Year C, Pentecost 3 Galatians 5:1, 13-25
“We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights, that among these are Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of Happiness.” We all recognize these words. It comes from the prologue of our Declaration of Independence which we celebrate on July 4th---which we will formally recognize next Sunday. Normally when we think of July 4th, we think of freedom. That is what we are celebrating, right? Freedom? Interestingly, the word freedom never appears in the Declaration of Independence. But there is liberty, which is just like freedom. Its right there—listed as one of our unalienable rights.We
hear the word “freedom” a lot when we talk about our nation. But it’s astonishing how differently we all
interpret that word. The apostle Paul
used that word frequently in his writings.
But he used it in much different ways than most of use it now. Paul
wrote, “For you were called to freedom,
brothers and sisters; only do not use your freedom as an opportunity for
self-indulgence, but through love become slaves to one another.”
The
dictionary defines freedom as: “the power or right to act, speak, or think as
one wants without hindrance or restraint.”
That was definitely not what Paul was describing. Paul didn’t believe
that our freedom meant we could live a life without restraint. He believed that we are free, but only if we
find freedom in Christ. Living in the
Spirit of Christ gives us freedom, but it also requires that we become servants
to God and even servants to one another.
In being free, we are bound to serve God. If you are a little confused right now, that
is ok, Paul can often be a little confusing.
One of
the fascinating things about the New Testament and Jesus’ message was that
everything we once considered true was turned upside down. It wasn’t that
things we considered true were suddenly untrue, it was just different. For
instance, Jesus said that the first should be last and the last should be
first. Jesus was a king, but his crown was made of thorns and his throne was
the cross. Death was not a defeat for Jesus, because he was victorious over
death. It was a paradigm shift. Jesus
taught, a completely different way of thinking and being. One of those things
he taught was the importance of being a servant, no matter how important you
may be. He said that the way we treat the least of these is the way we treat
God.
For
the Jewish people, being slaves was something that was very much a part of
their story. God had led them out of
bondage in Egypt to the Promised Land.
That was and is a big part of their narrative. And the Gentiles would
have known and understood slavery as well.
That practice was alive and well at the time. Therefore when Paul spoke
about slavery--that was not a foreign concept to the people he was talking to. I
discussed this a bit last week, how slavery in the ancient world was different
than it was in our nation.
Yet,
Paul was talking about a different kind of slavery entirely. It is not forced submission. One person or group does not forcefully take
control of another. For Paul it means that we willingly submit to God, and to
one another. It was and is a completely
different way of thinking.
In
talking about freedom, Paul reminded these new Christians of Galatia that
freedom was not supposed to be license for self indulgence. Freedom in Christ doesn’t mean that you can
just do whatever you want. It means that
you are free from sin, free from laws that tell you how to be holy. However there was one law that Paul and Jesus
chose to emphasize: "You shall love your
neighbor as yourself." In accepting this freedom in Christ, we also
accept responsibility for one another.
It is a communal freedom rather than an individual freedom. Individual
freedom is what we normally emphasize when we talk about it in the context of our
nation.
I
believe that our nation would be living more authentically as a free nation if
we were free for one another, rather than in spite of one another---if we felt
some obligation to serve the common good rather than serve our own self
interests. You might say, well that is not what American freedom is supposed
to be. That’s Christian freedom which is a totally different thing. I would
have agreed with you before I wrote this sermon. While preparing for this sermon, I read the
Declaration of Independence, all of it, not just that first part that is always
quoted. The last line reads: “And for the support of this Declaration, with a firm reliance on the
protection of divine Providence, we mutually pledge to each other our Lives,
our Fortunes and our sacred Honor.”
“We mutually pledge to each other…” Huh, sounds a
bit like Paul, doesn’t it? Now, I am no scholar of the Declaration of
Independence, but it seems to me that the founders of this country, understood
what would make our country truly free, and that is pledging ourselves to one
another. We declared independence from
Britain, not from one another. And even
if I am wrong about that, I think we can all agree that when we see greatness
in our county, it is when we serve one another.
There is a reason why the military, the police, and
the firefighters are often associated with patriotism….it’s because they serve.
It’s because they risk their lives to help other people. One of my most vivid memories from the days
after 9-11 was trying to give blood at the local blood bank. The line was
around the block. People wanted to give
something, do something. At the heart of
this nation is not just patriotism, but the kind of freedom that Paul
described.
Paul
wrote, “For the whole law is summed up in a single
commandment, ‘You shall love your neighbor as yourself.’ If, however, you bite
and devour one another, take care that you are not consumed by one another.”
Right now in our nation, we are biting and devouring one another. And you know what, Paul was right. It feels
as though we are consumed by one another---despite our desperate attempts to
distinguish ourselves and separate ourselves, we are consumed. We are not free. We think that the might of our nation depends
on our ability to protect ourselves and separate ourselves, but our might is
determined by our willingness to serve one another, or in the words of the
great document we celebrate this week, to “mutually pledge to each
other our Lives, our Fortunes and our sacred Honor.”
It is
indeed a sacred honor to serve God’s children.
But let us never forget that God’s children are all the children of the
world. Love your neighbor as yourself
was never meant to be literal. Love every person as yourself. That was what Jesus meant. Let us be free for one another, not in spite
of one another.