freed minds
26 December 2020
One of my favorite science fiction movies came out in 1999: The Matrix. For those who don’t know, The Matrix stars Keanu Reeves. His character’s name is Thomas Anderson, who by day has a job as a computer programmer. At night, he is a computer hacker who calls himself Neo. The movie also stars Laurence Fishburne as Morpheus, a legendary hacker who the government has branded a terrorist.
Morpheus contacts Neo, and a meeting is set up.[1] During a captivating conversation, Morpheus tells him, “What you know you can’t explain, but you feel it. You’ve felt it your entire life, that there’s something wrong with the world. You don’t know what it is, but it’s there, like a splinter in your mind, driving you mad.” The entire world, everything, is an elaborate computer program, the matrix.
(On a side note, there are some physicists who speculate that our whole universe might be something like a computer program, possibly being run by others.)
Neo undergoes a procedure, and he wakes up to the real world, a desolate wasteland. To make a long story short, Morpheus teaches Neo how to fight within the program. He does this because he believes that Neo can liberate everyone from the matrix; he believes he is a kind of messiah.
As they’re sparring, Morpheus shouts at Neo, “What are you waiting for? You’re faster than this. Don’t think you are, know you are. Come on. Stop trying to hit me and hit me.” They go back to fighting, and Neo stops his fist just before he hits Morpheus in the face. “I know what you’re trying to do,” says Neo. Morpheus responds, “I’m trying to free your mind, Neo. But I can only show you the door. You’re the one that has to walk through it.”
Free your mind. Free your spirit. I believe that’s a message the apostle Paul is giving the Galatians. Or maybe the better way of putting it is, “God has freed your mind. Accept that freedom. Don’t go back to being a slave.”
Our scripture reading is part of a longer passage that goes back to chapter 3. There, Paul speaks of the law of Moses as a kind of mentor, a supervisor. But he also talks about Abraham, who lived hundreds of years before the law was handed down by Moses. His faith, the faith of Abraham, was based on God’s promise that he would father a nation. His faith wasn’t based on the law.
The law and the promise do not contradict each other, but with faith, in particular the faith of Christ, the law is transcended. Old categories become meaningless. As the apostle says, “There is no longer Jew or Greek, there is no longer slave or free, there is no longer male and female; for all of you are one in Christ Jesus. And if you belong to Christ, then you are Abraham’s offspring, heirs according to the promise” (3:28-29).
So with chapter 4, he carries that thought of the law being a supervisor or a disciplinarian by saying that with faith, we grow up. We become adults. Paul compares inheritors, while they’re still children, as basically equal to slaves. They are still under tight restrictions.
There’s something dramatic that happens, something befitting the Christmas season. Paul says that “when the fullness of time had come, God sent his Son, born of a woman, born under the law” (v. 4). One might say that’s a verse pregnant with meaning!
Like any other squalling baby, Jesus emerges from the womb of a woman. And he is born into a family that faithfully observes the Jewish law.
This happens in “the fullness of time.” That’s when the time, the hour, had finally arrived; it was just the right time. What does that mean? In part, we can think of the Jewish faith and culture, with the steadily growing hope and expectation that the Messiah is about to arrive. That helps explain the bitter disappointment when their would-be Messiah is killed, and the nation is still being ruled by foreigners.
Still, there is something known as the Pax Romana, the Roman peace, with its many beneficial qualities.
For example, it enabled the Roman Empire to build a network of roads. The Roman peace made travel on those highways much safer. It’s easier to run an empire if you can put down those pesky local rebellions, as well as offering security against criminal elements. Another benefit was the flourishing of architecture and the arts.
The ease of travel made possible the spread of the Greek language, which served as a common tongue throughout the Mediterranean. The translation of the scriptures (what we call the Old Testament) into Greek helped spread the faith of the Jews, the faith in which Jesus was raised, into many different countries.
The work of human beings, the arc of history, usually serves a greater purpose than what we might imagine. Behind it and through it emerges the fullness of time.
In this fullness of time, the Son has arrived to redeem us, to buy us back, to set us free. We are now adopted as children of God. There is no greater freedom. As with Abraham and Sarah—as with the Galatian church—we have been set free because of the promise of God, not because we’ve been able to obey the law.
But there’s a problem with all of this. Paul sees it in the Galatians, and honestly, it’s also a problem with us. There’s something in us that wants to reject freedom. There’s something in us that doesn’t want our minds to be free—that doesn’t want our spirits to be free.
Let me give you another example from The Matrix. One of the characters is named Cypher. He’s tired of life in the real world, with the running and hiding from the machines that maintain the matrix. He’s tired of its blandness; he longs for the life he used to have—like what we too often have—even though it’s an illusion.
There’s a scene in which he’s sitting in a restaurant with one of the agents: computer programs in human form who are guardians within the matrix. Cypher is eating a juicy steak. He admits that the steak isn’t real, but he likes it. He wants to have his memory wiped and be put back into the matrix. Cypher wants to reject his freedom and go back to when he was enslaved—provided he doesn’t know he’s a slave.
How appropriate for a guy whose name means “zero”!
