Menu•SiteMap | Ministry




The Sufferings of Christ
Ministry by F. W. Trussler

 

Introduction

1. The Sufferings of Christ

 







INTRODUCTION
Ministry by F. W. Trussler

I first met Mr. Fred Trussler of Horsham in the early 1960's when he visited Canada. When asked what he did in his spare time he answered without hesistation – "I work" – the work of the Lord being his chief interest.

Mark Lemon, Stone Publishing Trust, says of Mr. Trussler, "I remember him as a man who had an unusual way of presenting things. I suspect that he spent a great deal of time meditating on the Scriptures and on the things of the Lord …

G.A.R.

Page Top

THE  SUFFERINGS  OF  CHRIST
An address at Croydon, May 18, 1959
Compare Doctrine: The Sufferings of Christ.
From 'Living Water' No. 86, March-April 2008
By permission of Stone Publishing Trust



Much help is needed in to speak about the sufferings of Christ — it is a holy and very affecting matter. Here is where we can all begin, that is, in relation to our sins. Peter says,

That body was not a body like ours in which we have committed sins. Christ’s body was holy, inherently pure, there was nothing corrupt in it, it was never used for any other purpose than the will of God; it was unique.

Then His lips never spoke an evil word and His eyes never rested on an unholy object.

Yet in that body our sins were borne. The sufferings of Christ are not a myth; they are not an artificial subject, they are a real subject.

Unbelievers’ sins are not borne in Christ’s body on the tree.

We cannot enter into the holy shrinkings of Jesus. Would that we understood Gethsemane a little more and all He faced there as He approached that moment of Calvary’s woe and sufferings in which that transaction was about to take place! How He could say,

Now I refer to Isaiah, which links with this passage. I suppose the Spirit of God used Isaiah 53 in the epistle of Peter. We have another thing brought forward in Isaiah:

What has happened? “Jehovah hath laid upon him the iniquity of us all”.

What submission there was with Him as He accepted it from God! What He has done for us, dear brethren! Do we not love Him? Do not our hearts surge up in love to Christ at this very moment as the Spirit of God bears in on our consciences and hearts what Christ has done for us?

He was there for you and me; otherwise He would not have been there at all. There was nothing in Himself to take Him there, but He was there for you and for me.



In Ezekiel and in the passage in 2 Corinthians we get Christ as made sin. This was far more than just the bearing of our sins.

Ezekiel is the nearest type, or picture, that we have in the Old Testament to Christ in His vicarious sufferings.

We cannot understand it. It is as inscrutable as His Person! May the sufferings of Christ in their immensity penetrate into our souls.

Christ appropriated what I was, my sinfulness — my every aspiration sinful, every movement of my body and mind and motive and soul inherently sinful as of the flesh — yet He appropriated it! What it meant to Him! Well might He say,

Calvary’s cross was a reality, a tremendous thing to Christ, the greatest thing in the universe that a Person who is divine, and who in manhood was intrinsically holy, should appropriate what I was in my sinfulness — what Scripture calls “sinful flesh”.

It is said in Corinthians that Christ was made sin, but according to Ezekiel He appropriated it, what I was in my sinfulness, with no spark of goodness anywhere in me.

What those hours were of awful anguish, the awfulness of the forsaking to One who had always known nearness and favour!



How richly we are provided in the four gospels with substance in relation to the death of Christ! John is unique in his presentation of Christ in His death.

Death was abhorrent to God, because it is His judgment upon sin and because it separates from Him.

Here Christ is, conducting His own arrangements, carrying His cross. Oh, the might and glory of the Son of God, moving forward into death!

The foundation of our blessing was laid in the work of Christ; the foundation of God’s moral universe was laid in the work and blood shedding of Christ.

Page Top   Article Top