I just discovered this amazing article by Russell DeLong .. believe you will be blessed and amazed at reading it
THE WOUNDS OF CHRIST
Pain is common to all men, old and young, rich and
poor, educated and illiterate. The
problem of evil is the most baffling of philosophy.
C. S. Lewis, the Oxford don, has written
a very interesting and thought-provoking book
entitled the Meaning of Pain.
It is not my purpose today to discuss the
philosophy of pain nor attempt to give a solution to the problem of
evil. My thesis for this address is simply this: Jesus in His final hours of
passion leading up to His death suffered every known kind of pain: physical,
mental, and spiritual. No other could suffer nor has suffered as He did. He
paid the supreme painful penalty of all the sins of all the human
race. For a few minutes let us analyze His suffering and relate it to man
generally.
In the realm of bodily pain there are five types of
physical suffering.
1. Concussion -- caused by being hit violently from
without or by internal pressure within.
2. Laceration -- when the flesh is cut and torn.
3. Penetration -- when the skin and joints are
opened by sharp proddings.
4. Perforation -- when holes are opened up by the
pressure from external objects.
5. Incision -- when cuts are made into the skin and
muscles by sharp instruments.
Jesus suffered all five of these physical wounds.
He was the victim of concussion, for He was struck,
hit, slapped, and buffeted about by an angry, blood-thirsty, murderous mob.
Jesus was lacerated by steel thongs at the end of
the scourging whip. This Roman
instrument of fiendish design would tear the flesh
in a hundred places at every vicious stroke. It would leave the flesh white and
quivering, drained of blood.
Jesus suffered the third type of bodily pain
produced by penetration. A cruel crown of
thorns was pushed and pounded into His holy brow.
These sharp thorns were two inches long, straight and strong and as sharp as
needles. They were pressed into His skin, His temples, and His veins. Blood
spurted out and ran down His wonderful face.
Jesus also endured the physical suffering of
perforation. Great spikes were driven through
the tender palms of His clean hands and through the
tendons of His guiltless feet.
And finally Jesus suffered the fifth kind of
physical pain - incision. The sharp spear not
only penetrated His side but sliced it open until
both water and blood flowed down His body, staining the cross and dripping to
the ground.
Do you get the awful picture? There Jesus hangs
between two thieves, suffering physically the combined five kinds of bodily
anguish -- concussion, laceration, penetration, perforation, incision. No
wonder the poet wrote:
"Five bleeding wounds He bears,
Received on Calvary.
They pour effectual prayers,
They strongly plead for me.
"Forgive him, oh, forgive," they cry,
"Nor let that ransomed sinner die."
But, strange as it may seem, His bodily, physical
suffering was the least painful. It was His mental anguish that shook Jesus to
His inner depths.
Psychologists and psychiatrists call mental
illnesses traumata. In brief, a trauma is an
emotional hurt causing extreme intellectual grief.
There are three main kinds resulting from three chief causes:
1. Loneliness -- to be left to one's self and
deprived of social communion with others is
one of the main causes of mental distress.
2. Misunderstanding -- this is acute when related
to enemies but becomes unbearably
severe when applied to friends.
3. Rejection -- here is the acme of mental anguish.
To be rejected as undesired by others
and undesirable by society is the zenith of
possible intellectual distress.
Jesus was an acute Sufferer of all these three
types of traumata.
He experienced loneliness. His friends forsook Him.
His disciples fled and even God
seemed to leave Him. Hear Him cry out in
anguish, "My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?"
The hymn writer wrote:
"It was alone the Saviour stood
In Pilate's judgment hall.
Alone the crown of thorns He wore,
Forsaken thus by all.
Alone, alone, He bore it all alone.
He gave himself to save His own.
He suffered, bled, and died alone, alone. [5]
Jesus also passed through the second type of
trauma, misunderstanding. He was a
conundrum to His friends and an irrational zealot
to His enemies.
But Jesus also suffered the third and worst type of
mental distress -- He was rejected. This kind of suffering is terrific. He was
rejected by His own people, the Jews. He was rejected by society and finally by
His friends and even His disciples. Peter even gave up and fled. He denied Him
and rejected Him at the court scene -- but Jesus gave him that tender,
compassionate glance. Jesus was betrayed by Judas, His treasurer and trusted
friend. And the form of his treason was a kiss, the highest expression of love
-- but now a kiss of death. Jesus was rejected.
So in the mental realm Jesus suffered all three
traumata: loneliness, misunderstanding, and rejection all rolled into one.
But as terrible as were the physical and mental
wounds, those of the spirit were worst of
all. Jesus carried the combined sins of all
men. They pressed in and crushed Him. (Forsaken by His Father..*), His spiritual heart was broken and it
affected His physical heart so that the elastic sac surrounding this organ was
broken and out poured blood and water. In the garden before His crucifixion He sweat great
drops of blood. So in His awful passion Jesus' blood was watery and His sweat
was bloody.
Yes, "He was wounded for our transgressions, he
was bruised for our iniquities."
Physically Jesus endured all types of bodily
wounds: concussion, laceration, penetration,
perforation, and incision. He suffered the
three mental wounds: loneliness, misunderstanding, and rejection. And in
addition His soul was distressed by the sins of the race -- yours and mine.
Yes. "He was wounded for me, wounded for me;
there on the cross He was wounded for
me."
Isa 53:1
Who has believed our report? And to whom has the arm of the LORD been revealed?
Isa 53:2
For He shall grow up before Him
as a tender plant, And as a root out of dry ground. He has no form or
comeliness; And when we see Him, There is no beauty that we should
desire Him.
Isa 53:3
He is despised and rejected by
men, A Man of sorrows and acquainted with grief. And we hid, as it were,
[our] faces from Him; He was despised, and we did not esteem Him.
Isa 53:4
Surely He has borne our griefs And carried our sorrows; Yet we esteemed Him stricken, Smitten by God, and afflicted.
Isa 53:5
But He was wounded for our
transgressions, He was bruised for our iniquities; The chastisement
for our peace was upon Him, And by His stripes we are healed.
Isa 53:6
All we like sheep have gone
astray; We have turned, every one, to his own way; And the LORD has laid
on Him the iniquity of us all.