Blog
Dear Trailhead family,
I distinctly remember the nerves and excitement I felt right before my first time in a canoe. I stood on the dock, grasped the gunwale, and placed a foot into the canoe. Unfortunately, this action caused an equal and opposite action and the canoe moved away from the dock. I now had an important decision to make and not much time to make it: Do I commit to the canoe or the dock? I wanted to commit to the canoe and experience the joy of being on the water, but the dock was predictable, familiar, stable.
I ultimately decided on both and was re-baptized. This immersion taught me that I could remain on the dock or I could canoe, but I could not do both simultaneously.
Although I was embarrassed, I've come to see that moment as my part in a long tradition that humans have had with canoes. Somewhere, long ago, our ancestors first attempted to get into their dugout canoe while keeping a foot on the shore, only to clumsily splash into the water. Then they looked around to see if anyone had noticed.
Thus, the tradition was born.
Our faith ancestors have a similar tradition that we also enact to this day.
This tradition has to do with the Law that God gave to the Israelites, this newly emancipated people who needed instructions on how to interact with the God who took notice of them and moved on their behalf.
In the wilderness, God gave instructions and made a covenant with his people. This covenant, based upon faithfulness to the Law, was big and powerful, but not timeless. The covenant could be fulfilled and thus, came with an expiration date.
Enter Jesus. A new human ushering in a new way to be human and a new covenant with humanity.
The dock was still there in the form of the Law, but now we had a canoe, a new covenant through Jesus.
And humanity has been plashing between the two ever since.
Paul, writing to Jesus/Law followers in Galatia writes this, “You who are trying to be justified by the law have been alienated from Christ; you have fallen away from grace.” (Galatians 5:4)
Splash!
The sign of fidelity to the Law was circumcision and Jesus followers in Galatia were feeling a need to combine their new-found life in Christ with adherence to the old covenant.
Jesus and Moses, rather than Jesus as the fulfillment of the Mosaic Covenant.
But Paul would have none of it. The new covenant wasn't a fusion of old and new.
No, Jesus made it clear that He had fulfilled the Law. Why work at paying off a debt that had already been paid off? Only fools or thieves would ask you to do something so absurd.
“For through the Spirit we eagerly await by faith the righteousness for which we hope.” (Galatians 5:5) Our hope is no longer in the Law to bring us righteousness, but faith in the Spirit to “complete the good work.” (Philippians 1:6)
“For in Christ Jesus neither circumcision nor uncircumcision has any value. The only thing that counts is faith expressing itself through love.” (Galatians 5:6)
And then Paul takes off the gloves. “You were running a good race. Who cut in on you to keep you from obeying the truth?... As for those agitators, I wish they would go the whole way and emasculate themselves!” (Galatians 5:7 & 12)
Rather than try and earn true Life by adherence to a covenant that has been completed, leap into the freedom found in Life!
“You, my brothers and sisters, were called to be free. But do not use your freedom to indulge the flesh; rather, serve one another humbly in love. For the entire law is fulfilled in keeping this one command: ‘Love [agape] your neighbor as yourself.’” (Galatians 5:13-14)
Tim Mackie with The Bible Protect says this about the agape kind of love, “In the New Testament, agape refers to a way of treating people that was defined by Jesus himself: seeking the well-being of others regardless of their response.”
The Law is out, the dock has been abandoned.
We are now wholly in the canoe but we are not adrift (the great fear of those who want Jesus and the Law). Agape love, as demonstrated by Jesus and empowered in our lives by the Spirit, steers us.
Paul goes on to paint us a picture of what this Spirit-empowered, freedom-from-the-law-because-of-Jesus, life will look like. People living in agape will burst with overflowing joy, peace that overcomes, patience that endures, kindness that emanates, goodness that brings flourishing, faithfulness that produces trust, gentleness that confounds power, and self-control that can only be explained by a risen Lord.
Paul had plenty of experience with dock people; people who have to constantly question if God loves them (and others) and if they (and others) have done enough to keep that love.
Paul knew what it was to be a dock person because he had been one. Before Paul met Jesus and gave up on the Law, he was convinced the only way to stay in God’s good graces was to hunt and arrest, to silence and kill, the people who had abandoned the Law.
But when the agape of Jesus ambushed Paul, He knew there would be no straddling the gap between the Jesus way and the Law.
“It is for freedom that Christ has set us free. Stand firm, then, and do not let yourselves be burdened again by a yoke of slavery.” (Galatians 5:1)
That warning is for us too friends. Mixing the Law and Jesus will be advertised as biblical living, as how to live if you are serious about faith. It’ll promise life but will deliver death.
The canoe is waiting; we are invited into a new covenant relationship marked by life stacked upon more life for those loyally in love with Jesus.
But you must let go of the dock.
Grace and peace be upon you,
Grant