I Peter 
2:24
     Who Himself bore our sins in His own body 
on the tree, that we, having died to sins, might live for righteousness – by 
whose stripes you were healed.  
     We come now to a magnificent verse.  We can hardly study it without falling on our 
knees.  Jesus, our Lord bore our sins in 
His own body.  Look who took our 
sin!  It is not just a heroic man or a 
kindly stranger; it is Jesus – the sinless, matchless, peerless, immortal 
Jesus.  If there were ever anyone who 
should never have tasted the sting and pain of sin, it should have been 
Him.  Yet He volunteered to bear my 
sins.  Are we not humbled to the point of 
kneeling before Him and tremblingly stutter out words of thanks?  And whose sins did He bear?  My sins.  
I am sinful, insignificant, unworthy, and prone to repeat the same 
mistake more than twice.  If there were 
ever a man born who was less worthy of having a savior lift his sins from his 
back, it would be me.  And yet I was 
healed when my Savior bore my sins on His own body on the tree.  How can I rightfully 
respond?
     We thank doctors for healing our diseases, and yet what 
do they really do for us?  They point us 
to a cure and then require that we pay them for it.  A doctor sacrifices nothing to gain us a 
cure, and yet we shower him with praise and gratitude for restoring our 
health.  But look at the means by which 
Jesus cured us of our sin.  It is as if 
we came to Him with our broken arm and in order to heal us – His arm is 
broken.  We ask Him to treat our 
headache, and we are cured when his head pains Him instead.  We, the sick, come to our Healer with our 
diseases and syndromes and cancers and torments and when we leave Him we are 
cured – because those things which tortured us are left to torment Him.  For a Physician like that, we would rightly, 
gladly pay Him all we had.  Our Great 
Physician Himself bore our sins in His own body on the tree -- and by His 
suffering we are healed.  How can we 
adequately thank Him?  This same verse 
begins the answer: “that we, having died to sins, might live for 
righteousness.”  Since our sins have 
caused Jesus such anguish, let us despise sin.  
Let us put to death our willingness to sin and make all effort to “live 
for righteousness.”  Seeing the anguish 
that our sin caused Jesus, how can we turn our back on this great show of love 
and mercy and willingly sin again?  Let 
us hate sin, the sin which Jesus bore to His own grief, and let us love Jesus 
who bore our sin that we might be freed of its weight. 
