How much are you worth? According to the fount of academic
excellence known as Google (although other founts are available and may differ!), the
human body is worth anything from just under $1 to just over £1,000,000 for all the body parts (or more on the black market) via
$160 for the chemical elements. This month around Valentine's Day
many people will be using cards and gifts to express to their loved
ones how much they value them, though I doubt that many will express
that in monetary terms! A human being is perhaps the greatest
example of something being worth more than the sum of its parts.
I hope that you think that you are worth more than £1,000,000, but
there are many ways that we can be made to feel worthless. Adverts,
even ones that proclaim that “you're worth it!”, are designed to
make us feel inadequate or incomplete without whatever product
they're selling. Society too gives out the message that you're only
worth something if you're popular; or have the right sort of
education or job; or have a good background; or live in the nice
places; or own certain things; or contribute a certain amount to
society; or believe whatever that month's socially acceptable views
are. Valentine's Day too plays into this conditional valuing of
human life suggesting that you are only worth something if you have a
partner, and have had many partners.
So how can we assess how much we are worth? Well, one way we can do
think is to think about it in economic terms: something is worth
whatever someone will pay for it. For example, if I owned the Mona
Lisa and put it on an online auction site, if the highest bid for it
is £1 then that is how much the Mona Lisa is worth. But what about
us humans? Paul tells us that we have been bought at a price (1 Corinthians 6:20), we have been redeemed or bought back by God. And
what did he buy us back with? His own blood (Acts 20:28)! God, in
Jesus, bought each of us with his blood. You are worth the life of
the eternal God!!
But
that then begs the question of what God bought us back from. The
Bible reminds us that we have all sinned (Romans 3:23) and Jesus says
that those who sin are slaves to sin (John 8:34). As the wages of
sin is death (Romans 6:23), in order to redeem us from slavery to sin
Jesus paid the price necessary, which was his death in our place.
Therefore, “In [Jesus] we have redemption through
[Jesus'] blood, the forgiveness of sins, in accordance with the
riches of God’s grace that he lavished on us” (Ephesians 1:8).
But why did
God pay such a high price for us? Because our sin separates us from
him (Isaiah 59:2) yet because he loves us (1 John 4:9-10), he wants
to be reconciled with us (2 Corinthians 5:18-19). To be reconciled
with God we need to accept his offer of forgiveness and repent of our
sins.
If God sent
you a Valentine's Day card its picture would be of Jesus on the
cross, and the caption would say “This is how much I love you.
This is how much I think you're worth.”
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