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The Broken Road to Authentic Spirituality

Freedom- does it offend you?

Mr. Lincoln walked into the slave market, and placed the winning bid on a young African woman. Seeing the anger and suspicion in her eyes, he walked away from the slave market with her, then turned to her and said, “You are now free!”

A series of questions were hurled from her to Mr. Lincoln. “What does that mean? Does it mean I can say what I want to say? Does it mean I can do whatever I want to do? Does it mean I can go wherever I want to go, and be whatever I want to be?”

Mr. Lincoln assured her that indeed she could, because she was truly free. The story is told that she then said, “Then I would like to go with you.”

Some people tell us that when Christ sets us free, we are “free to obey, but not to disobey”. I’m sorry, but that really doesn’t make any sense. If we are truly free it means we are free to stay or go, to do right or to do wrong. When He said, “the one whom the Son sets free shall be free indeed” I think he really meant it.

As parents, we have eventually got to let our children go, release our control over them, and let them make their choices whether we agree with them or not. You don’t do that to a five year old. But to a twenty-five year old, you do!

As American citizens we have fought to establish a society based on freedom such as is unheard of in Beirut or Baghdad, North Vietnam or North Korea, Singapore or Saudi Arabia. Sure there are Americans who have abused this freedom. But that goes with the territory. Without potential for taking unworthy advantage, there is not true freedom.

Scripture tells us that our sins were paid for on a cross, and there is nothing left to pay, that it was “finished” and we are forgiven. To those who believe, there is given a new standing in grace, along with a new heart that at least desires to please God, even though we often fail.

For followers of Christ, there is some good news and some bad news: the good news is that you are really, actually, no strings attached, honestly free! The bad news is the same: you are really free, so you can’t hide behind the rules any more. You are responsible to let Him lead you without a tight-knit formula and a rigidly controlled protective cocoon. You may choose to follow Him or not. You may go away, into a world where there is freedom to choose to be careless and foolish if you want to. But there are also consequences to the choices you make. After experiencing some of those consequences, you are free to come back home. The light is always on, and the door is always open. After you come back, you are still free to leave again.

When we understand grace, and build our lives on the truth of grace, we know there are risks involved. Sometimes people go into sin. Many times I have had people tell me, “If I believed that, then it wouldn’t matter what I did, I could do anything I wanted to and still be saved and God would still love me!” It used to bother me and I would say, “No, you don’t understand!” Now I say, “Well…yeah, you’ve got it!” It scares me to say that, but it’s the truth.

I want to give you a quote from somebody who had more guts than I do. This man shook the Christian world by his understanding of radical grace.

Martin Luther said:

“There are some who have no understanding to hear the truth of freedom and insist upon their goodness as means for salvation. These people you must resist, do the very opposite, and offend them boldly lest by their impious views they drag many with them into error. For the sake of liberty of the faith do other things which they regarded as the greatest of sins… use your freedom constantly and consistently in the sight of and despite the tyrants and stubborn so that they may learn that they are impious, that their law and works are of no avail for righteousness.”

Luther was saying that it is better to sin with boldness because you are saved by grace, than to be so uptight about doing right that people will think that only “good people” can be Christians!

The true Gospel was an offense in Paul’s time, and in Luther’s time, and is also in our time. If you are trying instead of trusting, working instead of believing, or boasting in your goodness instead of admitting your present sinfulness, what I’ve written here will royally upset you. I will close with a quote from D.L. Moody, who was was travelling by railroad train and talking to a performance-oriented religious man. Moody said, “There is one big difference between your religion and mine. You spell yours “D-O.” I spell mine “D-O-N-E!”

More good news, and this is the best of all! If you, just like Mr. Lincoln’s former slave, want to just stay close to the One who set you free, you are free to do that, too. You’re welcome to remain!

But not as a slave.

5 Responses to “Freedom- does it offend you?”

  1. karn said on November 6th, 2007 at 11:06 pm:

    Jim……love your site and can’t wait to read more but Ijust found it and am shutting off my computer now to try and get some sleep……looking forward to checking things out further. Karen in SoCal

  2. jimlee said on November 7th, 2007 at 4:26 am:

    Thanks, Karen! My site is just getting started, and to see that somebody in California would read it and respond is almost overwhelming to me! Thanks, and please write again// Jim

  3. Stephen Akinduro said on April 17th, 2008 at 10:03 am:

    Wow. I love this entry. I once heard a quote that said “love God and sin boldly” and I wanted to cry heresy when I heard it!! But the point of the quote is to realize that not even my sin can separate me from God’s love, so I don’t have to sin in fear. Now on the surface, this sounds like heresy, but the point is that I know that I don’t want to sin, but I realize that I still do. The perfectionist in me is often scared that sin is going to destroy my relationship with God, but grace says “relax, mmy son, you are covered and have no need to be afraid!”

  4. Katherine Gunn said on May 13th, 2008 at 10:11 pm:

    Wow. There was a time that did offend me. Now, I ‘get’ it… ;-)

    Here is a quote that I came across that you might like…

    “Freedom is not worth having if it does not include the freedom to make mistakes.” Mahatma Ghandi

  5. Katherine Gunn said on May 14th, 2008 at 12:00 am:

    Hmm… something else - the basic, underlying instruction He has been giving me for more than a year now… “Relax and trust Me.” Said with a smile and infinite patience. :-D

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