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What if the moment that looked like defeat was actually the greatest victory in history? In the final Servant Song, Isaiah describes a figure so disfigured that He is barely recognizable — yet through His wounds, many are healed. Rejected, crushed, and cut off, the Servant bears not His own sin but ours. And then — shockingly — He lives, reigns, and justifies many. In this climactic message of The Servant Songs, we see that Jesus's suffering was not a tragedy but a substitution. The cross was not a loss — it was our salvation.
By Gary Lee Webber4.9
1111 ratings
What if the moment that looked like defeat was actually the greatest victory in history? In the final Servant Song, Isaiah describes a figure so disfigured that He is barely recognizable — yet through His wounds, many are healed. Rejected, crushed, and cut off, the Servant bears not His own sin but ours. And then — shockingly — He lives, reigns, and justifies many. In this climactic message of The Servant Songs, we see that Jesus's suffering was not a tragedy but a substitution. The cross was not a loss — it was our salvation.

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