18-21).
smitten--by divine judgments.
afflicted--for His sins; this was the point in which they so erred
(Lu 23:34;
Ac 3:17;
1Co 2:8).
He was, it is true, "afflicted," but not for His sins.
JFB.
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