Thursday, March 17, 2016

16 March

Three months later, he was baptised. He told me, ‘I’m free of my previous life. I was a slave to a lot of things. I was a slave to society, a slave to my peers... But now I’m free to live my life. I’m excited to see what God’s got in store for me.’ Salvation means freedom. Sam had an experience of how Jesus Christ sets us free.

Even John’s name was an expression of God’s blessings – it means ‘the Lord is a gracious giver’.

It was said of John the Baptist, ‘The Lord’s hand was with him’ (v.66). That is a good prayer to pray for yourself, your family and your community: that the Lord’s hand will be with you.

Zechariah was filled with the Spirit and prophesied that salvation was coming. He said, ‘He set the power of salvation in the centre of our lives’ (v.69, MSG). John the Baptist was to ‘present the offer of salvation to his people, the forgiveness of their sins’ (v.77, MSG).

God reminds Moses that any kind of sin is actually an act of unfaithfulness to God: ‘Any man or woman who wrongs another in any way and so is unfaithful to the Lord is guilty’ (5:6). The guilty person is required to confess their sin, make restitution for it and offer a sacrifice of atonement (vv.6–8).

We cannot make atonement for ourselves. Atonement has to be made for us. That is what Jesus did on the cross. A simplified definition of atonement is ‘at-one-ment’ – in other words, God enabled you to be at one with him. The barrier of sin was removed through Jesus so that you and I can say, ‘I was a slave. Now I’m free’.

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