Freedom isn't a fragmentary expression...
Illustration
Freedom isn't a fragmentary expression of life in the kingdom: it is kingdom living. Paul tells us, through Jesus Christ, we are free from the ceremonial laws and rituals. We are free because our devotion is to something greater -- Jesus Christ, the living Lord.
We are granted an easy access to God through Christ. We don't need to work ourselves to death to please God. We are saved through faith in Jesus Christ, not through works. We are free to serve God and other people; we are never bound to do it. We are free to be the good creatures of God that God created us to be. We are free to ask God to forgive us of our sins, and God's saving grace is a free gift to us in return.
Jesus teaches us to be ourselves at all costs, and we will be free creatures. We are free when we live as God intended us to live. Jesus calls us to leave our sins behind and walk with him into the freedom of a new life, a life inside his kingdom. Too often, though, we don't want to be God's builders and contractors of the kingdom. The kingdom means freedom, but sometimes we'd rather live in chains outside its gates.
The hymn, "Spirit of Life," speaks of our Christian freedom. The challenge is clear:
The Spirit is free,
free as the wind!
So is the soul that is newborn again;
Bound by no shackles,
no law does he see
Except the law of charity.
We are granted an easy access to God through Christ. We don't need to work ourselves to death to please God. We are saved through faith in Jesus Christ, not through works. We are free to serve God and other people; we are never bound to do it. We are free to be the good creatures of God that God created us to be. We are free to ask God to forgive us of our sins, and God's saving grace is a free gift to us in return.
Jesus teaches us to be ourselves at all costs, and we will be free creatures. We are free when we live as God intended us to live. Jesus calls us to leave our sins behind and walk with him into the freedom of a new life, a life inside his kingdom. Too often, though, we don't want to be God's builders and contractors of the kingdom. The kingdom means freedom, but sometimes we'd rather live in chains outside its gates.
The hymn, "Spirit of Life," speaks of our Christian freedom. The challenge is clear:
The Spirit is free,
free as the wind!
So is the soul that is newborn again;
Bound by no shackles,
no law does he see
Except the law of charity.
