Jer. 20:7, 10-13; Rom. 5:12-15; Mt. 10:26-33
A young prince once asked an old wise man, “What is the greatest prison in the world?” The old man smiled and handed him a copy of John Bunyan’s The Pilgrim’s Progress. As the prince read, he came across the journey of Christian, the pilgrim, who left the City of Destruction in search of the Celestial City. Along the way, Christian was mocked, threatened, imprisoned, and tempted to abandon his journey. At one point he was locked inside the terrible Doubting Castle by Giant Despair. The giant constantly whispered to him, “Give up. There is no hope. No one will rescue you.” Christian almost believed the lie. But one night he remembered that he carried in his pocket a small key called Promise. With that key he unlocked every door of the prison and walked out into freedom.
John Bunyan himself wrote this masterpiece while imprisoned for preaching the Gospel. The authorities could imprison his body, but they could not imprison his faith. They could chain his hands, but not his hope. They could silence his voice in the marketplace, but not the truth that echoed through generations. Bunyan teaches us a lesson that perfectly introduces today's Gospel. Fear is the greatest prison. It is fear that keeps us silent when we should speak, inactive when we should act, and