Divine Appointments

Divine Appointments

The place in the Scripture which he read was this:

“He was led as a sheep to the slaughter;
And as a lamb before its shearer is silent,
So He opened not His mouth.
In His humiliation His justice was taken away,
And who will declare His generation?
For His life is taken from the earth.”

So the eunuch answered Philip and said, “I ask you, of whom does the prophet say this, of himself or of some other man?” Then Philip opened his mouth, and beginning at this Scripture, preached Jesus to him. (Acts 8:32-35)

Isn’t it amazing when God perfectly arranges things? God told Philip to leave a successful season of ministry and go to a complete wilderness. Philip then saw a chariot, and the man in the chariot was reading Isaiah the prophet. Then the man asked for help in understanding – what a divine appointment!

Divine Appointments

On top of all that, the man in the chariot read from the amazing prophetic passage of Isaiah 53, speaking of the Lord’s suffering servant. He read the words, He was led as sheep to the slaughter: In God’s wonderful planning, the Ethiopian was reading the amazing and specific prophecies in Isaiah 53 describing the sacrificial, sin-bearing work of the Messiah to come.

Then the man in the chariot asked an important question: I ask you, of whom does the prophet say this, of himself or of some other man? Regarding this passage from Isaiah 53:7-8, the Jews of that day had different ways they understood the identity of this suffering servant.

– Some thought the suffering servant was the nation of Israel itself, as Israel had suffered greatly in wars, exile, and persecution.
– Some thought the suffering servant was Isaiah writing about himself.
– Some thought the suffering servant was the Messiah, but they found this hard to accept, because they didn’t want to think of the Messiah suffering.

All three of these ideas could not be equally true. Though there was a lesser sense in which the Isaiah 53 passage was true of Israel as a nation and true of Isaiah as a prophet. Yet, there is no mistaking its main and greatest sense: Isaiah 53 speaks of the Messiah, Jesus Christ, in His role as the LORD’s Suffering Servant. It isn’t helpful to pretend that all interpretations of a Bible passage are equal, and Philip avoided this error.

Philip explained how these words from Isaiah 53 spoke of Jesus, the Messiah. He explained it to the man in the chariot beginning at this Scripture. It was easy to talk about Jesus beginning at this Scripture, so Philip did what he should – he preached Jesus to him.

It was a divine appointment that arranged all this in Acts 8. By other divine appointments, God has brought Jesus Christ to you. This same Jesus suffered as a servant for you. By faith, receive and cherish today all that He sacrificed to bring you into right relationship with God.

Click Here for David’s Written Commentary on Acts 8

Preaching Jesus

Preaching Jesus

Dear Pastor, Preacher, or Bible Teacher –

You made it through another weekend of serving God, His people, and a world that needs Jesus so much! Here’s a brief word from Acts 8 that might just encourage you today.

Then Philip opened his mouth,
and beginning at this Scripture,
preached Jesus to him.
(Acts 8:35)

Philip had a wonderful opportunity to preach. The high official from the court of the Queen of Ethiopia was reading from Isaiah 53 about the Suffering Servant, and he asked Philip to explain what it meant.

Preaching Jesus

Given the opportunity, Philip did what we all should do. He spoke, beginning at this Scripture. When we begin with the Bible, we let the words and themes of Scripture dominate the words and themes of our message.

It wasn’t hard to do, because the Suffering Servant passage from Isaiah 53 powerfully points to Jesus Christ. It was easy to talk about Jesus beginning at this Scripture. Because the whole Bible points to Jesus in one way or another, we really can begin at any passage and find where it leads to Jesus.

How did Philip preach Jesus to him using Isaiah 53? With that passage he could explain who Jesus was (He was “like a lamb”) and what Jesus has done for us (“He was led as a sheep to the slaughter”). Explaining who Jesus is and what He has done for us is the essence of the gospel.

Too many preachers today focus on what we must do for God, but the gospel begins with and is founded upon what God has done for us in Jesus Christ.

The next time you have the opportunity to preach or teach, remember these two things:

– Begin with the Scripture.
– Preach Jesus.

That always makes for a good sermon!

Blessings to you in Jesus’ Name – David Guzik

Click Here to Receive Email from David for Pastors, Preachers, and Bible Teachers