Finding freedom

If you were to ask one hundred random people what freedom means, most of them will tell you something that looks like, sounds like, or maybe even feels like freedom, but really isn’t. 

People regularly show a total incomprehension of freedom by their perpetual abuse of it.

They settle for all sorts  settling for a myriad of experiences and states-of-being that are freedom-ish, but in and of themselves are not genuine freedom. They define freedom with things like:

  • Being able to do whatever you want.
  • Being able to be whoever you want.
  • Not being obligated to anyone else.
  • Being able believe whatever you want.
Wave the flag, catch the baseball and pass the apple pie. Call in Toby Keith and Lee Greenwood, the fireworks are about to start.

Contrary to popular opinion, freedom isn’t being unfettered from responsibility. It isn’t release from consequence or accountability. It isn’t entitlement, license, or absolution. It’s not unchecked, unregulated thoughts, attitudes, or actions.

  • Ask the alcoholic who needs an “eye opener” to get the day going, a lunch-time cocktail to make it to quitting time, and who can’t go home until he’s had a few drinks “to take the edge off” if he’s free.
  • Ask the porn addict who daily has to clear his internet history to hide his habit from his wife and children and is terrified of anyone using his computer, his tablet, or his phone if he’s free. 
  • Ask the shopaholic whose paycheck is gone before she gets it because she’s paying 30% interest on credit cards that are maxed out if she’s free.
  • Ask the gossip who nobody trusts and nobody opens up to, because she takes friends’ vulnerability and uses it to her own advantage if she’s free.
  • Ask the guy who’s working 80-hour weeks to pay for a home, cars, toys, and vacations he can’t afford if he’s free.
  • Ask the over-eater who can’t drive by the drive-thru line without stopping for a snack and a Super Sized drink if she’s free.
  • Ask the person who lies so much he can’t speak the truth and is so self-deceived he actually believes the lies he’s saying if he’s free.
  • Ask the person who explodes with anger at every conflict, lives in bitterness and blames everyone else for every problem she has if she is free.
  • Ask the church that is so mired in debt that it can’t pursue God’s mission if it is free.
  • Ask the church that is so focused on being hip, cool, and relevant that it can’t ever speak on moral issues and has lost its voice for crucial messages if it is free.
sometimes, what looks like flavored pretzels or boho jewelry are actually chains that bind

What’s sad is that if you were actually to ask them if they are free…most of them will not only affirm they are free, but will pound their chests in pride about it.

Indeed, if there is anything that has mastered the ability to deceive the “duck test,” it’s the lambskin-wearing wolf of slavery draped in the faux fur-lined cloak of freedom.

No one ever experiences freedom until and unless he has been unshackled from that which holds them in bondage. Only then may he be free to chase this most noble pursuit. However if the now-free person chooses to instead pursue a different quarry, he unfortunately will capture only another oppressor, another enslaver.

To understand freedom, you must understand why you have been created. If you believe that you were created to enjoy the sensuous pleasures of life, that is what you will pursue. Subsequently, you will be enslaved by that those things that you think make you free, imprisoning you in sensuous torture. If you believe you were created to fulfill the consuming appetite of vanity, then you will be shackled poolside, wasting away your life gazing in Narcissisine puddles that appear much deeper than they actually be. As a humbled man once said, “I gave my heart to know knowledge and madness and folly. I now perceive that I was grasping at the wind.”

Freedom is described by but not defined by what you have been freed from; rather, freedom is defined by what you have been freed for. You have been created for the purpose of loving the one who loved you first. If (and when) If you pursue your loving Creator, only then can you be free. If you chase any other purpose in life, then no matter how free you may feel, you are really living under bondage.

Freedom is the ability to pursue without restraint who God created you to be.

Here’s the fun…and funky…part of being set free by loving your Creator. You experience and express this freedom by being…you gotta be kidding me…in bondage to Him. The only way to experience true freedom is by doing what the Creator has called you to do, exactly as He called you to do it, for as long as He called you to do it.

And nothing else.

