Jesus Is Savior

THE HERO GAP

June 2, 2026

Christian Standard

This Communion meditation contrasts human heroism with Christ’s saving work, reminding believers that Jesus does not merely extend life—he gives eternal life through his body and blood.

Jesus Is Savior, Not Just a Hero

This Communion meditation reflects on the difference between extending life and giving eternal life. While human courage can be heroic and deeply meaningful, only Christ saves from sin and death. At the Lord’s Table, believers remember the gift of eternal life purchased through Jesus’ body and blood.

  • Nurses and heroes often give sacrificially to preserve life.
  • Scripture teaches that sin brings death, but God gives eternal life in Christ.
  • Communion reminds believers that Jesus is not merely a hero but the Savior.

By Erick Riddle

Someone noticed the print on the back of a T-shirt worn by a nurse in a hospital. It read, “Save a life and you’re a hero. Save a hundred lives and you’re a nurse.”

It was more than the bright colors of the shirt that caught attention. The message pointed to the value of the work nurses perform every day. They often labor 8, 12, even 16 hours a day. In just one shift, nurses may rescue several people. Yet they rarely appear on the news or receive awards for their efforts. Their work is usually quiet, steady, and unseen.

Human Courage Has Limits

We are grateful to heroes and nurses who give of themselves to benefit someone else. Most of us have heard moving stories about people sacrificing their lives for others. Some for one, some for many. Some died for loved ones, some for people they had never seen.

We thank God for their skill and dedication. But even at their best, human acts of courage have limits. This is where Scripture gives us a deeper perspective on what it means to truly save a life.

There is a gap our heroes cannot cross. A bridge they cannot build. Their actions prolong life, but they cannot grant life that lasts forever.

The Gift of Eternal Life

The Bible teaches us that very clearly. Romans 3:23 informs us, “all have sinned.” Later in his letter, the Apostle Paul reminds us, “the wages of sin is death” (Romans 6:23). The distinction between saved and extended is important.

Jesus was not a hero. He is our Savior. He did not risk his life, he gave it. He has not extended our lives. By his sacrifice he has saved and instilled eternal life in his followers.

We might read a little further in Romans 6:23. We often stop after, “the wages of sin is death.” That verse goes on to instruct us: “but the free gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord.”

Remembering the Savior at the Lord’s Table

At the Lord’s Table, we remember not an act of heroism but the ultimate gift—eternal life purchased by Christ’s body and blood.

We don’t honor someone who extended life. We worship the giver of eternal life. The bread and the cup remind us of the price paid to save us from death and give us everlasting life. It was the body and the blood of our Lord that purchased life for us.

Christian Standard
Author: Christian Standard

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