Freedom Songs
June 27, 2004
Calum I. MacLeod,
Associate Pastor
Psalm 103
Galatians 5:1, 13–25
Luke 9:51–62
God
gave you a great gift that terrible night, Tony dear.
He gave you a vision of Hell. Not that silly fire and brimstone
stuff.
True Hell.
Being alone with yourself for all eternity.
Only your own self to hope in, only your own self to love.
. . .
As you said, a prison with no door.
I don’t think that vision will ever come to you again.
You must never forget it.
Dom Joseph Warrilow,
in Father Joe by Tony Hendra
Two monks were on their travels. One of them
practiced the spirituality of acquisition; the other believed
in renunciation. All day long they discussed their respective
spiritualities, till toward evening they came to the bank
of a river. Now the believer in renunciation had no money
with him. He said, “We cannot pay the boatman to
take us across, but why bother about the body. We shall
spend a night here chanting God’s praises, and tomorrow
we’re sure to find some kind soul who will pay our
passage.” The other said, “There’s no
village on this side of the river, no hamlet, no hut, no
shelter. We shall be devoured by wild beasts or bitten
by snakes or killed by the cold. On the other side of the
river we shall be able to spend the night in safety and
comfort. I have the money to pay the boatman.” Once
they were safely on the other bank, he remonstrated with
his companion, “Do you see the value of keeping money?
I was able to save your life and mine. What would have
happened to us if I had been a man of renunciation like
you?” The other replied, “It was your renunciation
that brought us across to safety. For you did part with
your money to pay the boatman, didn’t you? Moreover,
I had no money in my pocket, but your pocket became mine.”
This story, like all true wisdom stories, has many layers
of meaning that can be meditated on and extracted. I want
to use the story this morning to frame our thoughts on
one particular theme, the theme of freedom. This is a concept
central to Christian spirituality, one which suffuses scripture,
both the scriptures that we share with our Jewish cousins—what
we know as the Old Testament, with that central story of
the Exodus, the liberation of the children of Israel from
slavery in Egypt—and then woven throughout the New
Testament. Particularly strongly in Paul’s writings,
the letters he sent to the early churches, this theme of “freedom” comes
through. The question before us then might be put in the
following way: What makes us free? Some of the biblical
scholars among you will be itching to raise your hands
and shout out, “Read John in chapter 8: ‘The
truth will make you free.’” That perhaps begs
the question: What is truth? Back to our opening story.
Is it acquisition or renunciation that brings freedom in
that situation?
Freedom is a big concept; we encounter it daily. It seems
that it is an easy word to bandy about in the political
talk shows and on radio. Freedom, I think, is one of those
elastic words that can be used to justify particular stances
and, indeed, stances that are often opposed to each other.
In the realms of politics, ethics, psychology, economics
and so many aspects of the human endeavor, the concept
of freedom plays a part.
One aspect of the discourse is what we might call defining
the locus of freedom. For some, it’s about “freedom
to” act in a certain way. So we might have someone
from the NRA talking about the freedom to bear arms or
libertarians form the political right talking about freedom
to live in a particular way without the influence of government
or the state. From left and right, advocates of free speech
would talk about the freedom to express oneself in the
way one wants. In opposition to that, perhaps, would be
those who argue about “freedom from”: freedom
from gun violence, freedom from the effects of illegal
drugs on our society, freedom from racist taunts or neo-Nazi
marches.
This talk of freedom is perhaps striking a chord for some
of you, hearing echoes of that famous speech of Franklin
D. Roosevelt to Congress in January 1941, when he laid
out the Four Freedoms:
Freedom of speech and expression
Freedom to worship God as one wants
Freedom from want
Freedom from fear.
These statements implicitly hold that tension
of “freedom
from” and “freedom to.”
In political economics, it gets perhaps only more complex
where you can choose anywhere on the spectrum. From the
left, for example, Marx and Engels in the Communist Manifesto: “Workers
of the world unite. You have nothing to lose but your chains.” And
the more conservative voice of the late, and for some unlamented,
economist Friedrich von Hayek, the inspiration behind Margaret
Thatcher’s infamous quote that “there is no
such thing as society.” For Hayek, and I quote, “Nothing
has done so much to destroy the safeguards of individual
freedom as the striving after the mirage of social justice.” For
Hayek, private property guarantees freedom.
Freedom is a complex idea with lots of complex theories
and propositions. This my be why some of the baby boomers
out there might just be thinking that Kris Kristofferson
was right and that “freedom’s just another
word for nothing left to lose.”
The question for us this morning is, “How as pilgrims
together in faith, do we navigate this concept?” We
can, of course, go to scripture. Paul, as I noted earlier,
has much to say about freedom. To the church in Corinth
he writes, in Second Corinthians, “For where the
spirit of the Lord is, there is freedom.” From our
reading this morning to the church in Galatia: “For
freedom Christ has set us free. Stand firm therefore and
do not submit again to the yoke of slavery.”
