Did Christ Become a Ransom So We Wouldn’t Have To?

Part V of our series on Ransoming the Captive

We concluded our last post by noting how Jeremiah foretells of Jesus’ work on the cross, ransoming each of us from the captivity of sin and death.

On the island of Patmos, John, one of Jesus’ twelve disciples, records the vision given him by God.  In this part, the angels worship Christ for condescending to be our ransom:

 “And when he had taken the scroll, the four living creatures and the twenty-four elders fell down before the Lamb, each holding a harp, and golden bowls full of incense, which are the prayers of the saints. And they sang a new song, saying,

‘Worthy are you to take the scroll and to open its seals, for you were slain, and by your blood you ransomed people for God from every tribe and language and people and nation, and you have made them a kingdom and priests to our God, and they shall reign on the earth.’

(Revelation 5:8–10, ESV)

Now here’s the really interesting part about the word “ransomed” in this passage of Scripture. In Greek, the word that’s used is agorazo, which means “to be in the market place… to do business there, buy or sell.”

Jesus, in other words, is described as “doing the business” of buying us back!

The angels sing about how he does this: by purchasing us captives with the currency of his own blood.

Jesus the businessman, buying back captives. It’s an amazing thing for angels to sing about, don’t you think? It shows just how earthy this business of redemption is. He doesn’t just redeem us spiritually. He spills his very physical blood in order to redeem our spirits, souls, and bodies.

If you want to get even the smallest glimpse of what that’s like, consider the story of Oscar Schindler, another businessman who gave everything he had—spirit, soul, and body—to redeem the Jewish people from destruction at the hands of the Nazis.

Here’s how Louis Bulow tells it:

“Why did [Schindler] do it? Why did he spend something like 4 million German marks keeping his Jews out of the death camps—an enormous sum of money for those times?…

No one will ever know exactly what made this complex man do what no German had the courage to do. A large part of the fascination of Schindler is that not even those who admire him most can figure out his motives. But Oscar Schindler rose to the highest level of humanity, walked through the bloody mud of the Holocaust without soiling his soul, his compassion, his respect for human life – and gave his Jews a second chance at life. He miraculously managed to do it and pulled it off by using the very same talents that made him a war profiteer—his flair for presentation, bribery, and grand gestures.

Oscar Schindler was a sentimentalist who loved the simplicity of doing good. A man full of flaws like the rest of us. An ordinary man who even in the worst of circumstances did extraordinary things, matched by no one. The unlikeliest of all role models who started by earning millions as a war profiteer and ended by spending his last pfennig and risking his life to save his 1300 Schindlerjews.…

Irving Glovin, Schindler’s attorney and friend, met Oscar in 1963 and bought the rights to the story and film in 1980. He later recalled Schindler not only with affection, but with great admiration: ‘He drank, yes, he drank. He liked women. He bribed. But he bribed for a good purpose. All of these things worked. If he were not this kind of person he probably wouldn’t have succeeded. Whatever it took to save a life he did.’”

It’s not in the drinking or the love of women or the bribery that Schindler is like Jesus. It’s the part that says, “Whatever it took to save a life he did.

But you’ll notice that even Schindler’s generosity is only the faintest reminder of Jesus’ own.

Jesus gave more than 4 million German marks in ransom. He became the ransom for us. 

And that’s why in heaven, the elders and the four living creatures praise, of all things, Jesus’ business savvy! He put the right value on the right things, and whatever it took to save a life—which, it turns out, was giving his own life—he did. 

That’s what Peter tells us in 1 Peter 1:17-19. Here, Peter talks about exile.  That’s where we are now: in exile. Struggling through a world caked everywhere with the mud of sin. God cast our ancestors out of the Garden of Eden and consigned us to exile as the necessary consequence of our sins. But as Peter reminds us, God did this for our own good. There’s something we’re learning here; namely, the ways of the one who ransomed us. We’re learning to be like him. Peter says:

“…conduct yourselves with fear throughout the time of your exile, knowing that…you were ransomed from the futile ways inherited from your forefathers, not with perishable things such as silver or gold, but with the precious blood of Christ, like that of a lamb without blemish or spot.”

