[forthright] More Bucks for the Bang / The Best Kind of Freedom

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From: Forthright Magazine <forthrightmag@...>
Date: Fri, 04 Jul 2003 11:30:06 -0300
   Forthright Magazine
   http://www.forthright.net
   Going straight to the Cross


   ----
   What kind of fireworks will you set off or watch
   today?
   ----

   COLUMN:


   More Bucks for the Bang
   by Tim Hall

   Driving to my destination, I cross the county
   line. The county I have just entered has no
   ordinances prohibiting the sale of fireworks.
   Every mile or so a tent had been erected to take
   advantage of the few days on which fireworks can
   be legally sold.

   It has been many years since I've visited such a
   stand, but I hear that demand for pyrotechnics
   runs high during this patriotic time of the year.
   I don't know what current prices are, but I
   imagine most of the fireworks are not cheap.
   Adding to my reluctance to shop is the short
   duration of the pleasure; in just a few moments,
   all the enjoyment has gone up in smoke.

   As I drive past the tents stocked with Roman
   candles and bottle rockets, I wonder how much I
   could buy for $9, and how long the show would
   last. I chose that $9 figure for a reason; in the
   back of my car is a 50-pound bag of rice I
   purchased for that amount. The rice will be given
   to a family of refugees who have just come from a
   strife-torn country in Africa. The family,
   thankful to be in a safer place, will struggle for
   awhile. But that much rice will help feed them for
   several days.

   There is nothing inherently sinful about spending
   one's money on fireworks. But sometimes I wonder
   what such purchases say about the way we view our
   possessions and our stewardship. "It's my money!
   I'll spend it however I wish." Do such statements
   come from hearts touched by God's grace? Is there
   compassion for the needs of others behind
   declarations like that?

   James speaks clearly about the use of our
   possessions: "What does it profit, my brethren, if
   someone says he has faith but does not have works?
   Can faith save him? If a brother or sister is
   naked and destitute of daily food, and one of you
   says to them, 'Depart in peace, be warmed and
   filled,' but you do not give them the things which
   are needed for the body, what does it profit? Thus
   also faith by itself, if it does not have works,
   is dead" (James 2:14-17, New King James Version).

   John makes the same point: "But whoever has this
   world's goods, and sees his brother in need, and
   shuts up his heart from him, how does the love of
   God abide in him?" (1 John 3:17)

   How does the love of God abide in me?

   God has not commanded us to strip all pleasure
   from our lives. There's no inherent sin when we
   stop at the local fireworks stand to make a
   purchase. What we must ask, however, is this: Is
   this our usual pattern of stewardship? Do we also
   seek to imitate the Lord in using our blessings to
   bless those around us who are in greater need?

   Just after dark on July 4th, I plan to be outside
   watching the city's fireworks display from my
   front yard. Like others around me, I'll be going
   "Oooh" and "Ahhh". But deeper down in my heart,
   I'll be savoring a more enjoyable sensation: the
   good feeling that comes when I pass along a little
   bit of the rich grace that God has shed upon me.
   That's the "bang" I'll enjoy most (and longest)!


   ----
   Today is a holiday for some, a celebration for
   others.
   ----

   EDITORIAL

   The Best Kind of Freedom
   by J. Randal Matheny

   Americans today celebrate 127 years of political
   freedom. One organization which measures freedom
   in countries around the world claims that more
   people enjoy greater liberties today than at any
   other time in history, in part because of
   Americans' efforts at home and abroad.

   Every nation which enjoys some degree of freedom
   does well to commemorate and remember the
   responsibilities of citizenship.

   Though Americans celebrate July 4th in a unique
   way, the moment serves to remind us all,
   regardless of nationality,

   (1) That Christian values make good government. As
   Patrick Henry said, "It cannot be emphasized too
   strongly or too often that this great nation was
   founded, not by religionists, but by Christians;
   not on religions, but on the gospel of Jesus
   Christ!" The old saw is still true that "America
   is great because America is good." Remove the
   goodness, and the greatness will tumble. This is
   true, not only of the USA, but of any country that
   would adopt Christian principles.

   (2) That Christians make good citizens. Social and
   economic progress and political stability are
   served by the qualities of honesty, thrift, hard
   work, and integrity. Christians also understand
   true justice. As an example, slavery in England
   and the USA was abolished because of people who
   insisted upon the Christian truth that all people
   are created equal.

   (3) That Christian faith thrives in any social or
   political climate. One does not need democracy, as
   we know it, to live in Christ nor to preach the
   gospel. As thankful as we may be for the
   democratic process, the Way was born under foreign
   domination and spread throughout an Empire, under
   diverse and often harsh conditions.

   (4) That Christian freedom in the Lord Jesus
   Christ is eternal. Nations rise and fall, freedoms
   wax and wane, political systems come into vogue
   and disappear, but "[i]t was for freedom that
   Christ set us free" (Gal. 5:1 NASU). The phrase
   "for freedom," according to Kenneth Boles,
   "emphasizes the permanency of the new status" and,
   as J.W. McGarvey notes, indicates "the very design
   that we should cherish and enjoy our freedom."*

   Indeed, in Christ we are set from sin and its
   consequences to enjoy the wonderful, full, and
   lasting liberty of relationship with God. Such
   freedom is a daily celebration and causes constant
   gratitude.
   __________
   *Kenneth L. Boles, Galatians & Ephesians, The
   College Press NIV Commentary, p. 123; J. W.
   McGarvey and Philip Y. Pendleton, Thessalonians,
   Corinthians, Galatians and Romans, p. 279.

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