So remember, the problem with the Galatians is that there are those among them who still insist they must observe the law, to unwittingly return to slavery. It applies to both Jewish and Gentile Christians. They want to go back to what they’ve known. There is a comfort in hanging on to what gives you the feeling of control. I certainly understand it! Freedom can be a scary thing.
The apostle Paul sees even more at stake. By rejecting their freedom in Christ, they actually are choosing idolatry. He tells them, “Formerly, when you did not know God, you were enslaved to beings that by nature are not gods” (v. 8). He’s having trouble understanding what they’re up to.
He continues, “Now, however, that you have come to know God, or rather to be known by God, how can you turn back again to the weak and beggarly elemental spirits?” (v. 9). The word for “elemental spirits” is στοιχεια (stoicheia), which has several definitions. In this case, he’s probably speaking of the rules imposed by those old gods. Paul is truly exasperated. He says, “I am afraid that my work for you may have been wasted” (v. 11). He wonders if he’s just been frittering away his time.
Last month, while speaking of Paul’s first letter to the Thessalonians, I noted he congratulates them on how they encourage one other. How about the Galatians? They must have an especially praiseworthy attribute. If they do, the apostle doesn’t mention it. He has already said, “You foolish Galatians!” (3:1). Some translations are even harsher. “You stupid Galatians! You must have been bewitched.” (Revised English Bible). Has somebody put you under a spell? Are you taking crazy pills?
And remember what they want to be enslaved to: “the weak and beggarly elemental spirits,” “those powerless and bankrupt elements.” (New Jerusalem Bible) They’re playing the role of Cypher from The Matrix!
I wonder, how often do we reject our scary freedom? How often do we choose those powerless and bankrupt elements? What are these pitiful, worthless things which we place on the altars of our hearts? How can those who “have come to know God, or rather to be known by God,” choose slavery to what is nothing?
We so often imitate the Israelites who, having fled the chains of Egypt, berate Moses and long to return (Nu 14:4).
Richard Rohr comments on this business of serving what is nothing.[2] “Less than a block from where I used to live in downtown Albuquerque, there is a sidewalk where the homeless often sit against the wall to catch the winter sun. Once I saw fresh graffiti chalked clearly on the pavement in front of the homeless. It said, ‘I watch how foolishly man guards his nothing—thereby keeping us out. Truly God is hated here.’”
So again I wonder, what are the nothings to which we so desperately cling? How do we forget our status as adopted children of God and turn back to slavery?
Soon after being chosen as pope, Francis addressed the Vatican Curia, their governing body. He listed fifteen diseases that he had noticed among them.[3] (In doing so, Francis showed himself to be a frank pope.)
One disease is “Spiritual Alzheimer’s”: “a progressive decline of spiritual faculties…, living in a state of absolute dependence on one’s own often imaginary views. We see this in those who have lost their recollection of their encounter with the Lord…in those who build walls around themselves and who increasingly transform into slaves to the idols they have sculpted with their own hands.” Francis sees in the Vatican leadership this same forgetfulness of God and turning to slavery that we just looked at.
If we reject the loving freedom of God and turn back to idols, we will inevitably do harm to each other.
Those in Christ have been set free. To explore that freedom, there are always new doors to open. But like freedom, opening those doors can be scary. We might want to stay where we are, circle the wagons, and hold on to what we already know, or perhaps, what we think we know. We might want to stay behind the walls we’ve built, and not walk through the door into new territory.
We are on the verge of a new year—2021.
Recently during our prayer time, I shared some reflections of gratitude sent by readers of the New York Times. They were asked to submit a statement of six words, expressing what they were thankful for from this past year. Over ten thousand replies were received. Many caught my eye, but here are three I mentioned: “There’s really more kindness than hate.” “Thankful for sweet potato pie, y’all.” “I am thankful to be thankful.”
{a scene from Antwone Fisher of gratitude and welcome (the video's aspect ratio might be off)}
A freed mind, a liberated mind, is a grateful mind—it is a grateful spirit. Having said that, I must also confess there is absolutely no doubt that this past year has brought way more than its share of heartbreak and sorrow. People all over the globe can attest to that. We here can attest to that. Still, as the prophet says, “The people [we who have been] walking in darkness have seen a great light; on those living in the land of deep darkness a light has dawned” (Is 9:2).
That is the subtle strength, the peaceful power, of Christmas. This season is teaching us lessons. Christ lives within us. In what fullness of time do we now find ourselves? May it be a time in which we welcome each other—and the Christ within us—as we together walk into that new freedom.
[1] www.imdb.com/title/tt0133093/trivia?tab=qt&ref_=tt_trv_qu
[2] https://myemail.constantcontact.com/Richard-Rohr-s-Daily-Meditations--How-Foolishly-We-Guard-Our--Nothing-----Ecumenism----July-8--2013.html?soid=1103098668616&aid=zXdIB1uvLD4
[3] www.washingtonpost.com/news/world/wp/2014/12/22/the-15-ailments-of-the-vatican-curia-according-to-pope-francis/
Comments
You can follow this conversation by subscribing to the comment feed for this post.