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Long before Abraham
Lincoln became president, he had great compassion for the
plight of the slaves. On one occasion, he was passing the
slave market just in time to see a young black girl being
auctioned off. He noticed a man he knew, who was noted for
his cruelty, bidding on this particular girl and Mr. Lincoln
was constrained to stop and enter the bidding himself. He
won the bid and walked away with his ”property.” There was
a sullen, angry expression on the black girl’s face because
she knew in her heart that here was another white man who
had bought her and would abuse her.
As they walked
away from the slave block, however, Mr. Lincoln turned to
the young girl and said, ”You are free.” ”What does that mean?”
she demanded. ”It means, you are free,” Mr. Lincoln replied.
”Does it mean that I can be what I want to be?” she asked.
”Yes,” Mr. Lincoln said, ”you can be what you want to be.”
”Does it mean,” she went on, ”that I can go where I want to
go?” ”Yes, you can go where you want to go,” Mr. Lincoln reassured
her. ”Then,” her lips turning into a smile for the first time,
”Then, I’ll go with you!” she said happily.
Being purchased,
she chose to follow. Peter tells us, ”Forasmuch as ye know
that ye were not redeemed with corruptible things, as silver
and gold, from your vain conversation received by tradition
from your fathers; but with the precious blood of Christ.”
We, too, were
born into slavery. We were born into sin. ”Know ye not that
to whom ye yield yourselves servants to obey, his servants
ye are to whom ye obey; whether of sin unto death... or of
obedience unto righteousness?
We had no power
to redeem ourselves; we were in a hopeless condition without
Christ. Mr. Lincoln purchased the girl with silver and gold
but the Lord Jesus Christ redeemed us with his precious blood.
The young girl, being free, chose to follow the one who had
purchased her freedom. Do we willingly, gladly, and thankfully
follow the Lord Jesus who has redeemed us?
Without Jesus,
all we could look forward to was abuse as a result of sin.
As Paul put it, sin was reigning in our mortal body and we
obeyed it in the lusts thereof. All we had in our future was
sin and death. Not a pretty picture, but a true one. Then
Jesus redeemed us – for while we were yet sinners, Christ
died for us.
Do we respond to
the love of Christ by following him the way we should as a
result of his giving his life that through him we might have
life and have it without end?
Do we thank God,
that we were ”servants of sin, but we have now obeyed from
the heart that form of doctrine which was delivered unto us
that being now made free from sin we have become the servants
of righteousness?”
”Now that we have
been made free from sin, and become servants to God, we have
our fruit unto holiness, and the end everlasting life. For
the wages of sin is death; but the gift of God is eternal
life through Jesus Christ our Lord.”
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