…Our scriptures tell a story of emancipation. Our first passage is the scene in which the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob drafts Moses for the job. Moses has fled Egypt after killing a slave master who was treating the Israelites harshly. He is now living a peaceful, pastoral life in Midian, married, children probably on the way, working as shepherd for his father-in-law’s flocks and herds.
But God sees in Moses the leader needed to set God’s people free. After some hesitation, Moses accepts the challenge. God assures Moses: I will be with you. And God is with him, in the things he needs to do, in the words he needs to say, and in the journey he needs to take.
Our passage from Galatians takes place something like 1300 years later, but enslavement is still an issue, as it will continue to be for the next two thousand years. Paul, writing to the churches Galatia, first reminds them that they cannot earn the love of God, because God’s love is pure grace. The implications of this are enormous. Among other things, it means that categories of humanity—race, gender, status, for example—are no longer legitimate ways of ranking people’s worthiness. (They probably never were.) The man is not superior to the woman. The free person is not superior to the enslaved person. All are equal. All are one in the love and freedom of Christ.
These texts show us the ideal, the way things should be, much as our Constitution shows us the ideal functioning of our government and its laws. But as we are all aware, humans have a way of finding workarounds, of letting one another down, and of seeking out what will benefit them, no matter the cost to others….
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