Psalm 24
Isaiah 42:1-4
Galatians 5:13-14
"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 servants
to one another." Galatians 5:13
Gracious God,
we thank you for our creation and for our humanity. We thank you for
our world and for our nation and for the privilege of worshiping you
freely and openly. Help us to hunger and thirst for all that is good,
until your kingdom comes on earth as in heaven. All glory and power
to you, mighty God, now and forever. Amen.
*
* *
"I know not what
course others may take, but as for me, give me liberty, or give me
death" (Patrick Henry at the Virginia Convention, 1775).
"We hold these
truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they
are endowed by their creator with certain unalienable rightsthat
among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness" (The
Declaration of Independence, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, July 4, 1776).
"Fourscore and
seven years ago, our fathers brought forth on this continent a new
nation, conceived in liberty and dedicated to the proposition that
all men are created equal" (Abraham Lincoln, at Gettysburg, 1863).
"One nation under
God, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all" (The Pledge of
Allegiance to the Flag of the United States of America, 2002).
Whatever century,
these stirring words all give voice to the core idea of freedom. The
idea of freedom lies at the heart of the democratic experience that
was launched 226 years ago, as the Continental Congress declared the
separation of the thirteen American colonies from Great Britain. The
idea of freedom did not originate with our forefathers, of course.
In every age and in every place, human beings yearn "to breathe free."1
Three thousand years before Thomas Jefferson took up his pen and drafted
the Declaration of Independence, an enslaved people had cried out
to God for help, for freedom, and God sent a man named Moses in answer
to their cry. Two thousand three hundred years before John Hancock
and his compatriots affixed their signatures to the Declaration of
Independence, the prophet Isaiah had described the mission of the
servant people of God as that of setting the oppressed free (Isaiah
61:1). Jesus of Nazareth, many hundreds of years later, stood in the
synagogue and announced that he had been anointed with the Holy Spirit
in order "to proclaim release to the captives and freedom to those
who were in bondage" (Luke 3:18).
In his treatise
on freedom in the letter to the Galatians, the Apostle Paul argues
for a certain kind of freedom. He urges his friends to remember that
it was "for freedom that Christ has set them free." The initiative
of God, at work in human events and most supremely in the event of
Christ, has liberated them from bondage to sin, from all powers that
would enslave or oppress. But, Paul admonishes, never use your freedom
"as an opportunity for self-indulgence, but through love become slaves,
servants of one another, for the whole law is summed up in this single
commandmentYou shall love your neighbor as yourself" (Galatians
5:13-14).
How strange these
words of the Apostle Paul sound in the summer of the year 2002, as
each day brings news of fresh revelations of corporate self-indulgence.
WorldCom, the nations second largest long distance carrier,
is the latest in a long line of American corporations that have been
rocked by scandal and about which revelations of fraud have been forthcoming.
Clinton, Mississippi, is the headquarters of the WorldCom corporation.
The whole city is reeling in disbelief. Last week a local resident,
in speaking of Bernard Ebbers, the WorldCom departing CEO, told a
reporter, "We thought that Mr. Ebbers was going to lead us [like Moses]
to the promised land, but instead he has wiped away our futures. .
. . It is unthinkable that greed could go so far."2
This whole concept
of mutual responsibility has in far too many quarters in America been
replaced by the unrelenting drive for "more, more, and more" for ones
self. The free market system, it seems, is not inherently imbued with
a spirit of self-regulation, and so it is essential that there be
an overlay of morality and democratic principles, lest untrammeled
greed take over our future. "Be careful that you do not devour one
another," Paul wrote, indicating that excessive self-love will eat
you and everyone else alive. It has always been so, and so it is true
even now.
In the year 410,
Rome was invaded by barbarians. Some said that Rome had become soft
because of Christianity. Christianity, with its values of mutuality
and self-sacrifice, its call to gentleness and kindness had led to
the ruination of Rome. "It was in response to that charge that St.
Augustine wrote his famous treatise The City of God, in which
he argued that Rome itself, and not Christianity, was responsible
for its own destruction. Though Augustine paid due respect to the
nobility of many of Romes leaders, he laid the responsibility
for the fall of the mighty city squarely at their feet. It was the
desire for self-glory, for self-recognition that had come to characterize
Romes civic order, to the neglect of God and neighbor, and that
was their ruin."3
We remember this
weekend before Independence Day that freedom is a God-given gift.
We do not have to be slaves to our instincts and baser desires. We
do not have to be puppets, with God pulling the strings either, as
the story of Adam and Eve makes abundantly clear. God shows us the
good, but we are at liberty not to choose it. Freedom creates the
possibility that we may choose to act selfishly and destructively
and to serve purposes other than those of God.
Genuine freedom
always has disaster as a possible outcome. Witness the terrorist attacks
on our nation last fall. Now that our country is in the midst on a
war on terrorism, we would do well to remember that while freedom
is a gift, it is genuine and comes with its own predicament. Ben Franklin
said in 1755, "Those who would give up essential liberty to purchase
a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety." As
we work toward homeland security, we need also to be vigilant that
the basic American principles of due process of law and respect for
individuals as guaranteed by the Constitution do not themselves become
victims on the war on terrorism. The United States, as one commentator
has recently reminded us, is different from other tyrannical societies.
