Redeemed

I’ve been thinking about the word “redeem” lately. Its primary meaning is to gain or regain possession of something in exchange for payment. The Bible makes it clear that the job of the redeemer is to regain, to buy back, to make secure. We see an example of a family redeemer in Boaz, who made Ruth and Naomi secure when he married Ruth. He also secured her first husband’s lineage and inheritance (Ruth 4).

Boaz and Ruth’s grandson was King David. There were many years between David’s anointing as Israel’s next king and his coronation. During that time, he and the men who followed him lived among the Philistines. One day the men returned home to find that their enemies, the Amalekites, had raided their town and destroyed it. They carried off the women and children and everyone else. As the men wept over their lost families, David turned to God for guidance:

Then David asked the Lord, “Should I chase them? Will I catch them?” And the Lord told him, “Yes, go after them. You will surely recover everything that was taken from you!”     1 Samuel 30:8

We, too, have an enemy, a thief whose goal is to steal and kill and destroy (John 10:10). You don’t have to live very long on this earth to know that he’s good at it. God sent David’s descendant, Jesus, to go after the enemy and recover everything that was taken. In Him, God made payment to our captors in order to regain possession of those who belong to Him. He extricated us from bondage to sin (Romans 6:6) and released us from the debt that we owed. His life was accepted in exchange for our lives (Mark 10:45). He made our future, our inheritance, secure (1 Peter 1:4). It’s not a temporary situation that can change at any moment. What He has purchased cannot be taken from Him (John 10:28).

Jesus then goes with us to regain possession of everything that has been lost.  He helps us recover what we have given away. He goes with us to each enemy who stole from us, and He pays the ransom for what they took. He goes with us to each pawn shop where we traded pieces of our hearts in an effort to gain the world, and He makes payment for what we left there.

After we gather all the scattered, bartered, broken pieces of our hearts, we lay them before the Redeemer to be made whole. Because Jesus doesn’t just pay back, He restores. He puts us back into the condition God intended for us from the beginning. He exerts His unstoppable power to make up for the bad things we’ve done, and to overcome the bad things that have been done to us.

To redeem is also to make good on a claim.  To exchange something for its value.  When we redeem a coupon, or a gift card, we exchange it for something of value in return.  God gave us incomparable worth when He redeemed us with the most precious, most worthy thing in all of the universe. Jesus transfers the value of His life to our account.

This is what it means to be redeemed.

I will tell of the Lord’s unfailing love. I will praise the Lord for all he has done. I will rejoice in his great goodness to Israel, which he has granted according to his mercy and love… In all their suffering he also suffered, and he personally rescued them. In his love and mercy he redeemed them. He lifted them up and carried them through all the years.                  Isaiah 63:7,9

Hope is a Seed

Yet I am confident that I will see the Lord’s goodness while I am here in the land of the living. Wait patiently for the Lord. Be brave and courageous. Yes, wait patiently for the Lord.             Psalm 27:13-14

David wrote these words in Psalm 27. The first word jumps out at me – “yet”. In spite of all the evidence to the contrary. In spite of everything my eyes currently see, I am confident in the goodness of God. It’s not just head knowledge, but life experience that allows David to retain his confidence in God’s goodness. It is God’s nature, His character. He cannot be anything but good. He has a good heart, good intentions, good desires for you.

Does this mean that everything that happens to you will be good? Obviously not – this passage starts with “yet”. David had just described pleading with God while his enemies were threatening him. Our enemy always wants to harm us. But God desires to bless and bless and bless again. What He intends for you is not brokenness or pain. He intends good, healing, wholeness, restoration for you. This is His eternal plan from the beginning.

Our hurts happen because God gave humans free will, with which we accept or reject Him and His ways. He accepts our choices. Sometimes we’re hurt by our own choices. Sometimes we’re hurt as a result of others’ choices. Sometimes we’re hurt because we live in a world that’s under the curse of sin. While God accepts our choices that hurt ourselves and others, He does not desire for bad things to happen to us. In the midst of this cursed condition, God is actively, tirelessly, constantly working to restore all things, to make things right, to make something good out of what Satan intended would destroy us (John 5:17; Romans 8:28; Genesis 50:20; Jeremiah 29:11).

And so we have no choice but to wait. Wait for God to finish His work, accomplish His purposes. Wait for the evidence that proves our trust was not misplaced. What is this condition except one of hope?

Hope is a seed. A possibility. A desire not yet realized. In order for anything to come from hope, it must be planted. It disappears into the darkness. Mysterious things happen there, beneath what we can see. But all along, the seed is doing its miraculous dying, transforming into something bigger than its original form.

We plant our hope in the soil of God’s marvelous love. We believe earnestly, desperately, against all the odds that by placing our hopes here, there is a chance, a possibility of attaining that which we long for.

What do we long for? Freedom from the curse of sin. Restoration to our position as God’s sons and daughters. Paul says, “Even we Christians, although we have the Holy Spirit within us as a foretaste of future glory, also groan to be released from pain and suffering. We, too, wait anxiously for that day when God will give us our full rights as his children… Now that we are saved, we eagerly look forward to this freedom. For if you already have something, you don’t need to hope for it. But if we look forward to something we don’t have yet, we must wait patiently and confidently.” Romans 8:23-24

Like Paul, like David, like countless saints before, we are looking forward. We are waiting for something more. We are biding our time in confident hope for our good God to finish His good work.

We are looking forward to the new heavens and new earth he has promised, a world where everyone is right with God. And so, dear friends, while you are waiting for these things to happen, make every effort to live a pure and blameless life. And be at peace with God. And remember, the Lord is waiting so that people have time to be saved.                    2 Peter 3:13-15