Seasons of Salvation:
Saved by his life
"These things are written that you may
believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God, and that by believing you may have life
in his name" (John 20:31).
Which events of Jesus' life do you think were
insignificant? Which of the things he said or did is not worth taking notice of, or
remembering, or examining?
As soon as we ask the question, the answer
becomes obvious: if God considered any event of Jesus' life worth recording for us, he
must consider that event to be important for us.
The life of Jesus has the power to save us.
The events that make up his life—what he said and what he did (Acts 1:1)—can be used to
lead us to the belief and faith that result in salvation. As we immerse ourselves in
them they can strengthen our conviction (Luke 1:4) and establish us in the truth (2 Peter
1:8, 12).
Every recorded event of Jesus' life has
lessons for us. The events of Jesus' life are recorded for us to remember, study,
re-enact, commemorate and meditate upon.
By regularly doing this—for instance, by an
annual cycle that keeps returning us to events in the life of Jesus Christ—we grow in
faith, we draw closer to the heart of God and we are increasingly equipped to produce
fruit for our Lord.
The events of Jesus' life exercise their
power in our lives only to the degree that we remember them. We are called to do more than
just read about them or study them; we are called to experience Jesus' life by celebrating
and even re-enacting major events.
If events of the past are allowed to remain
nothing more than a written record, they lose part of their power. When we turn those past
events into ongoing celebrations, lives continue to be transformed.
Ancient Israel's experience teaches us the
value of such an annual rehearsal of God's acts of salvation. Every year they rehearsed
the great salvation events of their history, the events in which God acted to save them.
Their weekly Sabbath and annual festivals
were designed to remind them how God had freed them from their slavery in Egypt
(Deuteronomy 5:12-15; Exodus 12:11-12, 26-27, 42; 13:3,8-10; Deuteronomy 16:10-12;
Leviticus 23:43).
By celebrating this way they annually
remembered what God had done for them, they renewed and deepened their relationship with
God, and they remembered their responsibility to God.
And they were not restricted to worshiping on
those days alone. They continued to see the hand of God in their history long after the
Exodus, and so they created additional days of worship to remember and celebrate his
intervention, power and love.
For example, they instituted fasts in the
fourth, fifth, seventh and 10th months to remember the destruction of Jerusalem and the
temple by Babylon, and the beginning of their exile (Zechariah 7:5; Jeremiah 52:12; 2
Kings 25:8-25; Zechariah 8:19; 2 Kings 25:1; Jeremiah 39:2).
And when God delivered them from persecution
by Haman through Esther in the fifth century B.C., they commemorated his deliverance by
creating the Feast of Purim (Esther 9:27-28).
After God delivered them from the oppression
of Antiochus Epiphanes in the second century B.C., they instituted the Feast of Hanukkah,
mentioned in John 10:22, as a festival of remembrance and rejoicing.
Like Israel, we Christians have a great
salvation-event to remember. Unlike Israel's, ours is not just a salvation event. It is
the salvation event: the life, death and resurrection of Jesus Christ by which we are
saved from sin and death.
Unlike the old covenant, which God made with
the nation of Israel, the new covenant, which he has made with his church, contains no
commanded days of worship.
Under the new covenant, the church is free to
designate days on which to celebrate and re-enact God's act of salvation in Jesus Christ.
Those celebrations can draw upon imagery from some of the festivals of Israel, which,
while they looked back to that nation's salvation from Egypt, also can remind us of a
greater salvation, which has now come in Jesus Christ.
Or they can be Christian celebrations at
various times of the year, designed to remember and celebrate events of the life of Jesus.
The church is not commanded to adopt worship
celebrations for all the events of the Gospels, but it is permitted to adopt as many
worship celebrations as it feels appropriate.
And the church is free both to reinterpret
the festivals of Israel, and to create new festivals, to remember the life of Jesus
through whom we have salvation.
Which events in Jesus' life are significant
enough to remember? Any and all of them. If an event of his life was significant enough to
be recorded in Scripture, it is significant enough for us to remember and to celebrate.
Don Mears, 1998 
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