FREEDOM IN CHRIST – THE FOUNDATION OF ALL FREEDOMS!

WORD FROM THE CENTER:
MONDAY, JULY 8, 2024

Welcome to “Word from The Center” MONDAY, a devotional word from the Center of our faith, Jesus Christ, with reflections on His Word. I’m Gregory Seltz. Today’s verse is Galatians 5:1, where St. Paul writes,

It is for freedom that Christ has set us free. Stand firm, then, and do not let yourselves be burdened again by a yoke of slavery.

God’s Plan for the World, for You!

Throughout the past several years, fear has been “ramped up” in our culture -- fear of disease, fear of disasters, fear of our fellow citizens, and even the fear of the unknown. Sadly, amidst all of these fears, the government continues to stifle the church and its ability to minister to its members and to its community. That’s one reason why the LCRL contended so vigorously for the constitutional liberty of the freedom of religion and the freedom of religious assembly during the dark days of COVID 19. We felt that, amidst the kind of crisis that our nation was in, one of the most essential voices to be heard was the moral and Gospel voice of the church. As a result, when faced with the life and death issues of a pandemic, we weren’t going to let some government bureaucrats classify the church as a non-essential institution and declare its work to be merely of secondary importance. In fact, we believe, then and now, that the spiritual voice of the church was needed at that time and that it is necessary TODAY more than ever. It declares that God’s people have been set free by Christ to serve freely those entrusted to us by Christ.

That freedom is a precious thing. Our verse in Galatians tells us that ultimate, lasting freedom is to be found in our relationship with our Creator and Redeemer. That’s a freedom that cannot be taken away. Wonderfully, the Founding Fathers of America felt that the first and most enduring temporal freedom was the freedom of religion. They wholeheartedly believed that trusting in God and faithfully following the moral directions of the Bible were essential foundations to all other freedoms. Setting aside July 4th to honor those temporal freedoms doesn’t get in the way of the abiding truth that the only lasting freedom comes by grace through faith in Jesus. It merely thanks God for the freedom to receive and to share that message without fear of government intervention or coercion to the contrary. That’s pretty good stuff!

When hearts and minds are free, captive only to the God who loves us with an everlasting love, that freedom in action tends to seek freedom for others on God’s terms as well. As illustrated by the First Amendment to the Constitution, the Founders Fathers of America saw religious liberty and freedom of religious assembly as foundational to other liberties. Why? Because a believing, morally directed, free people are enabled to serve as a bulwark to other people’s freedom as well. Paul tells believers that we are set free to live freely for others (see Galatians 5:13). To be sure, that’s about more than religious liberty and freedom of conscience. But it sure is wonderful to live in a country where you can share your faith over your neighbor’s fence and practice it without fear. It is surely wonderful to still be able to raise up children in the ways of the Lord without coercion to the contrary. It is also nice to know that you can serve the community on Christ’s terms without legal threats.

In the afterglow of July 4th, we need to remember that our Founding Fathers understood the importance of the freedom to practice one’s faith, as well as the other freedoms that are protected

by the Bill of Rights. Many of them also understood which freedom was most important of all. For example, it still shocks people today when they learn that the person who said, “Give me liberty or give me death,” didn’t think that our civic freedoms, as important as they are, were the most important things in life. In his Last Will and Testament, filed in the Brookneal County Courthouse in Virginia, Patrick Henry noted something especially interesting. He wrote,

I have now given everything I own to my children. There is one more thing I wish I could give them and that is Christ. Because if they have everything I gave them and don’t have Christ, they have nothing.1

I would say that Patrick Henry understood what Paul was talking about in our verse for today. He knew that there is one thing in life that is the key to all of life -- faith in Jesus Christ alone.

So, as you bask in the glow of the freedoms that we still have in this country, be thankful that we were given the gift of the First Amendment. We were blessed with the idea that religious liberty was essential to our thriving as Americans. But, even more importantly, such protection challenges us to look to the freedom that only God can give. If our religious liberty protections are properly understood, they should challenge us to look to the enduring foundation that makes it possible, and then to share that without measure. Knowing the God who created and redeemed us by grace through faith in Christ gives a freedom that no government can give or take away. Patrick Henry, a great champion of freedom, knew that even something as vital as personal liberty and freedom needed to be resourced and empowered by faith in Jesus Christ for it to have real, lasting value. Give me liberty and give me life!

PRAYER: Dear Jesus, give us clarity of thinking to see the eternal freedom which is ultimately Your gift to a world caught in the bondage of sin. We pray that all of our freedoms serve that Good News because nothing in this world compares to freely knowing and believing in You by grace through faith, now and forever. Amen!

1 https://www.lhm.org/dailydevotions/default.asp?date=20160627

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America and its Faith Infused Freedoms for ALL

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Religious Liberty Is Vital, but It Is not Enough!