Wednesday 2 May 2012

The Best Samaritan



 The name of Clare Squires probably meant nothing to you until last month.  She was one of the tens of thousands who took part in the London Marathon the other Sunday morning, but sadly she did not reach the finish.  Just a mile from the end of the twenty six miles and 385 yards she tragically collapsed and died, the eleventh person to do so in the history of the event.

          What has happened since has been nothing short of amazing.  Clare was running in aid of The Samaritans, a worthwhile charity who had helped her family in the past.  By the time of the race she had already raised about £500, but in response to the tragedy that sum has, at the time I write this, already topped the million pound mark.  Television brings the reality of these distant events into our living rooms, and new technology like the internet and mobile phones enables people to give instantly.  When a young person is suddenly taken like this, particularly when they were busy doing something judged by people to be so commendable, people will respond generously.

          Though given the choice Clare’s family and friends would prefer to still have her with them, they are no doubt comforted by the great good that her death has done.  This would not have happened if she had crossed the finishing line like everyone else.  There are many more who will benefit from her passing than would have done otherwise, as the Samaritans put that finance to good use.

          The Samaritans of course, take their name from one of the parables of the Lord Jesus Christ.  It was Him that I thought of as I have followed the story.  The Good news of the Gospel is that we can benefit from the life of the Lord Jesus Christ, but even more so from His death.  We are saved because He came to earth as man and lived amongst us.  He went about doing good to people, not raising money to help others heal people and help them with their problems, but actually doing that miraculously himself.  He healed the sick, gave eyesight to the blind, made disabled people fit and well and even raised the dead.  He taught about God and His kingdom showing us the only way to Heaven was through Him.  And most importantly, He lived a life of entire obedience to His Father in Heaven, whose will He lived to complete.

          But we could not be saved by His life alone, as perfect as it was.  As strange as it sounds, we benefit even more from His death.  Such is the holiness of God, and the deadly nature of our sinfulness and failure that a perfect sacrifice was needed.  Someone had to die in our place.  Only Jesus, the perfect man who is God, could do that.  The Bible tells us that if we believe in the Lord Jesus Christ our sins are put to his account and paid for on the cross of Calvary.  In return we are credited with His righteousness, so that as God looks at us He does not see our sin but the perfection of Christ’s life.
          Our hearts go out to the family of Clare Squires, and trust that all that has been given in her memory will do much good.  But we need to be ready for the day when we are called from this world too.  Are you?                 

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