Ransoming the Captive is About More Than Being Nice

Part II of our series on Ransoming the Captive

We launched a new series this week on Ransoming the Captive and concluded by asking readers to share their thoughts on what it looks like for a church or an individual to ransom captives today. What does it look like to do this Work of Mercy in our time?

Well, on March 8, 2009, a new church was born in Sioux Falls, South Dakota. The local newspaper headline from just a few months later read:


The name of the new congregation was The Ransom Church, and it listed the following mission and vision on its website:

Our Mission:

We exist to set captives free…Period.…

Our Vision:

We believe God’s vision for us is to spread the truth of Jesus Christ through Sioux Falls. God has called us to set captives free. We want to leave no corner of this city untouched in living out this vision.

Now that’s a Scriptural mission!

In fact, as we’ll see all throughout this month, few missions or visions or congregational names are as Scriptural as the mission of ransoming captives. And when we understand how Christ has ransomed us, we’ll come to understand why even more deeply.

Unfortunately, though, the newspaper report and the website for The Ransom Church do not go on to detail a literal ransoming of literal captives, with members giving themselves up to imprisonment in order to ransom others. If the early church had a website, it would have talked a lot about that kind of ransoming. We know this, because it’s a subject that pops up in many letters and stories and reports by and about the early church.

It was one of the things that amazed people about Christians.

You can see it in Clement’s letter to the church in Corinth, sent around the start of the second century AD. Clement wrote:

We know that many have given themselves up to imprisonment in order to ransom others; many too have delivered themselves into slavery and have fed others with the sale price

(1 Clement 55:2) 

Did you catch that? Many. As in, “Many Christians have ransomed others by delivering themselves into slavery.”

And it was hardly a one-time thing: On through the Middle Ages, Christians continued to deliver themselves into slavery in Jesus’ name in order to set others free. In fact, several groups in the medieval church like the Trinitarians and the Mercedarians even set aside a third of their income to ransom church members who were taken captive.

Well, today, there are more Christians being held captive than ever before. In fact, there are 200 million Christians in 60 countries who are persecuted, tortured, and imprisoned simply for being Christian.

That’s a lot of ransoming to do!

Unfortunately, though, we don’t read the Scriptures very literally anymore. We don’t personally know a lot of Christians who are in prison. And we’ve forgotten 1800 years of church practice and instead we think of ransoming the captive as something figurative, or symbolic…which is what the pastor of the Ransom Church of Sioux Falls, South Dakota told the newspaper reporter when the reporter asked, “So what does it mean to ransom captives?”

“We’re all captive to something,” the pastor said. “Greed, guilt, abuse, past failures, money.”

So before Christmas, The Ransom Church leadership team delivered 2,000 Christmas bags door-to-door to homes around Sioux Falls. Those bags were stuffed with ribbon, tape and holiday gift tags in addition to flyers about The Ransom Church.

The church also held events in November and January at a gas station, sponsoring a 50 cent -per-gallon discount on gas. The pastor said, “We pumped gas, met people and had a commitment not to accept any donations. For the leadership team, it was about introducing ourselves, meeting people and serving free of self.”

Those are all very good things. And it’s true that greed, guilt, and abuse can be like captivity. But this is all quite a bit different than what Ransom Church’s ancestors—Christians across eighteen centuries—meant by ransoming the captives in Jesus’ name. For example, as a chronicler of the Mercedarian Order wrote:

An Irish saint by the name of Saint Serapion was enrolled as a soldier in Richard the Lion Heart’s Army…  He redeemed many captives and on one particular occasion gave himself as hostage to ransom Christian prisoners, who were on the verge of betraying their Faith.

His Mercedarian friend traveled swiftly to Spain, collected the money for the ransom and returned to save Serapion.

Unfortunately, the friend did not return in time and the Algerian King, Selin Benimarin, nailed Saint Serapion onto a Saint Andrew’s cross… Similarly, Saint Peter Armengol gave himself in exchange for a captive in Morocco. Once again the ransom money did not arrive in time and Saint Peter was hung. The Blessed Virgin miraculously intervened and although Peter remained with a twisted neck for the rest of his life, his life was spared. Peter died in seclusion in the Convent of Santa Maria dels Prats, in 1304.

Giving a 50 cent per gallon discount on gas is a good way to be nice to people.

