| James Foote - 1849 - 674 pages
...divine wrath for imputed sin. Though the Father loved him as his Son, he smote him as our surety. " It pleased the Lord to bruise him, and to put him to grief." He let in upon him the painful sense of being made a curse for us: and how distressing must that have... | |
| 1849 - 612 pages
...represent the sufferings of Jesus as a part of the judicial sentence. Else how is it that we read, that " it pleased the Lord to bruise him and to put him to grief?" How is it that his very individual sufferings are set forth in the Psalms, and that it says in the... | |
| James Smith - Bible - 1850 - 418 pages
...the wrath and curse of God was, which he was to sustain ; of what it was for Jehovah to bruise him, to put him to grief, and to make his soul an offering for sin. He was overwhelmed with sorrow, he was pressed to the ground with grief, his very soul was torn with... | |
| Henry KITTON - 1850 - 360 pages
...meaning of the word, and applied to the scenes of Christ's sufferings in Gethsemane and on Calvary, when "it pleased the Lord to bruise Him," and to " put Him to grief." On this account the week in which our Saviour suffered is commonly spoken of under the name of " Passion... | |
| Leonard Woods - Congregational churches - 1850 - 600 pages
...what the hand and counsel of God had determined before to be done." And Isaiah says expressly, that " it pleased the Lord to bruise him and to put him to grief." « Behold this singular and marvellous spectacle ! The Son of God suffering and dying, though entirely... | |
| Philip Henry Gosse - Bible - 1850 - 378 pages
...pleased, was treated as a sinner. He stood of his own voluntary will in the sinner's stead ; and thus it pleased the Lord to bruise Him, and to put Him to grief, that we, the guilty, might go free. Jehovah's sword awoke and smote Jehovah's Fellow, that out of his... | |
| John Dick - Presbyterian Church - 1850 - 590 pages
...all, indeed, befel him either by his immediate interposition, or by his appointment and permission: " It pleased the Lord to bruise him, and to put him to grief."t Some tell us that, in virtue of his sovereignty and supreme dominion, Gotl may subject his... | |
| Bible - 1851 - 774 pages
...soul, when he gave himself a sacrifice for our sins; and when, at the time that man shed his blood, wster they likewise shewed forth the perfection of that zeal and love, with which he voluntarily went through... | |
| Leonard Woods - Congregational churches - 1850 - 600 pages
...what the hand and counsel of God had determined before to be done." And laaiah says expressly, that " it pleased the Lord to bruise him and to put him to grief." Behold this singular and marvellous spectacle ! The Son of God suffering and dying, though entirely... | |
| John Dick - 1851 - 1138 pages
...all, indeed, befel him either by his immediate interposition, or by his appointment and permission: " It pleased the Lord to bruise him, and to put him to grief."t Some tell us that, in virtue of his sovereignty and supreme dominion, God may subject his... | |
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