Truth and Freedom

John 8:31-36

Truth is taking a heavy beating these days. In reality it always has but it seems this is especially the case of late. Call it what you want: alternative facts, political spin, disinformation and the list goes on. What they do is work to hide or discredit what is the truth. Call it what you want but a lie is still a lie. If you want to use theological language, a sin is still a sin. The refusal to seek the truth will continue to keep us bound, not free.

Disinformation/political spin/alternative facts are used by the powerful to keep us in the bondage of division, to their advantage. Disinformation/political spin/alternative facts reinforce the suspicions we carry toward others and push us into the heinous acts of hate. Disinformation/political spin/alternative facts convince us that what we know to be good is actually bad. They convince us that what we know to be evil is righteous. Without truth, there is only bondage. Without truth, there is no freedom.

The reading from the gospel of John tells of Jesus and the Jews having a rather sharp debate over the truth about being children of God. We first need to remember that Jesus was also Jewish and so this was more of a “family” argument and they can get nasty. Secondly, verses like these have been used to define Jews as the evil enemy and used as justification for persecution. This is a lie.

Jesus said,

If you continue in my word, you are truly my disciples; and you will know the truth, and the truth will make you free.

John 8:31

Those present declared their lineage to be from Abraham and so they have never been in bondage. A preposterous statement since their land was currently under the bondage to Roman authority. Jesus spoke of ‘continuing in his word.’ His word gave an honest definition of the truth regarding justice, peace and sin. Freedom will not come when justice denied is hidden under lies. Peace brought about under the threat of violence is not true peace. This is bondage, not freedom. Sin is more than doing something defined as ‘bad.’ Sin is defiance/rebellion against the ways of justice and peace God calls out for us to live. We won’t have freedom until we truthfully look at how we participate in the injustice and violence of this world.

The truth is taking a beating these days. Disinformation and spin are keeping us in bondage. Jesus calls out for us to continue in his word to learn the ways of God’s rule. The result is we will learn what is justice and peace from God’s perspective. In the end, we’ll know the truth that leads to freedom.

Peace.

Allegiance to Jesus Matthew 16:13-20

The politics of the election are starting to really heat up. What this means in practice, is that the name of Jesus is getting tossed about by those claiming to have the “correct” defining statement of his identity. Some claim to have the special insight as to which political party Jesus is present and where he is absent. Political mudslinging tries to label the opposition as against God or hurting God. Yes, politics is heating up and Jesus is being dragged into the middle of it to serve our purposes.

So the reading from Matthew is fitting for these days. Jesus asked the disciples what others were saying about him. The response was John the Baptist or a prophet. Then Jesus personalized the question to what the disciples had to say. Peter announced, “You are the Messiah, the Son of the living God.” Jesus didn’t praise Peter for coming up with the answer but the Father for revealing this to Peter. The reading ends with Jesus giving strict orders for this revelation to be kept quiet which seems strange. Why? Peter had the correct title but there was much more for him and the other disciples to learn. You see, Jesus’ question wasn’t a test to get the answers right. This was about allegiance to Jesus.

Caesarea Philippi was a town that was near a cave which housed a spring feeding the Jordan River. The cave had also served as a place where the Greek god, Pan had been worshipped. Herod had built a temple to honor Caesar Augustus there. At the time Matthew was written, Roman soldiers had destroyed the great temple in Jerusalem. Caesarea Philippi was now the administrative center for Philip the tetrarch (Herod’s son). This was a reality not ignored by Matthew’s readers. So when Jesus asked about what was being said of him, he was really asking about allegiance…which God do you worship…what leaders do you revere…to what political power do you surrender your allegiance.

Peter had the right answer but not the understanding of what his response meant for life. If your allegiance is to Jesus, then you do the things he did. Jesus set people free as he announced the coming of the kingdom of heaven. He set people free from their illness. He celebrated with those despised “sinners.” He received the outcast and unwanted. He was and continues to be the way death’s power is destroyed.

Peter and the disciples had still much to learn about Jesus and following him. The church today still struggles in the same way. Jesus gave the amazing job description that is concerned with setting people free for the kingdom of heaven. What we do will either set people free or keep them in bondage. In following Jesus are we keeping people in bondage to ideology, race, division, fear, hatred, poverty, sickness? Or, are we working for people to be set free for the kingdom of heaven?

Another election is drawing near, meaning those seeking office are tripping over each other in the race to say who Jesus is to serve their purposes. Jesus is asking who we say he is to serve his purposes for the kingdom of heaven. Who do we worship…who will we give honor and praise…what power will we in the end serve? The difference is as big as freedom and bondage. How will we live out our answer to Jesus’ question?

Peace.