Luke 9:57-62 · The Cost of Following Jesus
Free From What? For What?
Luke 9:51-62
Sermon
by Robert C. Cochran
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Today’s readings give us a chance to talk about freedom quietly a week before advertisers and politicians can fill the airwaves with patriotic rhetoric designed to sell us everything from washers to “wisdom” from Washington. We call the Fourth of July “Independence Day” and have good reason to celebrate. We say this is the day we gained our freedom from British rule. But are the words “freedom” and “independence” really synonyms?

I would maintain that, though we did gain our independence from England in 1776, we remained largely English for some time after. If we had truly become something new in the eighteenth century — Americans — we wouldn’t have viewed native Americans as the enemy. But we continued to think of ourselves as Europeans and held on to our hatred and fear of everything non-European for a long time. Most of us still identify ourselves more readily with European culture than with the culture of the people who occupied these lands before us. We weren’t free of the English in the 1770s; we merely became independent of them.

In today’s gospel, Jesus was approached on the road by three unnamed people of unspecified gender. Often, it is the case that when an unnamed character appears in the gospels, that character is meant to represent us. We are the ones who approach Jesus and tell him that we want to follow him but cannot walk away from the lives we are leading. We say we want to be given time to put our affairs in order, to take care of those we love, to say good-bye to friends and family. But the truth is that we really don’t want to let go of what we have, and we do not want to commit ourselves fully to God. Jesus’ demands for total commitment seem stifling and unfair. Such a radical commitment to serve someone else goes against our nature as freedom-loving Americans.

In the second reading for today, Saint Paul tells us, “For freedom Christ has set you free. Stand firm, therefore, and do not submit again to a yoke of slavery” (Galatians 5:1). This sounds like something the framers of the Declaration of Independence would say, doesn’t it? But Paul goes on, “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” (v. 13).

Oops, it seems we’ve been made free only so that we can enslave ourselves. This sounds ridiculous to our ears because we think of freedom and slavery as opposites. The truth is that independence and slavery are opposites but, as I said, freedom and independence are not the same thing. One can be independent and yet not free, as was the case of the early Americans who were not free from European assumptions and prejudices; and one can be free and yet enslave oneself to others, which is what Paul and Jesus are calling us to do.

We live in a society that worships independence. We have long prided ourselves as being a nation of rugged individualists. We love to hear stories of people who have bucked the system and overcome great odds to get what they want. We constantly preach on the importance of gaining independence from parents, siblings, and peers. We say a person must be physically, intellectually, and emotionally independent in order to be fully developed. In other words, we feel we all must learn to act, think, and feel for ourselves. We must be self-actualized. So, what’s wrong with this?

Teenagers have always been much maligned in this country. This is unfortunate because teenagers, like canaries in a mine shaft, can reveal much about the health of a culture. Before the age of gas meters, miners used to take canaries down into the tunnels with them because if there were any poisonous gases present, the birds, because of their delicate natures, would die before the gases became deadly to the miners. The miners could then get out before they were put in any real danger. In the same way, teens are more susceptible to the poisons present in any society. They haven’t hardened themselves yet, haven’t built up immunity to the toxins. If we look at how our teens are doing, then, we can pretty well judge the health of our society and what’s in store for us. The problem is that for a long time teenagers have been dropping over right and left, and no one’s been paying any attention.

So, what is it that teens have to teach us? As adults, our attempts at independence are generally balanced by our need for security: we can’t walk away from our domineering boss because we need to feel financially secure. Teenagers, however, are less concerned with safety and more interested in autonomy, so they provide for us good models of what happens when our inflated notions of the importance of independence are allowed to run their full course.

In the 1960s, particularly in places like the Haight-Ashbury district of San Francisco, the streets were full of teens who had listened to all of their parents’ complaints about their bosses and their constrained lives, and chose instead to live their lives differently. They decided to become completely independent; they wanted to be free. Instead, they ended up under the control of the people who provided them with food and shelter. They become slaves to their bodies that screamed out to be fed and comforted. They were independent, but they were anything but free.

