The message given in the Sunday night service in the Gettysburg United Methodist church. The Bible verses used are Galatians 5:13-26.
It’s the night of the Fourth of July. I
hope you’ve enjoyed your holiday. If you’re planning to shoot off any
fireworks tonight, please be careful. It is really dry around here, and
the last thing we need is to have a fire. Fireworks can be beautiful, but
we’d sure hate to have this most American of holidays end with a tragedy.
This
is the day we celebrate our freedom as Americans. We have a lot of
freedoms in our society. We tend to take those freedoms for granted, and
we should not. There are many people in the world who do not live in the
freedom that we do. We need to remember to thank God for the freedoms we
have living here in the United States.
As
Americans, you and I can, for the most part, live in any way we choose to
live. There are certain restrictions, of course, and there have to
be. But as long as we’re not hurting someone else, we can pretty much
live the way we want to. We can live where we want to live, and we can do
what we want to do. If someone else thinks the way we’re living is
stupid, well, they can think that, but we don’t need to pay any attention to
them. As Americans, we can still live the way we choose to live and do
what we want to do.
As
Christians, we also celebrate our freedom. But the freedom we celebrate
as Christians is not the freedom to do what we want to do. It’s the
freedom to do what God wants us to do. It’s not the freedom to live the
way we want to live. It’s the freedom to live the way God wants us to
live.
The
Apostle Paul says that Christ has set us free. Free from sin.
Including our own sinful desires. But, Paul says, we cannot just take
that freedom for granted. We have to stand firm, so we don’t fall back
into the slavery of sin.
It’s
a constant battle. Freedom in Christ versus the slavery of sin. You
and I have to fight that battle every day. Jesus will help us. In
fact, Jesus will be there and will fight the battle right alongside us.
But you and I still have to do our part.
Paul
puts the battle in pretty stark terms. He says, “Walk by the spirit, and
do not gratify the desires of the flesh. For the flesh desires what is
contrary to the Spirit, and the Spirit what is contrary to the flesh.”
In
other words, we must choose one or the other. We either walk by the
spirit, or we gratify the desires of the flesh. We cannot do both.
We cannot compromise. We cannot walk by the Spirit some of the time, and
gratify the desires of the flesh some of the time. In other words, we
cannot be slaves to sin some of the time, and be free some of the
time.
Because
that’s what sin tries to convince us of. Sin tries to convince us that we
can give in to the desires of the flesh once in a while, and then go back and
walk by the spirit as if nothing had happened. But it does not work that
way. The more we give in to sin, the easier it gets to sin. After a
while, we don’t even think about it anymore.
Let
me give you an example. I have, a couple of times in my life, been on a
low-carb diet. Basically, on a low-carb diet, what you do is give up
eating potatoes, breads, some fruits, and pretty much all desserts. What
you can eat is meat, most vegetables, some fruits, and a limited amount of
dairy products. Now, it’s more complicated than that, and if you’re
thinking about going on a low-carb diet I urge you to do more research on it
rather than just going by what I said here.
But
the point is that it works. Both times I’ve tried it, I’ve lost
weight. And at first, I do pretty well on it. Because, as I said,
you get to eat all the meat, and I really like meat. So that satisfies
me. For a while.
But
after a while, I start remembering how much I like ice cream. And
chocolate chip cookies. And chocolate brownies. And so, I cheat on
my diet. Just once. I won’t do it again. In fact, I feel kind
of guilty about having done it once.
But then, after a
few days, maybe a week, I start thinking about how good the blizzards at Dairy
Queen are. And so, I do “do it again”. I cheat again. And
again, I feel kind of guilty about it. But not quite as guilty as I felt
the first time. And so, a few days later, I cheat again. And this
time, I don’t feel much of anything about it. And pretty soon, I’m off
that low-carb diet completely, and I’m not even really thinking about it
anymore.
Now, I’m not
saying that eating ice cream and cookies is sinful (although there certainly
are Bible passages that talk about gluttony). But the point is that what
Paul calls “the desires of the flesh”--sin--works exactly that same way.
The first time we do it, we probably feel guilty about it. The second
time, not quite so much. The third time, we don’t feel much of
anything. And pretty soon we’re constantly giving in those desires of the
flesh, and we’re not even really thinking much about it anymore.
That’s why Paul
says “the flesh desires what is contrary to the Spirit, and the Spirit what is
contrary to the flesh. They are in conflict with each other, so that you
are not to do whatever you want.” It’s why Paul tells us to walk by the
Spirit, so that we will not gratify the desires of the flesh. We have to
choose, one way or the other. That’s not to say we’ll be perfect.
We’ve said before that perfection is not possible for human beings. But
that’s why I said we have fight the battle every day. We cannot just make
the choice once and be done with it. Those sinful desires of the flesh
will keep coming back at us, trying to enslave us. We need to keep
fighting them, day after day after day.
But we’ve been
talking in abstract terms. What are those desires of the flesh?
Paul lists some of them, although he says it’s not a complete list.
Sexual immorality. Impurity. Debauchery. Idolatry.
Witchcraft. Hatred. Discord. Jealousy. Fits of
rage. Selfish ambition. Dissention. Factions.
Envy. Drunkenness. Orgies. All of those won’t apply to all of
us, of course. But I’m pretty sure each one of us has at least one of
them that applies to us. We may not always give in to it, but we have to
keep fighting it. I don’t think I’ve ever known anyone--including
myself--who was not subject to some of those things sometimes.
We need to fight
those things, and we need to ask Jesus for help. But here’s the
thing. There’s an old saying that you cannot defeat something with nothing.
If our entire focus is on the things we should not do, we will probably
fail. We cannot spend our lives just avoiding negative things. We
need to fill our lives with positive things, the fruit of the Spirit.
What’s the fruit of
the Spirit? Paul lists that, too. Love. Joy.
Peace. Forbearance. Kindness. Goodness.
Faithfulness. Gentleness. Self-control. Those are the things
we need to focus on. Those are the things we need to spend our lives trying
to do. If we do those positive things, we won’t have time to focus on the
negative things. We will defeat the desires of the flesh, simply because
we don’t have time for them.
It’s not as easy
as that sounds, of course. As the old saying goes, if it was easy,
everybody would do it. We cannot do it by ourselves. We can only do
this with the help of Jesus. Jesus helps us ignore the desires of the
flesh and focus on the fruits of the Spirit. In fact, it’s more than
that. As Paul says, Jesus sets us free from the desires of the
flesh. We are no longer enslaved by them.
Living in the
United States, we have the freedom to choose how we want to live. We can
choose to live in slavery to the desires of the flesh. In fact, society
often encourages us to. How many times have you heard things like,
“Follow the desires of your heart” or “Do whatever makes you happy”. That
sounds good. But our hearts are unreliable guides. There are a lot
of sinful things that will make us happy--in the short term. But they
have consequences, and those consequences will come back to bite us in the
end. And we will end up in slavery to the desires of the flesh, and we’ll
find that we’re neither happy nor free.
But we can also
choose to live by the Holy Spirit. We can follow the desires of God’s
heart. We can do things that make God happy. And God’s heart is a
reliable guide. And the fruit of the Spirit will make us happy in the
long term. And we will find that we are both happy and free.
I hope you’ve
enjoyed the fourth of July. I hope you’ve been able to celebrate the
freedom we have as Americans. But let’s use our freedom to live by God’s
Holy Spirit. Then we will have the ultimate freedom--freedom from slavery
to sin. When we have that freedom, we are truly free.
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