Human freedom can be an alluring, and often intoxicating,
reality. For all the things I like to do and want to do – I want to be free to
do them. But for all the things you like to do and want to do that I don’t
approve of, then I want the church, the government, or some other form of
authority to say “No, you’re not free to do that.” Of course my ideas of
freedom are precisely God’s ideas of freedom – so much of “religion” these days
seems to suggest “I’m in charge – God said . . . “
The first line of Paul’s 1 Corinthians 9 starts out with
this this bold question: “I’m a free man, aren’t I?” (The Kingdom New Testament: A Contemporary Translation) Paul
expected that his readers would answer that question “Yes.” From that beginning he goes on to discuss a
number a ideas about apostles and freedom, but in the middle of the chapter,
verse 19, comes to the real issues at hand:
“The reason for all this is as
follows. I am indeed free from everyone; but I have enslaved myself to
everyone, so that I can win all the more.” In other words, it seems as though
he had been “freed to be a slave.” That’s a bit of an oxymoron for sure.
From there he talks about all sorts of categories in his
culture: everyone, Jews, those with the
law, those without the law, and the weak. He wraps that conversation up by
declaring “I have become all things to all people, so that in all ways I might
save some.” (9:22) The word “win” floats around in the text five times – once
for each category – and then shifts to “save some” as a summary of it all.
Freed to be a slave!
Sometimes I try and imagine about all the seeming contradictions that must have
fought for space in Paul’s head. A former Pharisee and hater of those who
followed Jesus, he is now its chief missionary. Later in Ephesians he will say
he spent jail time “on behalf of Gentiles.” He will sit with a group of
“God-worshiping women” by a river bank in Philippi and have a conversation
about Jesus. Having been set free from
the law of sin and death, he finds himself enslaved to everyone so he can
influence them for the gospel.
Actually, at the end of this paragraph he declares this is
the very nature of the gospel itself. “I do it all because of the gospel, so
that I can be a partner in its benefits.”
Each of the categories Paul mentions has potential for
difficult moments for him. It isn’t as though he is thinking “this is a breeze”
and I can influence people. Rather he must be thinking something like “this
won’t be fun, it won’t be easy, but it will be worthwhile.”
I love being free. But hopefully I love even more the call
God has placed on my life. I suspect that is true for you as well. So the
question that now remains is something like this: “What area of freedom should
I set aside in order to better influence others for the kingdom?”
Elsewhere Paul will remind his readers that when abused,
freedom can be an excuse to sin (Gal. 5:13;
1 Cor. 8:9). But he also reminds us that where the Spirit of the Lord
there is freedom (2 Cor. 3:17; Gal. 5:1).
Learning to walk in freedom and not abuse it may be one of
our greatest challenges these days.
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