But he was wounded for our transgressions, crushed for our iniquities; upon him was the punishment that made us whole, and by his bruises we are healed.
Isaiah 53:5
The prophet Isaiah, the most poetic of prophets, says on this black day that our Lord was "wounded, crushed and bruised" by our sins. When I hear those words, I flinch. Yet I am immediately assured that Our Lord's wounds have "healed" us and "made us whole." It is a powerful measure of God's greatness that we can be forgiven and comforted by one who was "despised and rejected," who was taken away and murdered "by a perversion of justice."
Part of the Songs of the Servant, this section has been called "the golden passional" and "the most important text in the Old Testament." The Ethiopian eunuch ponders it with Philip in Acts 8: 26-40. The verse is in what is known as Second Isaiah, assigned to an author or authors who came after Isaiah, beginning in 539 B.C. It first appears that the "servant" symbolizes the nation of Israel, (42:1-4) then later scholars see the servant as Jesus himself. especially in Chapter 53. As we read on in Isaiah, we know the Suffering Servant "shall see light" and make "intercessions" for us, the transgressors. I marvel at the prophet's vision and realize that he wants us to know the hope God gives us regardless of the blows life hands us - that there is a loving light beyond the darkness.
Val Hymes (2009)