Have you ever known someone, where
at some point, something went terribly wrong and one bad decision seemed to
pile on another? And maybe you thought,
“If they continue down this path, outside of a miracle of God, they are going
to wind up in either jail, the hospital, on the street or dead?
Jesus told a story about a young man
like this. One day he came to his father
in a spirit of anger and hate and demanded his inheritance while his father
still lived. His dad amazingly and
graciously complied and gave his younger son what he wanted. Then his son packed up his belongings and
abruptly left home and family. He
travelled far away to a large and bustling city, where bad decisions began to
mount. Jesus said he, “squandered his
property in reckless living” (Luke 15:13) and eventually he spent everything he
had been given. And things got worse
when a famine hit the region. He became
penniless, friendless, jobless, foodless and homeless. At this point in his life, his dad described
him dead and lost. Something had gone
wrong and he was speeding head-first down a path of destruction and ruin. His only hope was a miracle.
And that is what began to
happen! God’s invisible hand was
mysteriously working on the young man’s heart, where in a moment of wise
reflection he said to himself, “How many of my father’s hired servants have
more than enough bread, but I perish here with hunger!” (Luke 15:17)
This led to a key turning point where he stood up and began a long and
discouraging walk back home.
That miracle caused the young man’s
life to go from death to life and ruin to overflowing joy. What everyone else thought was impossible;
God knew was possible.
This is what Jesus was sent from
heaven to earth for. This is why he died
and rose again. To do miracles just like
this. When people are living for
themselves and leaving a wake of heartache and pain wherever they go, it is
easy to get frustrated and angry with them, to look down at them and write them
off. But God is merciful and
patient. He does not treat any of us as
we deserve. Instead, in His kindness, He
keeps drawing us to Himself until we humble ourselves and surrender all to Him.
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