Does Christian Liberty Give Us Freedom of Choice? (Part II)
In our last episode, we spent some time defining exactly what Christian liberty is and what it is not. What we found is that Christian liberty has little to do with the kinds of freedoms that are reflected in a social status kind of way and everything to do with being given spiritual freedom that is to be exercised with great humility and responsibility. We also uncovered how the gift of Christian liberty can be easily misrepresented and therefore misused. This is troubling, as the results of these misapplications add up to decisions and conclusions that are NOT Christ-based. How can we avoid these pitfalls?
Because our freedom in Christ is a sacred privilege and not a license for self-indulgence, it comes with “guardrails,” moral boundaries that guide us toward righteousness and away from licentiousness.
Three key areas in our lives where our liberty can easily be misapplied:
1. How we act: True liberty leads to loving service, not fleshly indulgence. Paul warned that irresponsible behavior can harm others and dishonor Christ. We must walk by the spirit and consider how our actions affect weaker consciences (Galatians 5, 1 Corinthians 8).
2. What we say: The distinction between “my truth (youtu.be/KELebbnMNwU) ” and “THE truth” is critical. Christian liberty does not grant freedom to redefine doctrine based on personal feelings, experiences or preference. Instead, we are called to speak and live according to Scripture, becoming “doers of the Word and not merely hearers” (James 1).
3. How we pursue peace and joy: Our liberty includes the freedom to surrender fully to God. On this episode, we read a personal testimony from a brother in Christ which illustrates how withholding repentance and vulnerability can block spiritual peace. Our true liberty requires humility, confession and submission to God’s will (christianquestions.com/program/1389-reconnect/) .
The bottom line is, our Christian liberty is designed for transformation (christianquestions.com/program/1391-many-are-called/) , not convenience. It equips all believers to make God-honoring choices, serve others and reflect Christ’s character in a broken world. The freedom we have is not FROM responsibility, but FOR righteousness.
