Friday, 21 August 2015
Unworthy of Rescue
So, I read this story from Destiny Rescue about a girl who - in fear and despair - contacted rescue agents begging for a rescue. By the time they got there, the girl had been raped and her spirit broken. And it absolutely shattered my heart to read how she now refused rescue. Her understanding of herself and her own worthiness had been so damaged and besmirched that she no longer considered herself worthy of rescue. She saw herself as worthless - good for only continuing in the life she had just been forced into.
And my heart didn't just break for her in that moment. It broke for all the girls like her. All the boys like her. In truth, it broke for all of us. Because - in all honesty - I think there's a little bit of her in all of us. I know there is in me.
Just over an hour before I read her story, I was composing an article for my university Christian group's newsletter. As I wrote it, I was reflecting on the horrific reality of the Cross and the extraordinary price that was paid for my rescue - my rescue from sin. And I had to honestly confess that there are times when I see it all and I just want to run away. I just want to reject it.
Because I'm not worth that.
All I'm good for is to go on living my life of sin and then taking my punishment at the end. I am not worth the rescue. Especially not when the rescue comes at that price.
And yet.... and yet...
The continual invitation of the Cross, the continual message of the Cross, is that I am worth it. Not because of anything that I've ever done or accomplished. Because I haven't done or accomplished anything - I've only ever accepted God's gifts and, far more frequently that I care to acknowledge - abused those same gifts. No, I am worth it, the Cross declares, because God has declared that I am worth it. And - as Paul puts it so bluntly in Romans 8 - who can argue with God?
There's a saying in the Middle East: what God has written can not be unwritten.
What God has written can not be unwritten.
And what has God written, written in His own blood, can never be unwritten, can never be erased, can never be changed. And what has God written?
He has written that I am worth it. He has written that I am rescued. He has written that I am justified. He has written that I am adopted. He has written that I am His and that can never be changed. He has written that I am not defined by what I have and haven't done - but by what He has done and what He has given to me.
And that message, it's not just for me alone. It's for you. It's for your next door neighbor. It's for the murderer in gaol. It's for the child with HIV in Africa. It's for the refugee on a boat on the ocean. It's for this girl who could not see past what was done to her to she her intrinsic, God given worth.
Because it's true. That girl was of no less worth the second day after she was raped than on the first day while she was still untouched. The actions of humans, her own actions, none of it could change the fact that she was created by God, in the image of God, for the glory of God and who later died for her. Every part of her worth and who she is was wrapped up in God - but the Devil had clouded her understanding. Had convinced her that she was what she did and what other people did to her. And so she passed over the chance of rescue. She turned away from the chance to know the truth.
And how many of us do this on a daily basis? Maybe on a smaller scale with less obvious consequences, but do this never the less. Maybe it's when you berate yourself as a failure for not getting that grade (guilty). Maybe it's when you remember the bullying you went through in school (guilty). Maybe it's when you yell at your mother and can't bring yourself to apologise (guilty). Maybe it's when you through yourself into preparing a fantastic Sunday school lesson, but forget to pray (guilty). Maybe it's when you start looking for ways to serve because you want to pay God back (guilty). Whatever it is, I'm sure it's there.
But the really wonderful news of the Cross? The really wonderful message of the Cross? Is that, until the day we die, the offer is still on the table. The offer to step into God's presence and to view ourselves and the world through His eyes is still being held out to us - and God is wanting us to take it. Each and every day.
Thank you, Lord.
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