The concept of freedom has been rattling around in my brain lately. I am focusing on the freedom afforded all of us who claim salvation through Christ.
There is something quite liberating when you know or realize that you have been “set free.” Have you ever thought about what that really means? The word “release” comes to my mind. However you want to describe it, I think the revelation of Jesus as Lord and Savior removes a lot of barriers, obstacles and burdens that we place upon ourselves.
That’s why, I believe, as people initially come to Christ they are overcome by a fresh perspective about life. It’s an enlightened one; one filled with less pressure. I think that’s why folk cry in church when it happens.
“For freedom Christ has set us free. Stand firm, therefore and do not submit again to a yoke of slavery.” Galatians 5:1.
The question is: What are you a slave to?
In a very real sense, this type of freedom provides incredible spiritual insight where addictions are overcome, hurt feelings are healed, guilt is removed, and insecurities conquered when Jesus enters the picture. Whatever you have been enslaved by, you become freed from.
One of the biggest things that happens when Christ enters your life is that fears are conquered. And if we’re honest with ourselves, we all have fears. I know I do. It can be the fear of being alone, of being without, of being humiliated, ostracized or even the fear of dying. The knowledge of Christ in all of these situations cancels those fears. You are released from them.
That’s what I believe people mean when they say “set free.” That’s how I’ve come to understand real joy in the context of spiritual awareness, i.e., being blood bought and saved. I have been set free from fear, anger, greed, selfishness, self-doubt and even self-hatred. Believe it or not, so have you.
These things have hopefully been replaced with honesty and integrity, hope and truth, confidence, self-worth, the promise of everlasting life and, above all, love. When love is set free within you, life takes on a whole new meaning. You no longer have to live in the shadows of pretense; rather, you can now live in the light of truth.
I can be who I really am, and so can you. Then the world will see you as God sees you and not who you think it ought to see. I am who God made. If that’s good enough for God, then certainly it’s good enough for anyone who wants to deal with me.
