Several years ago, the wife of a pastor friend of mine in Oklahoma went out to her car at school and found a traffic ticket on it. But when she looked at it closely, she found that the ticket was actually for another car: it was the same model car as hers, but it had a different license plate number! Some sly person was trying to get HER to pay their ticket! That would be nice, wouldn’t it, to have someone else pay the penalty for your infractions?!
And of course, that is exactly what Jesus DID do for us, with His death on the cross. Last week, in our study of Isaiah 53, we looked at the concept of the “Substitutionary Atonement” of Jesus, how “OUR griefs, HE Himself bore; OUR sorrows HE carried.” Jesus bore OUR sins in His body on the cross: as our substitute. That is what “substitutionary atonement” means: He made “atonement,” “payment,” as our Substitute on the cross. Now this week, in Verse 5, we see some of the costs and blessings of Jesus’ Substitutionary Atonement for us: “But He was pierced through for our transgressions, He was crushed for our iniquities; the chastening for our well-being fell upon Him, and by His scourging we are healed.”
Continue reading

Teacher’s Overview: Genesis 11:1-9, Lifeway “Explore the Bible” lesson for 1/28/24
A brief overview for Sunday School teachers and Bible study leaders, of Lifeway’s “Explore the Bible” lesson of Genesis 11:1-9, “Stalled,” for January 28, 2024.
A video version of this lesson is available on YouTube at:
INTRODUCTION
In 2011 NBC Sports began their coverage of the U.S. Open golf tournament with what was intended to be an inspirational montage of children saying the Pledge of Allegiance. Only they left out something: they cut words “Under God” from the words of the Pledge! It caused a firestorm of protest from many Christians, as they had left God out of the Pledge of Allegiance.
But there are many times, and many ways, that we can “leave God out” of our lives. This morning in Genesis 11 we see a group of people after the ark who sought to “make a name for themselves” but they left out God in the process, and were judged for it.
Continue reading →