Lenten Meditation: You are not your own

1 Corinthians 6: 19b-20a

You are not your own; you were bought at a price.

There is a well known story with a number of variations, all involving a scorpion that stings a good-souled frog/turtle/crocodile/person who tries to rescue it from drowning.    Since the sting dooms the rescuer and as a result the scorpion as well,  the scorpion explains “to sting is in my nature”.   In one version, the rescuer tries again and again to help the scorpion, repeatedly getting stung, only to explain before he dies  “it may be in your nature to sting but it is in my nature to save.”

This is actually a story originating from Eastern religion and thought, the purpose of which is to illustrate the “dharma”, or orderly nature of things.  The story ends perfectly for the Eastern religions believer even though both scorpion and the rescuer die in the end, as the dharma of the scorpion and of the rescuer is realized, no matter what the outcome.  Things are what they are, without judgment,  and actualization of that nature is the whole point.

However, this story only resonates for the Christian if the nature of the scorpion is forever transformed by the sacrifice of the rescuer on its behalf.   The scorpion is no longer its own so no longer slave to its “nature”.  It is no longer just a scorpion with a need and desire to sting whatever it sees.  It has been “bought” through the sacrifice of the rescuer.

So we too are no longer our own, no longer who we used to be before we were rescued.  We are bought at a price beyond imagining.  And our nature to hurt, to punish, to sting shall be no more.

1 Corinthians 15: 55

Where, O death, is your victory?  Where, O death,  is your sting?