Skip to main content

Freedom Choices

Hi all,
Happy Fourth of July.  By my rendering we are celebrating our 236 birthday!!!!  Not quite to Methuselah yet, but it's a good start.
I awoke this morning thinking about this Fourth of July and how we discover and really live in freedom.  Of course, there is no freedom outside of Christ.  I didn't say that, Jesus did.  John 8:34 (NIV) 
34 Jesus replied, "I tell you the truth, everyone who sins is a slave to sin.
and just a verse or two later, he says,
John 8:36 (NIV)
36 So if the Son sets you free, you will be free indeed.

What God has done for us in Christ is bring us out of a place where the master of our souls is the Fallen nature...not to say we can't or won't sin; but Sin is not our Master, as long as we seek a life in Christ, and seek His Kingdom first in our lives.  Consider this:

Exodus 6:6 (NIV)
6 "Therefore, say to the Israelites: 'I am the LORD, and I will bring you out from under the yoke of the Egyptians. I will free you from being slaves to them, and I will redeem you with an outstretched arm and with mighty acts of judgment.

Romans 6:18-23 (NIV)
18 You have been set free from sin and have become slaves to righteousness.
19 I put this in human terms because you are weak in your natural selves. Just as you used to offer the parts of your body in slavery to impurity and to ever-increasing wickedness, so now offer them in slavery to righteousness leading to holiness.
20 When you were slaves to sin, you were free from the control of righteousness.
21 What benefit did you reap at that time from the things you are now ashamed of? Those things result in death!
22 But now that you have been set free from sin and have become slaves to God, the benefit you reap leads to holiness, and the result is eternal life.
23 For the wages of sin is death, but the gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord.


My hearts desire is to live in such a way that the life of Jesus becomes more and more real in  each passing day.  I know that there is no perfection in me; but it doesn't mean that I can't be aware of Christ's life as each day comes along.  It's sort of like this:
We live in a land of freedom, but that freedom has come with a huge cost - the sacrifice of thousands upon thousands who both served and fought and died for that freedom to remain.  The founding fathers saw in our nation a place that they said was "a city set upon a hill", a biblical metaphor for the Psalmist portrayal of Jerusalem.
I don't believe that America is blessed above all other countries, and I don't believe that we are a Christian nation.  Our laws and government were put in place by people of moral conviction, and it's obvious that they had a strong Judeo-Christian ethic.


Freedom is not a religious exercise, it's a fundamental inward condition.

We are free because we walk out our lives as free people, not slaves.  But slavery is not an outward ball and chain as much as the inward disposition to claim our own ways and thereby set aside the superior wisdom and freedom of Christ.  I've seen free people in miserable conditions in the third world, and I've seen wealthy materialist people who are slaves to a miserable lifestyle of self.

We don't become free because we strive for individual selfish lives, but because we live our lives for a purpose much higher than ourselves.  We live for the eternity of God in Christ and the loveliness and freedom of his Kingdom.

Happy Fourth to you all,

Peace

Comments

Test said…
Thanks Elliot. I needed to hear this today.

Some of the thoughts you shared paralleled a post I wrote in January called Relentless God.

Be blessed, Jaime

Popular posts from this blog

Wednesday, Day 25: Christmas Eve - God Loves Us (So We Can Relax)

For Kids: There’s a lot of things we have to do each day. Get up from our sleep, Get dressed, Eat Breakfast, Get ready for School, Listen to the teacher, play with friends, eat our lunch, and after it’s all done, go back home. There’s time to play, Then we eat our supper… And eventually we have to get ready for bed and go to sleep! And then we do it all over again the next day. Sometimes there’s a vacation - like right now - and we get more time to play, to have fun and not have to do work at school. Our parents are good at helping us know what time it is and what we need to do next – even when we don’t want to move on to the next thing.  God is also good at helping us know what time it is, and what is next.  He doesn’t shout at us, or yell, or even scream…he does it peacefully, quietly.  He wants us to understand that he does it, most of all, for us. Christmas can be quite busy and there’s lots of things going on at once…but l...

Joy to the World - Help is On the Way

It’s the first day of Advent– while you prepare for Worship this morning at church take a minute to ask God to direct you through this season that you might be prepared to “receive your King”. In the first week of Advent we celebrate the PROMISE of His Coming. His promise is based on our need. We were made in his image, but there is emptiness in our soul that is the result of the Fallen nature of sin. But why did Jesus come? What in his coming announces God's heart? His desire for us to know and experience? 10 BUT THE ANGEL SAID TO THEM, "DO NOT BE AFRAID; FOR BEHOLD, I BRING YOU GOOD NEWS OF GREAT JOY WHICH WILL BE FOR ALL THE PEOPLE; 11 FOR TODAY IN THE CITY OF DAVID THERE HAS BEEN BORN FOR YOU A SAVIOR, WHO IS CHRIST THE LORD. GREAT JOY! Did you know that God is Joyful? 1 CHRONICLES 16:23-27 (NASB) 23 SING TO THE LORD, ALL THE EARTH; PROCLAIM GOOD TIDINGS OF HIS SALVATION FROM DAY TO DAY. 24 TELL OF HIS GLORY AMONG THE NATIONS, HIS WONDERFUL DEEDS AMONG ALL THE PEOPLES....

The Gospel of Matthew - Coming: An Exposition and Devotional on the Life of Jesus

Preface  I just finished writing a daily devotional of the book of Matthew with an emphasis on expositing the text and bringing some daily devotional thoughts to the text.  It will be a 40-day journey reading the book of Matthew and the things I wrote within it. Why do it?  Well, first of all, I have loved reading the Scripture for over 50 years now.  I taught the Scriptures on multiple levels from Sunday messages in a Church, to Bible Studies, to Young Adults' discipleship formation, to lectures in a college setting.  I love the Scriptures because it is the Word of God delivered to us from God through human authors, and as Paul reminded Timothy, “it is profitable”. Matthew was a disciple of Jesus, also called Levi, he was not like most of the other disciples. Many of the disciples were middle-class, some commoners, and several were fishermen by trade (which made them middle-class commoners).  We don't know what all of them did, but we do know what Matthew ...