7-3-26 - Home of the Free

You can listen to this reflection here. Sunday's epistle reading is here.

Tomorrow is Independence Day for the United States of America, a milestone birthday. Even after 250 years we have yet to achieve liberty and justice for all. Yet independence means something different in the Christian life than it might socio-politically. I believe God’s greatest desire for us is freedom, to be free from all that holds us back and makes us less than who we were intended to be, less than who God already knows us to be. That freedom does not make us independent, however – it makes us interdependent. That is the kind of liberty Jesus calls us into. He invites us to be tethered to God, to one another and to serving the world, not because we are forced, but by our free choice.

Paul writes in Romans that we have been set free from sin so as to be enslaved to God, being made holy (“sanctified”) in the process. Would we voluntary enslave ourselves to anything? Well, yes. Our lives are full of ways in which we yield our freedom – on a limited basis – to achieve a goal. We become employees working under the policies and procedures of our employers; we pay personal trainers large sums to make us perform painful and arduous exercises; we follow certain diets. I even discovered when I was instituted into ministry in the Anglican Church of Canada that I had sworn an oath of fealty to King Charles!

And we voluntarily take on the yoke Jesus offers, which he says is easy. Which it is, when we truly trust him; it is only when we pull away that we find it chafes.

We are asked to become more dependent on God, to throw all our weight and trust on this One we cannot see but discern in our lives and around us. As we grow in that relationship, we learn the ways that God is depending upon us to be the vessels by which her/his transforming love and healing power are enacted in the world. We cannot do it without God; God will not do it without us.

We are also invited to become interdependent with others in our communities of faith, and with those whom we would serve. And we are interdependent in service to the world, willing to be served as well as to serve. We will see peace and justice reign when we truly understand that to seek the good for our neighbor will create good and security and plenty for us. Even better will be the day when we don’t think in “us” and “them” terms at all – as U2 sings in Invisible, “There is no them; there’s only you, there’s only me.”

I wish all of us a weekend of perfect freedom and fun – with the prayer that, as we celebrate the unfathomable liberties many – though far from all – enjoy as a nation, we find a pattern of “tethered freedom” in Christ that allows us to be truly free.

© Kate Heichler, 2026. To receive Water Daily by email each morning, subscribe here. Here are the bible readings for next Sunday. Water Daily is also a podcast – subscribe to it here on Apple, Spotify or your favorite podcast platform.

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