Monday, October 1, 2018

620 - Freedom and Responsibility

Spirituality Column #620
October 2, 2018
Common Christianity / Uncommon Commentary

Freedom and Responsibility
By Bob Walters

“It is the nature of love to bind itself.” G.K. Chesterton, The Defendant

I’m pretty sure the very epitome of freedom has far less to do with what we are free from than what we have chosen to be responsible to.

This freedom – or lack of it – is what shapes our attitudes and faith: the freedom to bind ourselves to that which we think, feel, and experience as life’s ultimate purpose, joy, and worth.  It is within these boundaries that we will explore, find, experience, and share love; it is within these boundaries that we will discover Jesus Christ.

Outside these boundaries?  Satan and the world await.

Chesterton, the great 20th century Christian apologist and forerunner of C.S. Lewis, wrote often about how love, freedom, “binding,” and Jesus Christ form an inseparable equation of humanity’s best formula for glorifying God and discovering life’s most profound, shared human joys – the love, hope, forgiveness, and salvation of Jesus Christ.  And we note that Chesterton wasn’t talking about the “binding and loosing” of things on heaven and earth the way we often think of it as written in Matthew 16:18-19.

No, Chesterton was talking about the responsibility we undertake as humans to form relationships, help our fellow man, raise our children, worship our God, run our affairs, govern our nation, organize our communities, and recognize right and wrong in light of personal and sacrificial God-honoring love.  Not every culture, government, political persuasion, or religion in history (or today) has considered these to be essential and divine elements of human endeavor.  While kings, emperors, dictators, and despots separate mankind from this freedom, Jesus insists on it and America was founded on it.

It’s far more than mere “freedom of religion” that defines the great American “We the People” experiment in self-determination and societal mobility.  Despite grave religious and specifically Christian doctrinal disputes of that era, the early American, Enlightenment-era thinkers considered and penned our formative documents based on the moral assurance of God’s existence and mankind’s moral obligations to Him and to other humans.  This was preponderantly true even among the agnostics and deists.

What Jesus brings to the freedom equation is that He knows God’s true, divine love energizes the human heart only when fueled by free will.  These weld the Godly clasp that freely binds us to goodness, mercy, hope, and heaven; not the foul shackles that condemn us to earthly misery, dissension, despair, debauchery, and death.

It is our binding with Jesus we should treasure for ourselves, teach to our children, and share with our neighbor; for Satan is the author of the other.  The evil world – especially today in a million media, academic, and political ways – insists we must intellectually and behaviorally be chained to its popular but unholy norms.

No, our responsibility and joy is to be bound in freedom with Christ.  It makes a world of difference, and is the only thing that will make a difference in the world.

Walters (rlwcom@aol.com) adds: “It is absurd to say that you are especially advancing freedom when you only use free thought to destroy free will.” - Chesterton

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