FREEDOM THROUGH GOD’S LAW
By
Charles N. Spence, Jr.
God had always wanted His people to be free. However,
most people today have a radically different idea of freedom than God’s. Many
in the world today look at freedom as the uninhibited right to do what they
want to do. We can see this in almost every facet of society today. We see
children wanting to do their own thing without any restrictions from parents or
any other authority figures. Segments of society want the right to free sexual
expression with whomever they chose. Some want to be free to make their own
choices about life and death, whether it be their own or that of another
person. People over the years have developed a disdain for laws, rules and
regulations. They do not want any laws imposed upon them because they believe
that law, in any form, is a threat to freedom. The
When God gave the Israelites the Mosaic law he hoped that all would go well with them (Deu.
Again, God wants his people to be free. Just as He
delivered them from Egyptian bondage and gave them the Law to protect their
freedom, Jesus brings deliverance to those who do His will and gives them laws
to protect their freedom. Jesus said, “You
shall know the truth and the truth shall make you free” (John
Yet, with freedom comes responsibility and
accountability. More and more people refuse to be responsible and accountable.
According to the first amendment of the Constitution, I have the right to free
speech. However, that freedom must be tempered with responsibility. I am not
free to say what ever I want about anyone or speak in such a way as to disrupt
order, for example, yelling fire in a crowded theater. The fourth amendment
allows a person the right to bear arms. However, he can’t just walk into a
store and obtain a gun and shoot it whenever and wherever. Parents give their
children certain freedoms. A child wants to go to his friend’s house; the
parent grants the child the freedom to do so. Yet, the parent establishes a
curfew. If the child violates the curfew, the freedom to visit his friend is
taken away. In all these realms we understand the relationship between law and
freedom. Yet, in the realm of the word of God most people do not understand it.
The homosexual wants to be free to engage in immoral behavior, but does not
want to deal with the consequences of his actions. The fornicator and adulterer
want to be free to engage in their lifestyles, but will not take responsibility
for their actions. Much of God’s law is designed to protect us from ourselves.
When we go against it, we have to take responsibility for our decision to go
against God’s will. We cannot allow ourselves to be influenced by those who
seek to be free without accountability. Peter says of those, “While they promise them liberty, they
themselves are the servants of corruption: for of whom a person is overcome, of
the same is he brought into bondage” (2 Pet.
Let us learn to operate with in the guidelines of God’s
law. This is the only way we can guarantee our freedom. Jesus has given us His
law to live by, after taking out of the way the law that men died by because
they would not follow it (Col. 2:14). Jesus came that we might have a full and
abundant life (John