Quite a simple paradox. Compounding the simplicity of it all is that you do not earn God’s love by what you do (for this is the mark of a slave). Instead, you are empowered, enabled, equipped to do God’s will because of His love (which, by nature, is a distinction of freedom’s empowerment). You do not “do” because of who you hope to be, you “do” because of who He promised that you already are. “Doing” is the expression of your freedom. By refusing to “do” as freedom’s manifestation, you demonstrate only an ongoing bondage of self-incarceration. (I had to re-read that a couple of times to make sure I understood it. And I wrote it. So read it as many times as necessary to get it, too.)

Do not fear the prospect of being a slave to God. After all, the yoke of the God is light. Much lighter, in fact, than the one from which you have previously been freed.

Your joy is complete only when you are free to accomplish that for which you are created. You are only free when you are worshipping God with every breath, every thought, every step, every deed of your life.

You will know the truth, and the truth will set you free.

Jesus

Immerse Day 14 Observations

Text: Galatians

  • Overview: This letter is pointed, addressing a specific attack on the doctrine of grace.
  • Paul identifies himself as the author, noting that he is apostle appointed by Jesus himself (and by God, who raised Jesus from the dead).
  • He dives right in, not devoting much content to pleasantries (apart from a brief, gracious greeting), exclaiming his alarm that the Galatians are departing so swiftly from the truth that he had brought them.
    • He tells them that the message that they are now following is not good news at all, and an entirely different Gospel that what he had shared with them.
    • He proclaims that God’s curse is on anyone who would preach an alternative Gospel than the one shared by authentic Christians (this alternative Gospel being anything that deviates from authentic Christianity).
    • Paul acknowledges that this bold statement steps on some toes, but he only seeks to please God.
Larry David gets it.
  • Paul explains that his message is not of human origin, but comes directly from Jesus.
    • This is the same Jesus he zealously persecuted earlier in life, when he hunted down Christians and had them imprisoned and put to death.
    • Yet, he declares that before he had been born God had chosen him and called him by grace for this work that he was now doing.
    • He recounted his history of conversion, giving them a historical timeline of his walk of faith and highlighting the pervasiveness of grace he has experienced that has made his ministry possible.
      • He mentions an experience where he had experienced conflict that was similar to what he was addressing now with the Galatians. When it had happened earlier, he sought (and received) agreement from the Jerusalem Apostles because he wanted to be certain that he himself wasn’t the one teaching aberrant doctrine. The Apostles agreed with him, and they were unified that they wanted to preserve the true Gospel and protect it from heretical teachings that attempted to add additional requirements to the grace of God.
      • The Apostles added nothing to Paul’s teaching and recognized that he had been set apart to take the Gospel to the Gentile world, just as Peter had been appointed to the Jewish world — both of whom were serving the same Lord with the same message.
    • Yet, despite this initial agreement (or perhaps more accurately, because of it), Paul later opposed Peter to his face when he witnessed Peter behaving hypocritically when he initially would eat with Gentiles but later would not when he was in the presence of other Jews. This hypocrisy was soon mimicked by other Christians, including Barnabas.
      • Paul made the point to Peter that to return to these old ways and to abandon grace was to rebuild that which has been torn down.
      • He explained that because of grace he had stopped living for the law that could only condemn, which freed him to begin living for God.
      • understated point: to live in Christ means to identify that the old (pre-belief) life has been crucified (put to death) with Jesus when he died on the cross. The new life is realized (experienced) because of and in the power of the resurrected Jesus.
  • Focusing on the main point of his letter, he takes them back to the origins of their new faith in Jesus, explaining that it came as a result of the Holy Spirit, and not in following the laws of Moses. Therefore, it was illogical and unreasonable to go back to the law to try to add to the grace God has shown them.
  • He then educates them on Abraham, the familiar father of their religion. Paul illuminates that God’s favor shown to Abraham was grace, and his belief in God’s promises was credited to Abraham as righteousness, apart from obedience to the law (which had not yet been given).
  • understated point: it is by faith (alone) that a righteous person has life.
