Monday, February 11, 2013

How free are you Christian?


The Apostle Paul declared in Galatians 5:1, “It was for freedom that Christ set us free”.
As a Christian, under New Covenant Grace, do you have the freedom to do anything you want, and yet not sin?
It depends on how you answer the question. 
Does God or man have absolute freedom? No! Neither God nor man has absolute freedom. God cannot do whatever He wants! You might say, “Blasphemy!” But consider that all freedom has a context, even God’s. Although God can do whatever He wants (“with God nothing is impossible”), yet what He does is always consistent with who He is; and He therefore always acts consistent with His character for He can do nothing contrary to His own character.
God is a Free Being. God is an Independent Self. God has Free-will. God is absolute. His character is that of absolute holiness and purity. He acts consistent with His perfect character. God is absolute but He will not, He cannot, act contrary to His character. The context of His freedom is always Love. God is free to be who He is; God is Love and therefore always consistent with His character. Absolute freedom would imply that God could do something inconsistent with His loving character, and thus deny Himself.
What about man? God did not create us to be like Him. He created us to receive from Him. In order for man to understand who he is and how he was intended to live and function as God designed, we must always start with God. He is always to be man’s point of reference.
Does man have freedom to do whatever he wants? Yes and No! If you answer the question from an either/or mindset –you would be wrong to answer “yes.” However, if you answer the question from a both/and perspective and answered “yes,” you would be correct. As we have seen, freedom always has a context, both for God and man. What is the context of freedom as God intended man to be?
We could say that freedom has responsibility. Please don’t misrepresent the word ‘responsibility’ as something you have to do. We might say that, a person who is responsible has responded to an ability, “response-ability.” Freedom is responding to His ability. Christian ‘responsibility’ is our faith response to God’s ability. Faith is our receptivity to God’s activity.  A responsible Christian only does or acts in freedom when he or she acts in harmony with what the dynamic life of Christ is initiating in them.  Anything more or less would be sin or license. 
I can hear someone ask at this point; well what will this kind of freedom look like in real life? I am often asked, “How do I live like that?”
My answer is usually, “I don’t have any idea.” However one thing I can say with certainty is that it will look unpredictable, as unpredictable as God Himself.
Any behavioral expression outside of God’s functional design for man is not freedom but license. Many Christians have never understood their intended functional design. Christian religionists have taught that man was responsible to try to live the Christian life with the help of God. Their primary focus has been on the performance of obedience, devotion of love or service “for” God.
However, God’s purpose from the beginning, as seen in Adam, was the indwelling presence of God’s “breath of Life”.  God’s highest purpose for man was “the outlived life of God”. For man to choose to live in loving dependence on God, deriving all that man needed from God, in a beautiful experience and expression of the “abundant life” of God in/as/through man. God’s purpose for man was to experience and enjoy the fullness of the dynamic Life of God through His grace activity through man trusting and believing day by day.
Christians are volitionally free, but not free “to do” anything that comes to their mind if they are to function in the freedom that God designed for man. Religion often views freedom predominantly as freedom from something but Christian freedom is the freedom to love and serve others.
The context of freedom always loves because God is love, and our behavior as Christians is to be a loving expression of His loving character through us. God is “for others” and therefore the attitude of freedom is never focused on oneself but others.
Too often the focus of man has been on performance rather than function. God’s functional design was that man would be receptive, which is what faith is, receptive to all that God had planned and purposed for him even before the foundation of the world. It is the very life of the risen Lord Jesus living and reigning in the Christian that allows him to experience the freedom of grace that God had desired for man. Freedom is never found or experienced outside functionality as God intended.
The Christian therefore can choose to do whatever he or she wants, and not sin as long as the expression of character or behavior has been initiated by Christ as one’s life.  So Christian, you are as free as Christ has made you to be.  “Act as free men, and do not use your freedom as a covering for evil, but use it as bondslaves of God,” 1 Peter 2:16.
Don Burzynski © 2013

Wednesday, February 6, 2013

Christian living – Function vs. Behavior


People’s lives are full of challenges and problems i.e. Dysfunction. Often they look for solutions to solve their troubles, believing that if they find the right answers, things will be “fixed” or will at least get better.  

Behavioral modification is the popular belief of our day secular and sacred.  The truth is God is not a problem solver, a “spiritual bellboy” or even the answer! There is no formula, method or Biblical principle for living the Christian life, there is however a purpose or “function” for living in Christ as God designed!

What is God’s functional design for man?

Christian living must always begin with God (our point of reference). We are totally dependent on God and the only way to experience God is by deriving everything from God.  It is impossible for man to “live like God” and in fact that was the lie that Satan suggested to Adam.  “The Being and character” of God is demonstrated in Christ’s functioning as a man dependent and derivate by the Holy Spirit. Jesus came to manifest Himself and to function as God, intended man to be or live. To do so, Jesus, “emptied Himself” (Phil. 2:7) of functioning as God, and functioned as a man 100% dependent upon the Spirit of God in Him.  For thirty-three years Jesus never did His own initiative (John 5:30; 8:28; John 8:42; 10:18; 14:10) but only did what He saw the Father doing in Him. Jesus,” was never less than God, but never more than man and as such the Savior of the world.

Man needed a savior because man had no life (Romans 8:2; 5:10) and a functional death (Hebrews 2:14). Salvation is not just deliverance from sin but to be made safe from the dysfunction of human activity which is a result of man’s spiritual condition, by birth (John 3:6; Rom. 5:12; 15).  
It is only as man is born anew or born again (John 3:3) that the Saving Life of Jesus Christ indwells man (Rom. 8:9) and man can then participate with Christ’s life which makes us safe from dysfunction.