This upcoming Sunday evening, the Franklin community will gather together in the park to worship as part of the town's 4th of July celebration. I have the honor of delivering the message this year derived from Paul's letter to the Church in Galatia. That text illustrates well Paul's point that freedom for a Christian is not a license to do whatever we want, but an obligation to serve. How can freedom be obligation? The two thoughts may seem opposed to each other, but for Christians who understand that before our rebirth in Christ we were, like all mankind, slaves to sin, the answer becomes clear. Those apart from God are not free, whatever political system they live under, for whatever rights they may have in their own society, they remain in slavery to their own nature. To truly be free we must be set free by the forgiveness of ours sins, and the destruction of our sinful nature. Because we as human beings are incapable of affecting this change, we must rely upon the work of Jesus Christ on our behalf. Christ sets us free, from ourselves, when he redeems us.
But why did God call a people of his own and give them freedom? That they might serve him. As Paul wrote, "You, my brothers and sisters, were called to be free. But do not use your freedom to indulge the flesh; rather, sever one another humbly in love." (Galatians 5:13) As Christ followers, we are obligated to serve each other, humbly, in love; to put the needs of others above our own, to self-sacrificially replicate the love of God for us in our interactions with other people. We have indeed been set free, but for a purpose.
As Americans, the most intractable and even violent disagreements in our nation's history as well as our current society are differing responses to the question: What is the purpose of freedom? Over the years various Americans have answered that question in radically different ways, along the way prompting our Civil War over slavery, the movement that gained women the right to vote, the Civil Rights movement, the sexual "revolution" that spawned our differing viewpoint on abortion, gay marriage, and gender issues, gun ownership, property rights, not to mention our ongoing disagreements over poverty relief and immigration. We, as Americans, are sharply divided regarding our rights and responsibilities as free individuals within a free society. These questions are not going away anytime soon, and some will get more divisive and perhaps spark further violence before they are resolved, if they ever are. Why the vastly different viewpoint on what American society ought to be? In part because of deep and significant disagreement regarding the fundamental question: What is the purpose of our freedom?
As Christians, whether Americans or not, we ought to have no such disagreement as to the purpose of our freedom in Christ. We have been set free, not to indulge our own selfish desires, but to serve each other.
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