    • The promises God gave to Abraham were not undone, cancelled, or surpassed by the law God gave to Moses 430 years later.
    • The law was given, therefore, to show people their sin. As such, the law cannot give life, it can only bring death.
    • The law exists to show the holiness of God and the depravity of man – the vast chasm between them.
    • In this, the law serves as a guardian to people that speaks to the human conscience, until Jesus was revealed as the way from death to life, available to all people everywhere,
    • To further illustrate this truth, he compares people’s relationship to the law as children who are heirs to a wealth who are under a guardian until they are old enough to claim what is theirs. The law is that guardian that controls and directs people. Jesus, though, came and lived to pay the price to free all people who are subject to the law’s enslavement/guardianship.
    • Now, because of Jesus, you are no longer a slave of the law, but you are an adopted child of God.
  • Paul appeals to the Galatians to live in their freedom, rather than choosing to return to their enslavement to the law.
    • He tells them that the false teachers who were advocating this old way were people with bad intentions.
  • To further illustrate the argument of living under grace, Paul returns to Abraham, but this time illustrates the point by showing them how Isaac was a child of God’s promise, but Ishmael was a child of human effort.
    • God’s promise was long in development, but Abraham always believed God, and increasingly expected it to happen.
    • More specifically, Hagar (the handmaiden) represents Mount Sinai where the law (that brings death) was given, and Sarah (Abraham’s wife) represents Jerusalem, the free city.
    • The Galatians were like now like Isaac, free children of promise, who were now being persecuted by children of Mt. Sinai (a picture of Ishmael’s persecution of Isaac).
    • Just as Hagar and Ishmael were expelled, Paul exhorted the Galatians to expel the heretics now.
    • understated point: determine to stay free! Refuse to be enslaved to the law again.
      • if you choose to be enslaved by even one law (in the case of the Galatians, it was a post-belief requirement to be circumcised), then you are submitting yourself to the requirement of keeping all the law.
      • don’t miss this: what matters (what is important) is faith expressing itself in love.
  • Paul reminded the Galatians that they had started well in their belief, but this new teaching was a sin that was poisoning their faith.
  • He told them that their freedom in Christ was the new paradigm that gave them life.
    • He warned them not to misuse their freedom to fulfill selfish (sexual) desires.
    • Rather, he told them to love and serve one another.
  • He explained that their ability to accomplish this was found in letting the Holy Spirit guide their lives.
    • The human nature continually wars against the Holy Spirit.
    • But because you, Christian, are controlled by/ are free in the Holy Spirit, you are not enslaved to the cravings of your fallen human nature.
    • Human nature-controlled behaviors are predictable, and consistently destructive and divisive. People whose lives are characterized by these behaviors will not inherit the Kingdom of God.
    • Similarly, Spirit-controlled behaviors are predictable and consistently constructive, unifying, and God-glorifying. These behaviors are known as the “Fruit of the Spirit” because these are the expressions or manifestations of God’s Spirit inner-workings in a believer’s life.
    • There is no law against these expressions of the faith life.
    • Paul exclaims, because we live in the Spirit, let us follow the Spirit!
  • Paul also encourages the Galatians to help restore fellow believers who stumble in their grace walk (or sin in any general manner).
    • He warns them to be gentle and humble in this gracious work of restoration, and to not fall into the same sins that ensnared those they are restoring.
    • understated point: share one another’s burdens, and in so doing you fulfill the law of Christ (the singular law to love others sacrificially)
    • He also admonishes them not to think they’re too important to help others. Because they aren’t.
one gentle serving of humble pie, coming up
  • Interestingly, in the shadow of the command to help cary one another’s burden, Paul admonishes them to work hard to live a life free of comparison, because we are each responsible for our own conduct.
  • He offers some final directions:
    • Don’t think that God can be mocked, you’ll harvest whatever you plant.
      • If you live for the flesh, you’ll harvest the fruit of human nature.
      • If you life for the Spirit, you’ll harvest the fruit of the Spirit.
    • understated point Never grow weary doing good!
    • What counts is whether or not we’ve been transformed into a new creation.
      • That’s all.
      • Nothing else.
      • In Jesus, you are the new people of God.
      • Don’t bother Paul with this nonsense again.
so there you go!
  • Grace to you, Galatians (and gentle readers!)