In this passage, the Servant becomes the bridge between sinners and God. He unselfishly and undeservedly bears our iniquities. Like the symbolic goat from Leviticus 16:22, the Servant bears sin itself so we can once again have relationship with God. But there’s more going on here than suffering and death; the Servant is resurrected. After he is brutally murdered for humanity’s sake, the Servant sees offspring, prolongs days, sees light, and is satisfied by his experience—the Servant does things that