Sermon Tone Analysis

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This weekend many people will be celebrating Independence Day in a variety of ways.
Some people travel to see loved ones, and others just stay home with the family.
There is a lot of BBQ going on all across the country.
There are fireworks, parades and all kinds of celebrations which have become tradition in the US.
We celebrate this holiday because of what happened in 1776.
We celebrate the actions of people we only know about because of books.
We celebrate the actions of people that lived without electricity, without regular mail service, without Super Wal-Mart.
What a stark existence to be willing to fight for.
We celebrate that these people had the gumption, or gall or courage to break the existing hold of Europe on this wilderness colonies.
What did they want to become independent from?
If you read through the document you find oppression, abuse, removal of rights, false justice and punishment.
You find a precisely stated set of charges against the king and their justification for independence.
Their declaration was to break free of the strangling hold of a tyrant.
Interestingly we celebrate the day of declaration not the day it was actually achieved.
I guess if they had lost their struggle we would not be celebrating at all on Monday.
We celebrate the ideal of the prize that was worth so much time energy and lives.
So what is the Christian comparison?
Our Key text this morning is from the book of Galations
Freedom For the Children of God
The scripture we heard this morning is talking about freedom.
This passage is about Mosaic law.
The law is described else ware as being something that helped to identify sin, and how to live a life honorable to God.
However, too many people, religious leaders, used the Law as a tool of control.
They used it for power and position and separation.
Paul declares freedom from the law.
He tells the churches in Galatia that they are called by God through Jesus to be free.
The people of Paul’s day suffered persecution and hardship which increases as they became Christians.
The community made it tough to live a new faith.
It had to be hard to celebrate the freedom that Paul encourages.
They had already broken from their old traditions.
They were trying to figure out the ins and outs of this new faith.
They had lots of questions and pressures to give into and it appears in scripture that one of the most logical was becoming a Jew to become a Christian.
The pressure was to live under the law as a first concern.
Paul insist that it is not true.
Pal thought that the Law was being retired as the means to cover sin, they still had the problem of Sin to deal with as we still do today.
Hind sight is so good.
Today we can look at United States history and find the investment made by people so long ago was worth it.
It is great to be free.
It is fantastic that I can pretty much do what I want and say what I want.
The first sentence in the Declaration of Independence is a whopper.
The unanimous Declaration of the thirteen united States of America, When in the Course of human events, it becomes necessary for one people to dissolve the political bands which have connected them with another, and to assume among the powers of the earth, the separate and equal station to which the Laws of Nature and of Nature's God entitle them, a decent respect to the opinions of mankind requires that they should declare the causes which impel them to the separation.
The second sentence of the Declaration of Independence says continues
We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights that among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.
229 years later we still enjoy the freedom that the Declaration of Independence created for us: life, liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.
This is my kind of place.
I am so happy that God placed me here.
I mean the US, Georgia and especially as your pastor.
There are a lot of less comfortable places in this world where there is little or no freedom.
Places where life liberty and pursuit of happiness are a pipe dream.
For some on this planet the biggest goal is to have life and there is little hope for much else.
However, there are still a few problems even here, I am not complaining mind you.
But, we have a lot rules in this country.
Traffic laws, home mortgages, traffic lights, speed limits, Income taxes, building codes, lines at the grocery store even the need for money.
I could go on and on.
It seems to me that with freedom comes a lot of other things which steel away our freedom.
The freedom we receive is cooperative.
It is a union of people to protect God given rights at a cost that is shared by the group.
The freedom we enjoy was not obtainable by one or two.
In the revolutionary war they fought to make something new.
The freedom we receive has limits that keep us from expressing our freedom at the expense of another.
But let’s look at this from a Christian perspective.
We live in the greatest country in the world, the richest, the finest, and the seemingly blessed.
What is our Freedom to be used for?
In our scripture today, Paul tells the churches in Galatia that they were meant to be free.
Free from slavery to sin – free from the obligation to keep the law which is impossible to keep.
However, even Paul explains that with freedom there are still rules and limits.
He states rule 1 like this:
“But do not use your freedom to indulge the sinful nature; rather, serve one another in love.”
We can not use our freedom to become immoral people!
We can not use our freedom to abuse or use other people!
We can not use our freedom to avoid obligations within the church.
We can’t use our freedom to sit around and do nothing!
Our Freedom is not a license to sin in any way.
He also adds, We are to serve one another (within the Church) in Love.
Sounds like a limited version of freedom, sort of restrictive.
But, it is not too expensive.
After all, the people at church are family by birth or holy adoption.
We all do things we don’t necessarily like for family, at least occasionally.
Now we get to the second rule,
“The entire law is summed up in a single command: "Love your neighbor as yourself.”
There is that Love your neighbor thing.
It starts in Leviticus, then Jesus is quoted in Matthew, Mark and Luke, then Paul and James both remind us.
Sort of a pain isn’t it.
To be reminded about loving your neighbor.
Perhaps, we need to take the reminders as extra significance or importance.
Here Paul reminds us that this one rule replaces the entire law.
-This one rule if followed will set your life on an even footing in the right direction.
-This one rule will set you free of al the little nuances and petty restrictions of the Law.
Loving your neighbor as self, What does that really mean?
How do we demonstrate our love for ourselves?
When we are hungry, thirsty or sick we do something about it.
When I decide to go someplace I use my car, something I bought to meet my needs.
I guess there are a lot of things I do for myself, some are needs some are comforts or fun.
But I am worth all of it, right?
According to Paul, our neighbors are worth something as well.
With freedom come obligations to our family, community, neighbors and even individuals along our path.
Folks that don’t value you or me at all, should still be important to us because of our freedom.
Paul is writing to people that are in the middle of a battle over salvation.
They do not have the advantage of hind sight.
They are fighting their way toward the path of righteousness and are uncertain of the proper steps.
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