#349 - Kyle Thompson // The Long Shadow Before the Cross

May 4
5 mins

Episode Description

We’re wired to look for a certain kind of savior: big presence, obvious strength, and a win everyone can see. Isaiah 53 starts by tearing that picture down. The servant doesn’t arrive like a towering tree or a conquering king. He comes up like a young plant in dry ground, with no outward majesty, no beauty that draws a crowd, and a life marked by rejection. 

We walk through Isaiah 53:1-3 and connect it to the world Jesus steps into, where many expect a Messiah who will crush Rome, restore the throne of David, and establish national power by force. Then Jesus arrives as a baby, born in a manger, raised in an unremarkable town, with no political connections and no army behind him. His ministry centers on people most leaders ignore, and even his hometown takes offense at him. John’s Gospel points back to Isaiah and shows that this rejection isn’t a detour, it’s fulfillment. 

We also slow down on the phrase “acquainted with grief” and why it’s not vague religious poetry. It’s the language of deep personal experience. From Jesus weeping at Lazarus’ tomb to his agony in Gethsemane, we see a King who doesn’t stiff-arm suffering but carries it. The result is a sharper, more honest view of strength, leadership, and what God is doing when he saves through weakness. Subscribe, share the show with a friend, and leave a five-star rating and review so more men get equipped for the fight.

Support the show

Want to connect? Email communication@coe22.com

See all episodes