One of the greatest mystery and a miracle that happens across the world is the act of redemption. How joyful is the soul that has broken free from the passions of the flesh and looks anew to the face of God. Herein let me relate three true stories of redemption.
Saint Augustine was a young man who lived an immoral life, but he was always in quest to search the answers for the fundamental questions of life. This led him to the group of thinking called Manichean sect. Augustine soon realized that while Manichaeism tends to promise answers to questions relating to God. It never did. In one summer, while he was sitting at his friend’s garden, weeping for his sins he heard a child singing in Latin from a neighboring house, “Tolle, lege! Tolle, lege!” (“Take up and read! Take up and read!”) Augustine thought to himself that these were strange words indeed for a child to be singing at play, and so he took them as from the Lord. Picking up a scroll, which lay at his friend’s side, he let his eyes rest on the words:
“… Not in revelry and drunkenness, not in lewdness and lust, not in strife and envy. But put on the Lord Jesus Christ, and make no provision for the flesh, to fulfill its lusts.” (Rom 13:13-14).
“No further would I read”, he wrote later, “nor had I any need; instantly at the end of this sentence, a clear light flooded my heart and all the darkness of doubt vanished away.”
John Wesley, the founder of Methodist movement, relates to his conversion like this.