This lesson has been repeated over and over again in the last fifty years, as teens leave home and move out to live on the streets of New York, Los Angeles, or Seattle. They are merely taking the lessons we teach of the importance of independence to their natural end. And they end up in bondage... every time.

So, what is true freedom? First, let me say what it is not. Freedom is not an escape from authority, from responsibility, or from obligation. Sure, authority figures, responsibilities, and obligations can feel inhibiting, but to walk away from these is to be enslaved by our bodies, our minds, and our passions. In Paul’s words, it is to be enslaved by the flesh, which leads to destructive sexuality, drunkenness, the worshiping of false gods, hatred, strife, jealousy, anger, quarrels, dissensions, factions, envy, and so on. All of these arise out of our indulging our bodies, minds, and emotions.

Destructive sexuality and behaviors like alcoholism come out of our indulging our bodies rather than guarding and protecting them as one would any object of value. When we indulge our minds, they create false gods so they can feel in control of the universe. When we indulge our emotions, they invariably lead us into conflict with others. There is no true freedom until one is set free from the tyranny of one’s own body, mind, and emotions. Authority, responsibility, and obligation are the keys that turn this lock.

We would all like to live lives full of what Paul calls the fruit of the Spirit: love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, generosity, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control. But to do this, we must first be freed of the shackles of our bodies, minds, and emotions. This is not accomplished through independence but rather through dependence, total dependence on God. Love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, generosity, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control are gifts from God.

Through Christ’s sacrifice we have been set free, but from what? From the tyrannies of the flesh: body, mind, and emotions. We’ve been set free, but for what? We’ve been set free to become slaves to one another. Jesus said that he came to serve not to be served and that those who would lead must become servants of all. In 1 Corinthians Paul says, “For though I am free with respect to all, I have made myself a slave to all” (9:19). The irony is that only the truly liberated person can really serve others. Liberation comes when one finally releases one’s own agenda and accepts God’s. In our lives, we must strike a balance between security and independence, but we need to make no compromises when it comes to freedom. We are called to freedom, but we are not to use our freedom as an opportunity for self-indulgence of the flesh but rather, through holy love, we are free to become servants of God and slaves to each other.

The tale is told of British and American POW’s imprisoned behind German lines in World War II and separated by a high-wire fence. The Americans had managed to create a make-shift radio and were able to get news from the outside. Every day, one of the prisoners in the American camp, who happened to know ancient Gaelic, would meet a Scottish chaplain at the fence and exchange a “greeting” in Gaelic, which would include news from the outside. The Germans never caught on to what they were doing.

One day, news of the German surrender came over the radio. The war was over, but the German guards didn’t realize it for three days. During the interval, everything in the camp had changed. The prisoners were still held captive, none of the routines had changed, but they looked at their hard life differently. They sang, waved at the guards, and laughed at the dogs.

When the guards found out about the surrender, they fled, leaving the gates open. Now, when were the prisoners really set free? That’s right — when they heard that they were to be delivered from their captivity. This is the state we live in. We are seemingly held prisoner by many things: bodies that let us down, habits we can’t break, debts we can’t shake, jobs we can’t stand or leave, pasts we can’t let go of, futures we can’t fathom. But we are like the British and American prisoners: our chains can’t bind us if we remember that the war is over; the victory is secured.

When Christ died and rose again, the enemy was forced to surrender. It’s only a matter of time until the gates will be left open and we can walk out. Of course, there’s still hardship, but we know the end now, and we know that the end is at hand. Let us live our lives in the joy and freedom of those who know the enemy is already defeated and those who know that the only true freedom lies in servitude toward God and all of God’s beloved children.

CSS Publishing Co., Inc., Spirit works: Cycle C sermons for Pentecost Sunday through proper 12, by Robert C. Cochran