It is important for us to realize some of the context for
Paul’s understanding of freedom. Paul in Galatians
is writing to a church that has come under the influence
of some Christians with whom Paul disagrees because they
believe that a person needs to be part of the original
covenant between God and the Children of Israel before
they can then become a part of the new covenant in Christ.
In other words, they need to be circumcised (if they are
male) into the Jewish tradition. Paul argues vehemently
against this and comes to the conclusion that freedom is
deeply rooted with the relationship between the law in
the Old Testament and grace under Jesus Christ. Adrian
Hastings, a British theologian, points out that Paul is
talking about freedom from the need for circumcision. Hastings
even goes as far as to suggest, and I quote, “It
[Paul’s stance] has no obvious or immediate political
consequences.” For example, he points out that nowhere
does Paul denounce the institution of slavery.
One might take issue with Hastings and point out that Paul
talks about new kinds of relationships, particularly in
the letter to Philemon when he sends back the slave Onesimus
to his master and describes a new relationship that could
happen.
Still we may find it more useful to explore the gospel
that we heard earlier from Luke.
Jürgen Moltmann, in the preface to his fine work of
theology The Crucified God, makes the claim that “only
the crucified Christ can bring the freedom which changes
the world.” For Moltmann then, there is a direct
correlation between the events of Good Friday and a call
to God’s people to work for change in the world.
The gospel begins with a very familiar experience for Jesus
in his life in ministry: rejection. Rejection by the Samaritans
and the village. Rejection that will lead to the loneliness
of the events in Jerusalem that Jesus has resolved to undertake
by setting his face towards Jerusalem.
There is a fine modern hymn that often comes into my mind
when thinking about that idea of the loneliness and rejection
that Jesus experiences. Written by Brian Wren, the opening
line is, “Here hangs a man discarded, a scarecrow
hoisted high.”
What a powerful image for that picture of Christ on the
cross: a scarecrow, an object of foolishness gathered together
from things that have been discarded. So we have rejection
and loneliness. But underneath this all is Jesus’ resolve.
And that’s partly perhaps why what happens next in
this story seems kind of harsh to us.
“
I’ll follow you but let me first go and bury my father,” says
one. And Jesus says, “Let the dead bury the dead.” “Let
me say farewell to my family before I join you,” says
another. And Jesus uses that cutting and incisive image
about not looking back when your hand is on the plow. I
think what Jesus is challenging the hearers —that
includes us —to do is to think about freedom in a
particular way. Freedom from the self—more precisely
from that aspect of the self that holds us back from being
who we are called to be. I have been reading a very thoughtful
book that has helped me to understand something of this.
It’s a recent publication, a spiritual memoir called
Father Joe: The Man Who Saved My Life, written by an English
guy, who has lived for many years in the United States,
called Tony Hendra. Tony Hendra is a satirist. He was the
editor of National Lampoon magazine and will be known to
some you out there as the character Ian Faith in the band
Spinal Tap in the spoof This Is Spinal Tap.
Hendra writes in the book Father Joe about his relationship
with a Benedictine monk who lives on the Isle of Wight,
off the south coast of England. He relates how through
their friendship he comes to an understanding of meaning
in his life. In one of their conversations, they discuss
something of this. They talk initially about love. Father
Joe says, “We perform [a] work not to feel wonderful
but to know and love the other. It’s the same in
romantic love. You may not feel your love but God is still
your loved one, your other.”
Hendra writes, “ I began to sense that there might
be possibilities I could never have known.
Father Joe continues, “The other day Father Prior
was telling me about a French writer Jean Paul Sartre,
an existentialist. I’m sure a brain like you has
come across him. One phrase particularly struck me, ‘Hell
is other people.’ Do you think he meant that as a
joke, Tony?”
Tony replies, “I don’t think humor’s
a strong point with existentialists.”
Father Joe says, “I think it’s poppycock. How
can hell be others? God is manifested in others. God is
the Other. That’s why the self must lose itself and
love for the other. It’s the self we must leave behind.
Better to say ‘Hell is the Self.’”
I think that’s something of what is behind Jesus’ hard
and challenging teaching here. Let’s be clear that
this is not about us working out our own salvation but
about freedom from self through the grace of Jesus Christ.
The promise is to be brought to a place where we can be
freed of those aspects of self that hold us back from being
fully ourselves.
Then we have the offer of being given the freedom “to
go and proclaim the kingdom,” as Jesus says. In doing
this, we should remember Francis of Assisi’s dictum, “Preach
the gospel always. Use words only when necessary.”
And throughout all these reflections, I keep hearing in
my mind Bob Marley’s great plaintive anthem of the
experience of slavery, “Redemption Songs,” in
which he challenges the hearer of the song, “Won’t
you help to sing these songs of freedom?”
To know freedom in our own lives and thus to bring freedom
in our world is the ultimate outcome. St. Augustine put
it this way: “Help us O Lord, so to know you that
may truly love you and so to love you that we may fully
serve you; whom to serve is perfect freedom.” Or
in the words of our hymn by George Matheson, the fine Scottish
hymn writer of the Victorian era, “Make me a captive,
Lord, and then I shall be free.”
Thanks be to God.
Amen.
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