“For
even the Son of Man did not come to be served, but to serve, and to
give His life a ransom for many."
Mark 10:45
Mark 10:45
As
long as there have been villains who are willing to kill and hurt
innocents for profit, there have been wealthy people willing to pay
the bad guys off so that it doesn’t happen. Since there is no
standard rate for a kidnapping, the size of the ransom doesn’t
depend on the value of the victim, as much as the bank account of the
one paying the tab.
In
1932 Charles Lindbergh paid $50,000 to the kidnappers of his son,
only to discover later that they murdered the boy even before the
ransom was paid.
The
ransom of Patty Hearst was $6 million in 1974. The enormity of
the sum shocked many people, but 22 years later Hong Kong tycoon, Li Ku
Shing, paid $134 million for the release of his son.
Historically,
these prices are low. When Julius Cesar was 25 years old, he was
captured by Sicilian pirates and ransomed for 8,522 pounds of silver.
King Richard the Lion-Hearted was released by his captors after
65,000 pounds of silver was paid, the modern equivalent of $3.3
Billion. Atahualpa, emperor of the Incan Empire was strangled by
Spanish Conquistadors after 13,000 pounds of gold and 26,000 pounds
of silver were paid for his release (roughly $34 billion today).
But
none of these compares to the ransom paid by Jesus Christ for
the lost human race. There are no deeper pockets than those found on
the Creator of the Stars. He could have made a solid gold planet or
listed a galaxy on the real estate exchange, but none of these could
ransom mankind” (1 Peter 1:18-19).
In
giving the only thing in heaven that couldn’t be recreated, God
overpaid for the deliverance of sinful man. Jesus paid it all and for
all. He’s not only the ransom for many, He’s the ransom
for all (1 Timothy 2:6). Not everyone is saved, because not
everyone responds in faith to the salvation that is already paid for.
What a pity!
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