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C.I. Scofield

C.I. Scofield (August 19, 1843 – July 24, 1921) was an American preacher, theologian, and author whose ministry and editorial work profoundly shaped dispensational theology through the creation of the Scofield Reference Bible. Born Cyrus Ingerson Scofield in Lenawee County, Michigan, to Elias Scofield, a sawmill worker, and Abigail Goodrich, he was the seventh child in a family disrupted by his mother’s death in childbirth and his father’s remarriage. Raised in Wilson County, Tennessee, he served in the Confederate Army during the Civil War (1861–1865), earning the Confederate Cross of Honor, before moving to St. Louis, Missouri, where he worked as a lawyer and politician, elected to the Kansas House of Representatives in 1871. Converted in 1879 at age 36 under the influence of YMCA worker Thomas McPheeters, he abandoned his legal career for ministry. Scofield’s preaching career began with ordination as a Congregational minister in 1882, pastoring First Congregational Church in Dallas, Texas (1882–1895), where he grew the congregation from 14 to over 500 members, and later Moody Memorial Church in Northfield, Massachusetts (1895–1902). His most enduring contribution came in 1909 with the publication of the Scofield Reference Bible, a King James Version annotated with dispensational notes that sold over 10 million copies, popularizing premillennialism among evangelicals. Married twice—first to Leontine Cerré in 1866, with whom he had two daughters (divorced 1883), then to Hettie Hall van Wark in 1884, with whom he had a son—he faced early controversy over alleged fraud and forgery, though he claimed redemption through faith. He died at 77 in Douglaston, New York, leaving a legacy as a key architect of modern dispensationalism.
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C.I. Scofield delves into Isaiah 52:13-53:12, highlighting Christ's ultimate triumph, His rejection, His role as a suffering substitute, His resignation, and God's victorious purpose. The heart of the lesson focuses on the atonement chapter, emphasizing the substitutional and vicarious nature of Christ's sufferings, not merely physical but spiritual, and how His death was both a sacrifice and a birth of new life for believers.
The Suffering Saviour
(Isaiah lii:13— liii:12.) I. The Analysis. 1. Christ's ultimate triumph (lii:13-15). 2. The rejected Christ (liii:1-3). 3. The suffering substitute (liii:4-6). 4. The resignation of the sufferer (liii:7-9). 5. God's victorious purpose. II. The Heart of the Lesson. As to the whole meaning of this great chapter there is, of course, no controversy. It is the great atonement chapter. It is to the prophetic part of the Old Testament what the i6thof Leviticus is to the typical part. In the i6th of Leviticus we have, so to speak, the anatomy of atonement, in the 52d and 53d of Isaiah the philosophy of the atonement. As both chapters are expressly appropriated in the New Testament to Christ (Heb. ix:7-12; Acts viii:32-35), it follows that any theory of the atonement which claims to be Scriptural must gather into itself the teachings of both. Our lesson, however, requires us to look at but one of these two great chapters. It seems to me that the heart of things here is three-fold. 1. The sufferings of Christ in atonement were substitutional, vicarious. He died, not as a piteous spectacle, with intent to produce by his agonies a subjective moral influence on human hearts, though surely the fact that we, like the brutal Roman soldiers, can apathetically "watch him there" (Matt, xxvii:36), is the final proof of our depravity. Nor did he die as a martyr, immolated in a great cause. He was under no necessity of death so far as human power was concerned. Of his lie he said, "I lay it down of myself, no man taketh it from me." When the traitor-led crowd came out against him into the garden, he had but to say the dread, "I AM," and they "went backward and fell to the ground." More than twelve legions of angels were ready to deliver him. There is but one explanation of the death of Christ which satisfies the Scriptures: "He was wounded for our transgressions, he was bruised for our iniquities; the chastisement of our peace was upon him; and with his stripes we are healed. All we like sheep have gone astray; we have turned every one to his own way; and the Lord hath laid on him the iniquity of us all." "For he hath made him to be sin for us, who knew no sin; that we might be made the righteousness of God in him." "Who his own self bore our sins in his own body on the tree that we, being dead to sins, might be made the righteousness of God in him." "Christ hath redeemed us from the curse of the law, being made a curse for us." 2. The sufferings of Christ in atonement were not chiefly physical, but spiritual. His soul was made an offering for sin. The soul is the seat of the affections, desires, will. Yet in the death of Christ we see the sufferings of the only man who ever loved God perfectly; whose whole desire was the father's pleasing and who could say of himself, "Lo, I came to do thy will, O God." But his holy soul was made an offering for sin. No man could have done that. Inevitably it must be written, "It pleased the Lord to bruise him; he hath put him to grief." The token of this was Christ's desolate cry from the cross: ''My God, My God, why hast thou forsaken me?" Put the emphasis hard on the "thou," and the "me." Why, indeed, should the only perfectly holy, perfectly obedient Servant whom the Father ever had on earth be forsaken of God in his utmost need? The answer, and there can be but one, is that the Holy One was in that dread hour the sinner's substitute. 3. The sufferings of Christ were germinant. Death pangs, indeed, they were also birth pangs. The anguish of his death was that we might never "taste" death (though we may die), and therefore true death agonies; but the anguish was also the anguish of our new birth. It was the "Travail of his soul." The corn of wheat had fallen into the ground and was dying that the life of it might pass into countless corns of the wheat of God.
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C.I. Scofield (August 19, 1843 – July 24, 1921) was an American preacher, theologian, and author whose ministry and editorial work profoundly shaped dispensational theology through the creation of the Scofield Reference Bible. Born Cyrus Ingerson Scofield in Lenawee County, Michigan, to Elias Scofield, a sawmill worker, and Abigail Goodrich, he was the seventh child in a family disrupted by his mother’s death in childbirth and his father’s remarriage. Raised in Wilson County, Tennessee, he served in the Confederate Army during the Civil War (1861–1865), earning the Confederate Cross of Honor, before moving to St. Louis, Missouri, where he worked as a lawyer and politician, elected to the Kansas House of Representatives in 1871. Converted in 1879 at age 36 under the influence of YMCA worker Thomas McPheeters, he abandoned his legal career for ministry. Scofield’s preaching career began with ordination as a Congregational minister in 1882, pastoring First Congregational Church in Dallas, Texas (1882–1895), where he grew the congregation from 14 to over 500 members, and later Moody Memorial Church in Northfield, Massachusetts (1895–1902). His most enduring contribution came in 1909 with the publication of the Scofield Reference Bible, a King James Version annotated with dispensational notes that sold over 10 million copies, popularizing premillennialism among evangelicals. Married twice—first to Leontine Cerré in 1866, with whom he had two daughters (divorced 1883), then to Hettie Hall van Wark in 1884, with whom he had a son—he faced early controversy over alleged fraud and forgery, though he claimed redemption through faith. He died at 77 in Douglaston, New York, leaving a legacy as a key architect of modern dispensationalism.