Reflection: Can you picture this extraordinary scene? In the strange fate of this moment, Jesus’ life is given over to the thumbs up or thumbs down of a crowd. Who will they choose? A violent criminal or an innocent man?
Can you hear the crowds? Crucify him, crucify him. They’re baying for Jesus’ blood. The chief priests and elders have Jesus’ blood on their hands. Pilate has
Jesus’ blood on his hands. And now this huge crowd have the blood of the son of God on their hands. And so do we. Jesus died in Barabbas’ place, and ours. If we hadn’t sinned, Jesus would not have needed to die.
Consider this: when Jesus dies, Barabbas goes free. And in this way Barabbas represents us all. When Jesus dies, the rebel goes free, the sinners go free, we all go free. What an extraordinary prelude to the death of Jesus! In this exchange, a guilty man walks free. You and I walk scot-free because of Jesus. We’re guilty. We know it. There is no hope for us outside of his grace; no hope for us outside of his love. And yet this is love: while we were still shaking our fists up at God, he sent his son to die for us. A son who is just like
him. A son who loved his enemies enough to die for them. Enemies like us.
This is love: not that we loved God, but that he loved us and sent his Son as an atoning sacrifice for our sins. 1 John 4:10
Question: How does this passage bring home the reality that Jesus died to set you free?
Prayer: Dear Jesus, I praise you today. Thank you, from the depths of my being, for what you did for me on that cross. Thank you for bearing my guilt, my sin. Thank you for your grace, and the hope that your love brings. Amen.
We are reading the Bible with Paul White until 7th April.