But willingly entering into crucifixion, hanging, or neck twisting in order to ransom a captive brother or sister—that is not about being nice. 

It’s about mirroring the character of Christ to the world.

And we have to figure out what that means today. In other words, is ransoming the captive just a figure of speech for us? Or does God intend for it to be something more?

What do you think?

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Jesus’ First Sermon (And Why It Matters)

Part I of our series on Ransoming the Captive

If you like to put bookmarks in your Bible, you may want to stick one at Luke 4:16-21:

And he came to Nazareth, where he had been brought up. And as was his custom, he went to the synagogue on the Sabbath day, and he stood up to read. And the scroll of the prophet Isaiah was given to him. He unrolled the scroll and found the place where it was written,
‘The Spirit of the Lord is upon me,
because he has anointed me
to proclaim good news to the poor.
He has sent me to proclaim liberty to the captives
and recovering of sight to the blind,
to set at liberty those who are oppressed,
to proclaim the year of the Lord’s favor.’

And he rolled up the scroll and gave it back to the attendant and sat down. And the eyes of all in the synagogue were fixed on him. And he began to say to them, “Today this Scripture has been fulfilled in your hearing.” (Luke 4:16–21, ESV)

So there you go: Jesus’ first sermon. His first public speech. The initial announcement of his ministry. And what was front and center in that announcement and in that ministry?

Ransoming Captives.

Given the way Jesus highlights the topic, then, it should be no surprise that for the first eighteen centuries of the church’s existence, the Work of Mercy of ransoming the captive in Jesus’ name was front and center in the church’s practice as well.

And, to be real clear about it (and to telegraph the punch of where we’re going this month):

For the first eighteen centuries of the church’s existence, ransoming the captive in Jesus’ name meant literally ransoming literal captives

In other words, the Work of Mercy of ransoming the captives is a whole life Work. It’s spiritual, to be sure, but it doesn’t stop there. Because the human being is more than spirit, and captivity is always more than spiritual. Ransoming is a spirit-soul-body activity, and I think we’ll be surprised to learn how seriously not only Jesus but the whole church took each dimension of that Work.

Ransoming the captive means the expensive day-to-day function of redeeming, or buying back, individuals taken captive by their enemies through war or kidnapping or imprisonment.

In the ancient world, families ransomed captive family members, armies ransomed captive soldiers, and whole nations ransomed their citizens.

And for eighteen centuries, the church ransomed its people, too.  This month we’re going to see how and why, and how it all connects right back to that first sermon that Jesus ever preached, and to Jesus’ ransoming of each of us.

We’ll start that in the next blog post.

In the meantime, answer this: what do you think ransoming the captive looks like for the church today?  What about for you individually?

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Be a Barnabas. Pursue a Paul. Train a Timothy.

Part X of our series on Making Disciples

“Therefore everyone who hears these words of mine and puts them into practice is like a wise man who built his house on the rock.”

So says Jesus in Matthew 7:24.

This month’s field trip for the Work of Mercy of Making Disciples will take you to three different places to connect with three people who will go on to be very, very important in your life.

In the words of Pastor Paul Martin, “Be a Barnabas; Pursue a Paul; Train a Timothy.”

In other words:

  • Make sure you have a peer disciple who is holding you accountable and who you are holding accountable;
  • Ask one person to disciple you formally;
  • Identify one person for you to disciple.

Commit all three of these requests to prayer today, and pray for each one daily in your family worship time until God fulfills all three—even if it takes six years. If he fulfills the first one but not yet the other two, thank him in prayer for the first one and beseech him for the other two. He’ll give them to you. It’s a request he’ll delight in fulfilling, because it’s in accordance with his word and how he desires to train you.

Utilize your offering to facilitate the process of discipling, being discipled, and being with another disciple. Build up a resource library like D. Michael Henderson talked about so that you can regularly be building up the person God sent you to disciple. Hit the Waffle House weekly—hey, three times a week; one for each relationship!—and let God produce the growth he delights to produce in each of these crucial and transformative relationships.

Just don’t order the chocolate chip waffle with extra bacon every time you go.
Oh, and remember to use an “After Action Review” to help make this a learning experience for you.  Here are the questions I ask myself after doing the word:

  • What was the intent?
  • What happened? Why? What are the implications?
  • What lessons did we learn?
  • Now what?
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