"...His visage was marred more than any man, and his form more than the sons of men; so shall He startle many nations; the kings shall shut their mouths at Him, for that which had not been told them shall they see, and that which they had not heard shall they consider." Isaiah 52:14, 15
The Atonement was something you could not have guessed. It is true that both Jew and Gentile knew that the divine required sacra fices (though perhaps for different reasons); it is equally true that the Gentiles went so far as to say that a god could be a sacrifice. However, that the God of gods would come emptied of His authority and glory, His coming void of all candor or ceremony or splendor, coming disguised as an ordinary man, easily confused with and replaced by any other man, coming to be rejected and murdered by His own creations and worshippers in a sacrifice that was equally void of all candor or ceremony or splendor; that is something no priest or myth maker could have conjured. The Atonement is less like a myth and more like real life because it caught everyone by surprise. We who have heard the story over and over again are no longer surprised; but to those who experienced first hand, it was the shock of the century.
There is a reason that God's ways and workings are often described as "mysteries," i.e., truths that are hidden for the moment (not, as some would say, the unknowable). God's ways are "mysterious" in that they are not only hidden but also true, i.e., real and actual. We linger on their 'hiddenness,' but forget that they are true ways, true workings, ways and workings that exist in absolute Reality and that will work themselves out into relative reality at appointed times. That is why what God does catch us so off guard: they are not only hidden, but also real, like real life, like reality; and reality is something you could not have guessed.
"We who watch Your Story unfold,
Are gloriously surprised at every turn..."
-Jon Vowell
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