Who did no sin, neither was guile found in his mouth It is suggestive as indicating the line of prophetic interpretation in which the Apostle had been led on, that as soon as he begins to speak of the sufferings of Christ, he falls, as it were, naturally into the language of Isaiah 53:9, as he found it (with the one exception that he gives "sin" for "iniquity") in the LXX. version. The two clauses assert for the righteous sufferer a perfect sinlessness both in act and word.

Continues after advertising
Continues after advertising