“We are more than conquerors through Him Who loved us.” “It is for freedom that Christ has set us free.” “Where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is freedom.”
Freedom.
It feels like our worship leaders always quote this during an interlude and we rejoice in it, but how does this freedom affect our lives? What does it free us to do, exactly? Why are we said to be free yet so often called slaves and servants of God and to righteousness?
There is an important distinction: we have been freed from something, but also for something. Freedom from death, freedom for righteousness.
The primary freedom for those in Christ is from the spiritual and eternal death that results from our sin.
At one time we were slaves to sin, slaves to our passions and desires, to that which cannot fully satisfy. We were slaves, because we were unable to do any differently. We were unable to change our desires, our feelings, our thoughts, our actions.
On our own, we cannot seek God, "no one can come to [Him] unless the Father draws him" (John 6:44). It is He Who gives us the faith to trust in Him. It is that faith which leads us to repentance, to seeing God for Who He is, and, subsequently, ourselves for who we are in comparison to Him. No one trusting in self or sin will inherit Heaven. “And such were some of you. But you were washed, you were sanctified, you were justified in the Name of the Lord Jesus Christ and by the Spirit of our God” (1 Corinthians 6:11).
Through Christ, we are freed from death.
But there is another aspect to this freedom. Through Christ, we are also freed for day-to-day obedience to the Son and the sanctification of the Spirit.
But there is another aspect to this freedom. Through Christ, we are also freed for day-to-day obedience to the Son and the sanctification of the Spirit.
Jesus told His disciples He no longer called them slaves but sons. Slaves do not know the Master’s business, they only do as directed. As sons, there is more than mere duty behind the actions; it is imitation of a father by his child. It is motivated by love and respect and admiration.
In other chapters, Jesus says that we are servants of righteousness. “So you also, when you have done all that you were commanded, say, ‘We are unworthy servants; we have only done what was our duty’” (Luke 17:10). How can both be true? How can we be slaves and also not slaves?
In the former, Jesus talks about motivation-- why we obey. The latter is directed toward our attitude-- how we obey, how we react to that obedience. “Does [the master] thank the servant because he did what was commanded?” No, it “was our duty.” This speaks to our sense of entitlement. We think God owes us something, because we’ve obeyed a few of the commands He died to equip us to carry out. “It is He Who works in us, both to will and to work according to His good pleasure” (Philippians 2:13). It is “He Who began a good work in you” and will “carry it on to completion” (Philippians 1:6). Though we must consciously fight against sin, it is “not I, but the grace of God that is with me” (1 Corinthians 15:10). Servants of righteousness.
We are freed from who are were so that we might become like Christ. But we can't embrace who we are in Christ if we don't separate from who we were before Him. We must renounce sin and replace it with what is right. To not only “hate what is evil,” but also to “cling to what is good” (Romans 12:9). To not only remove “filthiness, foolish talk, and coarse joking, which are out of place among the saints,” but to fill your mouths with “thanksgiving” (Ephesians 5).
Removing sin without replacing it with obedience is to open the door for bitterness. We're tempted to fill our mind with what we’ve been “deprived” of. We're tempted to see God as a bit of a cosmic buzzkill.
This is where Satan got Eve: she focused on being commanded not to eat from one single tree, forgetting her freedom to enjoy the fruit of every other tree in the garden. And she fell to that temptation. We cannot think Christianity is simply to “deny yourself.". It is also to “take up your cross, and follow [Christ],” to become like Him, your desires aligned with His. To “renew your mind” and act accordingly (Romans 12:2).
This is where Satan got Eve: she focused on being commanded not to eat from one single tree, forgetting her freedom to enjoy the fruit of every other tree in the garden. And she fell to that temptation. We cannot think Christianity is simply to “deny yourself.". It is also to “take up your cross, and follow [Christ],” to become like Him, your desires aligned with His. To “renew your mind” and act accordingly (Romans 12:2).
Freedom from gossip.
Freedom from lying.
Freedom from tearing down.
Freedom from complaining.
Freedom from superficiality.
Freedom for encouragement.
Freedom for speaking the truth in love, with gentleness and respect.
Freedom for building up.
Freedom for giving thanks.
Freedom for vulnerability.
Freedom from loneliness.
Freedom from selfishness.
Freedom from any hint of sexual immorality.
Freedom from pornography.
Freedom from abuse and manipulation.
Freedom for “bearing one another’s burdens.”
Freedom for “outdoing one another in showing honor.”
Freedom for purity.
Freedom for intimacy.
Freedom for symbolizing Christ and the Church.
Freedom from wrath; freedom for peace.
Freedom from sin; freedom for righteousness.
Freedom from death; freedom for everlasting life.
“For the grace of God has appeared, bringing salvation for all people, training us to renounce ungodliness and worldly passions, and to live self-controlled, upright, and Godly lives in the present age, waiting for our blessed hope, the appearing of the glory of our great God and Savior Jesus Christ, who gave Himself for us to redeem us from all lawlessness and to purify for Himself a people for His Own possession who are zealous for good works” (Titus 2).
This is really good! I read something last semester from my professor who said something along the same lines on Jesus' perfect and free obedience to the Father...
ReplyDelete"Third, directly following the statements of Jesus' absolute obedience to the Father, that he never spoke anything by his own initiative and always and only did was pleasing to the Father, Jesus has the audacity (or so it would appear!) to instruct on the subject of freedom! Abide in his words, he told those who believed in him, and they would become disciples of his, and they would know the truth, and the truth would set them free. Live as Jesus has lived before the father, abiding in his truth and speaking only what the Father has taught them, and they will be like Jesus, knowing the truth and entering into true freedom. It appears, then, that we need to learn something about the nature of true freedom. Freedom is not what our culture tells us it is. Freedom is not my deciding, from the urges and longings of my sinful nature, to do what I want to do, when I want to do it, how I want to do it, with whom I want to do it. According to the Bible, that is bondage, not freedom. Rather, true freedom is living as Jesus lived, for he is the freest human being who ever lived. In fact, he is the only fully free human being who is ever lived, and one day we will be set free fully when we always and only do the will of God. So, what is freedom? Amazingly, Jesus' answer is this: Freedom is submitting- submitting fully to the will of God, to the words of God, and to the work that God calls us to do." -Dr. Bruce Ware
#goodstuff!
-Kev D.