"[Our] government is not permitted to hustle its citizens into prison
without offering legally sound reasons for their incarceration and
without giving the accused an opportunity to challenge their loss
of liberty."4 This has always been the American way.
I recall so clearly
how it was after 9/11 that I felt as if I could not go on with the
life I had lived before the terrorist attacks. I found myself in grief
and governed more by fear than I wanted to admit. I was able to turn
the corner for several reasons. One, I had the opportunity to grieve
and remember those who were gone. I had a renewed sense of thanksgiving
for our brave and giving nation. But what finally made the difference
was a strong resolve in my heart that I would not allow the terrorists
a single other triumphthey were not going to take away my outlook
on my life. Now, we cannot offer the terrorists any other victories.
We cannot give them our core principles, which include equal protection
under the law. This we do for democratic reasons, and, I would add,
for religious reasons as well. Think of the words of Jesus in the
Sermon on the Mount, "In everything, do to others as you would have
them do to you" (Matthew 7:12). The predicament of freedom is that
we cannot protect our own freedom without being committed to the freedom
of others. True liberty is a function of justice for all.
It is true that
spiritual freedom and political freedom are not interchangeable, but
they converge, I believe, in crucially important ways. Neither kind
of freedom can survive without the attendant elements of responsibility
and mutuality. I would add a third, making it a trinity: mutuality,
responsibility, and humility.
To illustrate
this point, I turn to the great American pastime, baseball. In George
F. Wills essay in the book What Baseball Means to Me: A Celebration
of Our National Pastime, he writes, "What is so important about
baseball is not its written rules, but its unofficial code of conduct."
He says, "Remember Mickey Mantle, running all the bases after a home
run. What strikes you in your minds eye? Isnt it that
Mantle always kept his head down, showing restraint and respect for
others." Will goes on to say that in all his years of studying baseball
and its players, the most surprising thing has been that never, not
once, has he heard a big league baseball player brag.5
Is this not the American way?
In Pauls
letter to the Galatians, he reminds his readers that while they have
been given freedom by God, they are not to abuse it. They are to live
according to the Spirit and thus bear the fruits of the Spirit, which
are kindness, joy, gentleness, and self-control, not self-indulgence.
"Let us not be conceited," Paul writes, "competing against one another
or being envious of one another" (Galatians 5:22, 26). The whole law
is summed up in these words: you love your neighbors as yourself.
One of Americas
greatest gifts to the world is the notion of religious liberty. The
state cannot impose religion on others, and all our citizens are free
to exercise religion or not, according to their own wishes. The government
cannot not impose Christianity or another religion on anyone, but
that does not mean that Christians do not have a crucially important
civic role to play. People of faith ought to be working every day
to create an American society that is marked by concern for the common
good. We ought to be challenging corporate America to clean up its
act. We ought to be speaking out against excessive self-indulgence.
We ought to be asking not only what is best for America, we should
be asking what is best for the world of which we are a part.6
Last weeks
ruling by the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
Court in California has raised quite a storm here in the United States.
There is little doubt that higher courts will overturn that courts
ruling to remove the words "under God" from the Pledge of Allegiance
to the Flag. In the meantime, we have been offered an important opportunity
to engage in a new conversation about the role of religion in America,
about the moral development of children, and about the issues involved
in the separation of church and state. I am personally in favor of
retaining the words "under God" in the Pledge of Allegiance to the
Flag, but I am dismayed that the father who brought the claim that
his daughter was injured when she was made to or invited to say the
pledge including the words "under God" has received death threats.
That ought to be a reminder to us all that the spirit of liberty is
a fragile gift that requires constant care.
I close with
the words of Learned Hand, one of our nations most outstanding
jurists.
What then
is the spirit of liberty? I cannot define it; I can only tell
you my own faith. The spirit of liberty is the spirit which is
not too sure that it is right; the spirit of liberty is the spirit
which seeks to understand the minds of other men and women; the
spirit of liberty is the spirit which weighs their interests alongside
its own without bias; the spirit of liberty remembers that not
even a sparrow falls to earth unheeded; the spirit of liberty
is the spirit of Him who, nearly two thousand years ago, taught
humanity that lesson it has never learned, but has never quite
forgotten: that there may be a kingdom where the least shall be
heard and considered side by side with the greatest.
Brothers and
sisters in Christ, may our pledge of allegiance today be to the kingdom
of Christ here on earth as it is in heaven. Amen.
Notes
1. Inscription
on the Statue of Liberty, New York Harbor.
2. From a Chicago Tribune story, 27 June, 2002.
3. From
a sermon by Eugene C. Bay, The Bryn Mawr Presbyterian Church, Bryn
Mawr, Penn., entitled "The Vocation of Citizenship," 28 May, 2000.
Dr. Bay references Philip Wogemans Speaking the Truth in
Love (Louisville, Ky.: Westminster /John Knox Press, 1998), 22-23.
4. Bob
Herbert, "Is Democracy Worth It?" New York Times, 17 March
2002.
5. Curt
Smith, ed., What Baseball Means to Me: A Celebration of Our National
Pastime (Warner Books: 2002).
6. Bay.