Sing Redeemed
A story told by Paul Lee Tan illustrates the meaning of redemption:
When A. J. Gordon was pastor of a church in Boston, he met a young boy in front of the sanctuary carrying a rusty cage in which several birds fluttered nervously. Gordon inquired, “Son, where did you get those birds?”
The boy replied, “I trapped them out in the field.”
“What are you going to do with them?”
“Im going to play with them, and then I guess Ill just feed them to an old cat we have at home.”
Gordon offered to buy them, and the lad exclaimed, “Mister, you dont want them, theyre just little old wild birds and cant sing very well.”
Gordon replied, “Ill give you $2 for the cage and the birds.”
“Okay, its a deal, but youre making a bad bargain.”
The exchange was made and the boy went away whistling, happy with his shiny coins. Gordon walked around to the back of the church property, opened the door of the small wire coop, and let the struggling creatures soar into the blue.
The next Sunday he took the empty cage into the pulpit and used it to illustrate his sermon about Christs coming to seek and to save the lostpaying for them with His own precious blood. “That boy told me the birds were not songsters,” said Gordon, “but when I released them and they winged their way heavenward, it seemed to me they were singing, Redeemed, redeemed, redeemed!”
You and I have been held captive to sin, but Christ has purchased our pardon and set us at liberty. When a person has this life-changing experience, he will want to sing, “Redeemed, Redeemed, Redeemed!”