(1 Peter 1:17b–19, ESV)

If we’re learning to be like him, and he was a ransom, then how do you think he wants us to mirror that to the world? Or, to ask it a little differently:

Did he become a ransom so that we don’t have to?

Answer: No. He became our ransom so that we would voluntarily choose to use our whole lives to ransom others also. Use our lives in a way that makes Oscar Schindler’s 4 million German marks seem average, not extraordinary.

What would it look like for you to do that?  Who can you ransom out of captivity this way?

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When God Leads Into Captivity

Part IV of our series on Ransoming the Captive

In Monday’s post, we talked about how Christ did not come to pay the ransom for us but to be the ransom for us and why that difference matters.

Today, we’re going to see how the concept of ransoming the captive didn’t actually begin with Jesus.  The Old Testament is saturated with the idea which should clue us in to how close to God’s heart this work of mercy really is.

Wilhelm Bacher (a professor at Jewish Theological Seminary in Hungary) and Julius H. Greenstone (an American Rabbi) give us a sample of just a few of the Old Testament verses that relate to ransoming the captive. You’ll notice as you hear them that we don’t normally think of these Scriptures as related to ransoming captives, but according to the Hebrew tradition we have inherited, we should. They write:

He who refrains from ransoming a captive is guilty of transgressing the commandments expressed or implied in Biblical passages such as the following:

  • “Thou shalt not harden thy heart”
  • “Thou shalt not shut thine hand from thy poor brother”
  • “Neither shalt thou stand against the blood of thy neighbor”
  • “He shall not rule with rigor over him in thy sight”
  • “Thou shalt open thy hand wide unto him”
  • “. . . that thy brother may live with thee”
  • “Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself”
  • “Deliver them that are drawn unto death”

One who delayed in the work of ransoming a Jewish captive was placed in the category of the murderer.

So you see, a lot more of the Bible is about ransoming the captive than we might think. And there’s a lot more to God’s role in ransoming the captive than we might think, too. That’s because God is portrayed in Scripture not only as the one who ransoms his people from captivity, but also as the one who sends his people into captivity in the first place!

That may not sound very loving. But really, it is—supremely.

Even when God leads us into captivity, it really is for our good—for our redemption.

And he protects us even when we’re in captivity. You can see that in the way that those who mistreat us when we are in captivity always get punished by him.

Always—always—there is a glorious redemption for those owned by God.

The prophet Jeremiah portrays the whole picture, from freedom to captivity and back to freedom. The following is a long passage, but it’s worth hanging on every word. Read it carefully and resist the temptation to scan.  I know this is a blog and all, but it’s important that we allow the Holy Spirit to speak to us.

This Scripture teaches us how God thinks about captivity, and, when we understand that, it will profoundly reshape how we think about captivity, too—ours and those whom he sends us to free in his name. What you’ll hear from Jeremiah here is about Israel. But it’s also true of the entire human race, which entered into comprehensive captivity to sin and death:

“And it shall come to pass in that day, declares the Lord of hosts, that I will break his yoke from off your neck, and I will burst your bonds, and foreigners shall no more make a servant of him. But they shall serve the Lord their God and David their king, whom I will raise up for them.
“Then fear not, O Jacob my servant, declares the Lord,
nor be dismayed, O Israel;
for behold, I will save you from far away,
and your offspring from the land of their captivity.
Jacob shall return and have quiet and ease,
and none shall make him afraid.
For I am with you to save you,
declares the Lord; I will make a full end of all the nations
among whom I scattered you,
but of you I will not make a full end.
I will discipline you in just measure,
and I will by no means leave you unpunished.

