Love and Freedom

The most difficult aspect of love is the freedom it inherently requires. Love, in its ultimate and proper form, only exists between equals. There can be a sort of benevolence and nobility towards another who is not equal, but never love. This makes it difficult to understand the God-who-is-love.

It will quickly be said by most that God is not our equal, and that we can never be His equal. What we suggest by that is that He can never love us and we can never love Him. He can be kind and caring towards us, and we can be affectionate and respectful towards Him, but we can never love Him as our equal.

Against this denial is the blatant Christian teaching (constantly affirmed in the Orthodox Church) that God’s intention towards us is to raise us up as equals. We say that “God became man so that man could become God.” Often that statement is “fudged.” We quickly add that we do not mean that human beings will become “God” in the same manner that He is God. But what the Fathers say is that we will become, by grace, everything that God is by nature. This is to say that we will become what He is because it is His gift to us.

And in this gift, we can say that He loves us. He intends to raise us up as equals.

Christ says, “I no longer call you servants… but friends (Jn. 15:15). He has held nothing back from us.

The image that speaks of this most deeply for me is that of seeing God “face to face.” This is much more than an expression of closeness or visibility. It is also an expression of an encounter with an equal.

All of this, of course, is predicated on the fact that God wills Himself to be our equal. It is His condescension that makes it possible. He became “small” and “weak,” not only to enter into our world, but, in entering it, to come as our equal. He came as a man among men, not as a ruler or a lord. He washed feet with the suggestion that we should do the same.

And this is love. Love is only possible between equals. This is perhaps not obvious to us at first. We think of parent and child and do not consider them equal. But, properly, they are. Something which establishes our equality with one another is the nature of our “boundaries.” There is something inviolable and intrinsically deserving of regard and respect between equals. With my dog, such a boundary does not quite exist. He conforms to my will and, generally, gets no vote in matters that arise. A child is not a dog. Though a child requires more guidance and help from an adult, they have boundaries that remain. Those boundaries say to an adult, “You cannot trespass here, without doing harm.” The child’s boundaries become equal to the parent in that moment.

For that matter, even a dog has a certain form of equality: that of a fellow creature. We cannot do with them just anything. Cruelty is real and constitutes an unwarranted violation of an animal.

It is said by some that God has no boundaries regarding us, that He is God and may do with us (and to us) whatever He wills. This, of course, is true in an abstract sense. However, it is not true of God as He has made Himself known in Christ. Christ is a God who “asks.” He is the God who allows a freedom so great that it can kill Him.

The mystery of our freedom is found in the condescending love of God. The exercise of our freedom, particularly when used for evil ends, inevitably makes God appear weak or non-existent. We rarely consider the fact that it makes Him look like an equal, and an equal who loves us. Obviously, this allows for the tragedy of our evil actions. But, even there, God does not exempt Himself from that tragedy but embraces its consequences in His death on the Cross. It is fully within our freedom that He addresses us and rescues us from the consequences of our own evil (and the evil of others).

Of course, such a voluntarily weak God is deeply frustrating. He could do so much more. What we want Him to do is not love some in order to love others. If He ignores the freedom of the evil-doer in order to preserve the life of the innocent, we ask Him to violate His love (or negate it). This reality creates the paradox of love and freedom. That paradox is only solved in the mystery of Pascha itself. In His voluntary suffering and death, God takes upon Himself the suffering that love allowed to our freedom. Without violating that freedom, He nullifies the effects of its abuse in the resurrection of the dead (not just His own, but that of all).

All of this turns the usual arguments (and thoughts) about the so-called “problem of evil” on its head. Those arguments require a God whose power selectively loves and nowhere limits itself. When I have written that Pascha is at the heart of everything (and I believe this faithfully represents the teaching of the Church) this weakness born of love is its consequence. It is the love of God that surrounds us and calls us to be His friends. It seeks us, face to face, even searching for us when we hide. But it is a love that stands weakly at the border of our freedom, and waits for our invitation.

 

 

About Fr. Stephen Freeman

Fr. Stephen is a priest of the Orthodox Church in America, Pastor Emeritus of St. Anne Orthodox Church in Oak Ridge, Tennessee. He is also author of Everywhere Present and the Glory to God podcast series.



Posted

in

, , ,

by

Comments

107 responses to “Love and Freedom”

  1. Dean Avatar
    Dean

    Ya’all sound like Orthocostals, but I like it! 🙂 At least your praise has very real substance backing it.

