Title: Messiah's Victory (Isaiah 63:1-6)
1. Who is the Messiah who will come again? Verse 1 says, “Who is this from Edom, from Bozrah, clothed in scarlet? Who is he who walks with his splendid garments and with great power? He is I, who speaks of righteousness and is mighty to save.” said
(2) The one who will save the chosen people is coming. He told us who he was, and in verse 1 he said, “He is a speaker of righteousness and is able to bring salvation.” He is the one who will bring salvation. God is the Savior who delivered Israel from the clutches of oppressors. The name Jesus means Saviour, and it means “saved his people from their sins.” The truthfulness of his promises of salvation comes from salvation. Therefore he will do all his words. He will allow us to compare and contrast his words with his deeds, and to confirm his words with his deeds. He is mighty to save. No matter how obstacles in the way hinder it, he can bring the promised salvation. The only one who faithfully keeps his promises is the Messiah. And only Jesus can conquer the powers of death, hell, or the grave. Also, only the Messiah has the power to save.
2. How will the Messiah, the Second Coming Lord, judge?
(1) Judgment is like treading a winepress (verses 2-3). In verse 2-3, “Why are your garments red and your clothes like a presser of a winepress? I trampled the crowds in my anger and trampled them in my anger, so their blood ran on my clothes and soiled all my clothes.” In this way, it is a metaphor to the image of Jesus coming back to annihilate the enemies of the church and judge them. Jesus is the only one who will judge you like treading a winepress. He truly treads the winepress. It is the great winepress of God's wrath (Jn 14:19), and we are sinners worthy of being cast into that winepress. But Jesus Christ wants to save us and cast our enemies there.
(3) He judges independently. In verse 5, it says, “I saw no one to help and there was no one to sustain me, so I wondered, because my arm saved me, and my one upheld me.” He does not use , and God alone treads on the enemy until he turns the enemy into a footstool with his own power, and that person is only Jesus. No one can save sinners from the hand of the enemy devil except Jesus (Acts 4:12, 1 Corinthians 15:57), and Jesus will carry out the final judgment alone. But the Bible never acknowledges the power of the majority. The Bible acknowledges God's power and is satisfied only with God's will. It means that the wrath of his justice worked to preserve his justice. Such anger is the last necessary anger to maintain God's being God. If he did not show such anger, it would be tantamount to losing the essence of God. “Angry” and “wrath” in verse 6 also refer to the wrath of holiness in the same sense.