“For thus says the Lord: Your hurt is incurable,
and your wound is grievous.
There is none to uphold your cause,
no medicine for your wound,
no healing for you.
All your lovers have forgotten you;
they care nothing for you;
for I have dealt you the blow of an enemy,
the punishment of a merciless foe,
because your guilt is great,
because your sins are flagrant.
Why do you cry out over your hurt?
Your pain is incurable.
Because your guilt is great,
because your sins are flagrant,
I have done these things to you.

Therefore all who devour you shall be devoured,
and all your foes, every one of them, shall go into captivity;
those who plunder you shall be plundered,
and all who prey on you I will make a prey.
For I will restore health to you,
and your wounds I will heal,
declares the Lord, because they have called you an outcast:
‘It is Zion, for whom no one cares!’

“Thus says the Lord: Behold, I will restore the fortunes of the tents of Jacob
and have compassion on his dwellings;
the city shall be rebuilt on its mound,
and the palace shall stand where it used to be.
Out of them shall come songs of thanksgiving,
and the voices of those who celebrate.
I will multiply them, and they shall not be few;
I will make them honored, and they shall not be small.
Their children shall be as they were of old,
and their congregation shall be established before me,
and I will punish all who oppress them.
Their prince shall be one of themselves;
their ruler shall come out from their midst;
I will make him draw near, and he shall approach me,
for who would dare of himself to approach me?
declares the Lord. And you shall be my people,
and I will be your God.”

Behold the storm of the Lord!
Wrath has gone forth,
a whirling tempest;
it will burst upon the head of the wicked.
The fierce anger of the Lord will not turn back
until he has executed and accomplished
the intentions of his mind.
In the latter days you will understand this.

(Jeremiah 30:8–24, ESV)

And Jeremiah was right: In the latter days we really did come to understand this, specifically through the revealing of Christ Jesus, the visible image of the invisible God. The visible God offered himself as our ransom!

Have you ever been led into captivity by God?  What did you come to understand about the work of Ransoming Captives through that experience?

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Myth: Jesus Came to Pay The Ransom for All People

Part III of our series on Ransoming the Captive

As is the practice of those who would be a disciple of Jesus, learning how to ransom captives involves us first looking at how God ransomed us.

First we hear the word of how God has ransomed us.  Then, we do the word.

So we began with Jesus’ first sermon, where he talked about ransoming the captives. And here is the key point I want to make over these last few blog posts:

As Jesus’ mission unfolded, what Scripture reveals is that Jesus did not come to pay the ransom, but rather to be, personally, the ransom for all people

The apostle Paul summarizes it in this way:

For there is one God and one mediator between God and men, the man Christ Jesus, who gave himself as a ransom for all men—the testimony given in its proper time.

(1 Timothy 2:5–6)

Mark Shea writes about Francis Gajowniczek, a Polish army sergeant who was sent to a Nazi concentration camp during World War II for aiding Jewish people. One day in the camp, something remarkable happened to him. Shea writes,

Gajowniczek was chosen at random by the commandant of Auschwitz to die along with several other prisoners in reprisal for an escape. His sentence was to perish in the starvation bunker without food or water in the middle of the blistering Polish summer of 1941. As he was about to be led away, [he said, “”My poor wife! My poor children! What will they do?”]… there was a stir in the ranks of the assembled prisoners in the yard.

A man stepped forward and volunteered to take Gajowniczek’s place. He explained that he was old and a priest, of no use to anyone in the Nazi New Order of utility. The commandant, with brutal Nazi calculation, accepted the proposal—and St. Maximilian Kolbe was led away as a ransom just as his Master had been.

Just as his Master had been.

When we pay 50 cents a gallon of people’s gasoline cost, it reminds them that there are still nice people in the world.

But when we ransom the way Jesus ransomed – when The Ransom Church actually becomes a ransom in Christ’s name, rather than just paying for gas and wrapping paper – it reminds the world that there is a redeemer: Jesus, God’s own Son, the perfect…and only…ransom for our sins.

And through the Holy Spirit, we are invited as his church to return to the literal work of ransoming that he began.

When thinking about becoming a ransom for someone else in Jesus’ name, what fears or reservations do you have?

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