  2. Karen Avatar
    Karen

    “Romanides’ later stuff, goes in a direction that is very troubling. There is a thread that describes those who have reached theosis in a manner that I think can be dangerous. He makes them into infallible seers of all possible truth. This has trickled down into some popular Orthodox thought that will simply quote a saint’s opinion on something (like science questions) as possessing some higher, unchallengeable truth. I don’t think we have any examples of saints who can be seen that way – and in the hands of some, this itself can turn into an almost cult-like version of Orthodoxy.”

    I decided to read up a little on Romanides as a result of this thread because my own Rector had made derisive noises when I mentioned reading something by him once–likely for the reasons you state. From what little I’ve seen, I would agree Romanides can be understood this way, but I’ve also seen critiques that suggest it is a misunderstanding of his language to believe he taught Saints could be “infallible seers of all possible truth.” The critique suggested what he really believed was that the God-bearing Fathers are the only fully reliable (collective?) hermeneutic of the faith, since they are filled with the Spirit of the Tradition. It is the Holy Spirit that is the only infallible Guide to the truth of the Tradition, not individual God-bearing Saints. Whatever the reality is of what he taught (versus what some have taken him to be teaching), I think his emphasis on purified noetic perception as the proper vehicle of inspired understanding is very valuable, entirely Orthodox, and an emphasis I have appreciated in your work here as well. But it is important to understand the polemical context in which Romanides was attempting to articulate Orthodox faith in response to Protestant and Orthodox attacks on what they perceived to be errors in Orthodox tradition in the early part of the 20th century. Polemical works and descriptive works are two different things. I would be very leery of those cult-like responses to Romanides’ work you describe. I think I’ve seen that, too, and that sort of thing is indeed very troublesome.

  3. Paula AZ Avatar
    Paula AZ

    Karen…after reading your comment about Romanides I realized that it was the polemical nature of his work that I had reacted to. So, “very critical” and “polemics” sort of go hand in hand. But there is a varying degree of abrasiveness that make some easier to read than others.
    Anyway, thanks for bringing that out.

  4. Karen Avatar
    Karen

    Paula,
    It’s very true polemical works can be hard to take. They can come across as harsh and abrasive. I think the “The River of Fire” address Fr. Stephen has in his pages here is another example of a polemical work. In fact, it seems to me Kalomiros draws quite heavily from Romanides’ perspective in this essay. When I read “The River of Fire”, I realized much of the beginning part was quite a caricature of anything I would recognize as the theolological tradition of “the West”. At the same time, there was a kernel of truth within that caricature—especially as this pertained to certain Reformed and Evangelical presentations of “the gospel”—which validated very real difficulties I had come to have understanding the gospel in fullness as an Evangelical Protestant. So, I took the first part of TROF with a large grain of salt, looking at the kernel of truth it contained, and was able to really appreciate and recognize the Orthodox understanding of the nature of Final Judgment and Hell it presented in its second part as the spiritual medicine I had been needing for the healing of my soul.

  5. Paula AZ Avatar
    Paula AZ

    Karen… Now that you mention it, I do recall in a recent post you relating a story about reading on the Last Judgement, where you had an epiphany! Didn’t remember it was TROF. though. A very significant moment for you.
    I will consider this and think twice the next time I come across a difficult piece. It may be well worth it (as it was for you) to continue to the end, especially if there is something worthwhile being said. Thanks again!

  6. Karen Avatar
    Karen

    I should add, Paula, that for every bit of polemical argument I read, there are probably dozens I have passed over for less provocative food for my soul. There was a reason the Holy Spirit wanted me to read TROF. Equally, I think He has convicted me to avoid other sources that would have simply stirred up my passions and been unhelpful. We don’t all profit from identical spiritual prescriptions.

  7. Paula AZ Avatar
    Paula AZ

    Karen…yes. Well said, and I agree. In retrospect I can look back and recognize God’s ‘hand’ in leading me away from [books, readings, places online] the very things that contribute to inflaming my already inflamed passions. And then to find just the right material. or place, or person that will bless!

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *


Subscribe to blog via email

Support the work

Your generous support for Glory to God for All Things will help maintain and expand the work of Fr. Stephen. This ministry continues to grow and your help is important. Thank you for your prayers and encouragement!


Latest Comments

  1. Byron, My primary thought is that it our communion with Christ is given in and through His “broken” Body and…

  2. Fr. Stephen, Thanks for the reminder about that maxim. It comes as a balm to my soul. The noise in…

  3. Sam, you said: Indeed, Christ allowed His risen face to be recognized in the the setting of eating with Him…

  4. It seems clear that without the Crucifixion, there is no communion. Is there not communion in the Incarnation itself, Father?…

  5. Matthew, We obey the commandments of Christ as best we can (they’re not complicated). I don’t remember a commandment that…


Read my books

Everywhere Present by Stephen Freeman

Listen to my podcast



Categories


Archives