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BASED IN NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE, THESE ARE MORNING DEVOTIONALS BY RICH FORBES. HIS POSTS EXPLORE CHRISTIANITY THROUGH PRAYER AND SCRIPTURE.

Jesus Christ, The Gift We Can’t Possibly Repay

09/03/2025

 

What do we do with the fruit of great sacrifices that have been made for us? Do we take them like provisions into our larder? Do we consume them like fine wine? Or perhaps we attempt to distribute them among the deserving? This begs the ultimate question of faith... what are we doing with the great sacrifice of Christ, and what are we doing with the blood offering of Jesus? There are certain things that people give us, and blessings that God lavishes upon us that are just too great to accept easily unto ourselves. Let's look in scripture at a bible story that might help us understand this...

 

“And David said longingly, "Oh, that someone would give me water to drink from the well of Bethlehem that is by the gate!" Then the three mighty men broke through the camp of the Philistines and drew water out of the well of Bethlehem that was by the gate and carried and brought it to David. But he would not drink of it. He poured it out to the Lord and said, "Far be it from me, O Lord, that I should do this. Shall I drink the blood of the men who went at the risk of their lives?" Therefore he would not drink it. These things the three mighty men did.”

2 Samuel 23:15-17 ESV 

 

David would not accept the risk that these men placed their lives at. He could not accept and drink the offering of water because it was too great a gift. How could he ever repay them for such an act? So, David gave that gift to God. This was a touchy situation wasn't it? If he simply refused the gift it would turn these men's hearts against him, so what to do that would both honor them and yet relieve him of the debt he owed them. David chose wisely to offer the water to God... He alone could repay such an act of love.

 

We can also draw a direct correlation between this "blood of the men who went at the risk of their lives", and the blood of Christ that was offered in communion and on the cross. Like David, how do we accept the life that Jesus gave for us? Can we ever hope to repay Him for it? Well, the answer is no... so we pour out our lives, and the gift of redemption they contain, to God; we return to Him what His Son has purchased for us... a sin-free life, and we do this at the altar when we accept Jesus as our Lord and Savior. Pastor Oswald Chambers wrote of such offerings in this way...

 

"There are certain acts of other people which one could never accept if one did not know God, because it is not within human power to repay them. But immediately I say - This is too great and worthy for me, it is not meant for a human being at all, I must pour it out unto the Lord, then those things pour out in rivers of living Water all around." - Oswald Chambers

 

Jesus sets the value we should place on a life that is offered and it is beyond our ability to repay without giving our own. The scripture I am thinking of reads this way:

 

“"This is my commandment, that you love one another as I have loved you. Greater love has no one than this, that someone lay down his life for his friends.”

John 15:12-13 ESV 

 

Jesus tells us to give the gift of love He has given us to our neighbors, and, we understand now, that the gift from Him culminated in His death on the cross. So, we give our lives to Him... to God... and then that offering of ourselves is measured out to all those who come in contact with us. The Love offering Jesus gave us on Calvary was the greatest gift we could possibly receive and is meant to be sanctified and spread by God in ways we ourselves are incapable of. The sacrifice of the Son returns to the Father when we give ourselves to Him... and allow Our Holy Father to share us with many.

 

Some gifts that are indeed too great to receive... Have we, or someone we love, been the recipient of such a gift from another in our lives? Perhaps we know the recipient of a donated organ? Do we know a person who was given the gift of life by a person or family that loved others in a way that was so great that it manifested itself as a love offering of life to them out of the very tragedy of death a family was facing? What did they do with this gift of life which was given to them? I hope it was poured out to the Lord and is now being used by Him every day as they touch others.

 

Sacrifices of life... they represent unredeemable gifts to us, and offerings that only God can repay. The parents that give up their lives to care for a handicapped child, the soldier that saves a comrade's life at the expense of his own, the man who donates his organs at death, or the fireman that runs into a burning building to retrieve a victim... all of these things and more provide someone with a gift too great for them to repay. So rather than trivializing it, or letting it eat away at you b y asking “Why?”, the appropriate thing to do is to honor the sacrifice by pouring it out to God and then letting Him repay the debt through you.

 

Are you pouring out the gift of Christ before God? Are you allowing Him to redistribute the love contained in you through the sacrifice of Christ? Or have you simply accepted this gift as belonging solely to you? Think about this today...

 

Prayer:

 

Father, I thank you for receiving the gifts that I now lay before you, gifts that are too great for me to accept unto myself. I thank you for those priceless sacrifices made on my behalf, and I honor those who gave them by placing them at your feet. Take these gifts Lord, especially those that are represented by my life, and do with them as your will dictates. Use them, use me, to facilitate your will and great purposes.  Lord your wisdom, mercy, and grace, serve to repay the greatest offerings and blessings in my life, and only you know how to use them to such a degree that they honor their giver completely. Take my life, saved by the blood of Christ, that was so painfully offered; take the life He lavished in love upon me. Take this gift that I consume and remember in communion and return it in love to all those around me. Holy Father, I know that Jesus died for me, an undeserving sinner, and gave me a gift I can’t possibly repay. I offer it to you Lord and ask that you make me Holy and righteous by your Son’s redemptive power, and purify me through His sacrifice. Accept my life that I now offer to you in love, and use me to do your will, and bring you honor and glory forever. Hear this my prayer and know that I worship, praise, and love you with all my heart, mind, soul, and strength… you are my God and there is no other. Holy, Holy, Holy, are you who was, and is, and is to come! And I cry out to you… Hallelujah! Hallelujah! Hallelujah!

 

AMEN!

 

Rich Forbes

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