
Brooklands Gospel Centre
Dundonald, Northern Ireland
Worthy is the LAMB that was slain
Revelation 5:12

God’S Pleasure in His Son
“This is my beloved son, in whom I am well pleased; hear ye him.” -
“Yet it pleased the Lord to bruise him, he hath put him to grief, when Thou shalt
make his soul an offering for sin, he shall see his seed, he shall prolong his days
and the pleasure of the Lord shall prosper in his hand.” -
The Father’s pronouncement of His pleasure in His Son is a demonstration of unspeakable glory, ‘his face shone as the sun.. and his raiment was white and glistering’. It caused the watching disciples to fall on their faces. It was not that humans should fall before such glory, it was God, the Father, taking pleasure in the radiance of His Son. He reveals Him in blinding light and says ’This is my pleasure’.
In measure, as humans, we can understand this revealing of God in His Son, in a scene of resplendent glory. What we find quite beyond us is an explanation of the Prophet Isaiah’s word, “Yet it pleased the Lord to bruise him”! Where do we start in an attempt to interpret the Lord’s heart? In his book THE PLEASURES OF GOD , John Piper refers to the ’Great tension of the ages'. The harmonising of two opposites:
On the one hand 'God’s passion to promote His pleasure and His glory and on the other, God’s electing love for sinners that scorned that glory.’
Seven hundred years before the birth of Christ, we are given the answer to the great
question of how sinful humanity can be reconciled to a holy and righteous God. It
was by the bruising and putting to death of His Son. And the staggering thing is
that God took pleasure in it! He was not slain by man in an uncontrollable frenzy,
He was, as the Apostle Peter states, “delivered by the determinate counsel and foreknowledge
of God” -
We might ask, Why did God do this? He did it to accomplish the task that would bring
Him the ULTIMATE PLEASURE! That we, sinners of a fallen race, might be reconciled
to Him! This is the ultimate glory spoken of by the Apostle John in his Gospel, “Father,
I will that them whom thou hast given me, be with me where I am that they may behold
my glory” -
Our text goes on to say; “He shall see his seed and the pleasure of the Lord shall
prosper in his hand”. Here was an additional way that God would derive pleasure,
that despite being “cut off out of the land of the living”, unmarried and without
offspring, he would “see the travail of his soul and be satisfied “. In other words,
as Hebrews 2:10 puts it, “For it became him, for whom are all things, and through
whom are all things, in bringing many sons unto glory, to make the captain (pioneer)
of their salvation perfect through suffering” and again in 2:13 “…behold I and the
children which God hath given me” -
He tackles the seemingly impossible.
He does what no one has done before.
He triumphs over every difficult circumstance.
And now finally, we need to ask; Is this justification automatic? We return again to Romans 3:22 “…through faith in Jesus Christ unto all them that believe”. The Apostle goes on to say that there is no distinction between Jew and Gentile “for all have sinned and come short (missed the mark) of the glory of God”. There we have it again, “the GLORY OF GOD”. This is the beginning and end of the matter. It is this that we are declaring when we preach the Gospel. In its proclamation let us carefully and prayerfully interpret the Word remembering that God’s honour and glory is at stake.
DREW CRAIG