EXCERPT
Everything is permissible
if God does not
exist, and as a result, man is forlorn,
because neither within him nor without
does he find anything to cling to.
—Jean Paul Sartre
AUTHORS’ NOTE:
Twentieth-century French philosopher
Sartre believed that individuals, possessing free will and therefore personal
responsibility, mold themselves by making a choice or taking a side. He said
people are free because they can do this, and they are in anguish because they
must do this.
We believe people are free
when they’ve been set free in Christ . . . and in anguish because they’ve
either never found Him or they’re bound by legalism. We hope, in this
book, to give you encouragement, motivation, and help in finding and enjoying
the freedom God wants you to have, both inside and out.
Marilyn Asks, “What
Does Freedom Mean To You, Luci?”
MARILYN: What do you tell the woman who
wakes up with sixteen things to do but wants
to be free?
LUCI: Well, I can give
her a list. Academically, I can say, “Count your blessings.
Learn to tell the difference between inconveniences
and catastrophes. Savor the moment. Look
for the funny side of life.” All these
ideas are good things to remember.
I’d also tell her that freedom is
a choice. Quite often, it’s not so
much behavior as it is an attitude. This
is where a spiritual life of faith and trust
is so important, I think. That woman may
be up to her ears in an insurmountable amount
of duties as a wife and mother, but within
all that, there’s freedom in knowing
Christ. He has given her promises that tell
her she’s not alone; He is with her
to help her carry her burden. When she accepts
that, believes it, and applies it to those
sixteen things she’s doing, they somehow
don’t feel so awful.
I also think it’s important for her
to remember that everything has come to pass.
Those sixteen things that are driving her
crazy now won’t last forever. They
have a shelf life. Everything has a shelf
life. So I’d say, “Enjoy what
you can and give the rest to God to handle.”
MARILYN: Do you think
people are free but don’t know it?
LUCI: Oh, yes. Absolutely.
And that’s
terribly sad, I think. When people come to
know the Lord, when they accept Christ as
their Savior and pray to receive Him, they
have been at that moment set free—and
by that act of faith alone, they’re
free to experience another way of life. But
unfortunately, until they are taught that
truth from Scripture, they remain spiritually
bound, for the rest of their life in some
cases.
I’ve known people like this. I want
to take them by the shoulders and say, “You
don’t have to live this way. You have
a million promises from God right at your
fingertips that will lift you out of the
shoulds and oughts and musts. But you’re
living like you’re in a dark prison.
You’ve got the key to open the prison
door. Do it. Step out into the sunshine.” It
goes back to that thing of having to want
to be free before you can find freedom. Christ
is the key, but walking out of the prison
door is up to the individual.
MARILYN: Have you ever started out feeling
free and somehow, in the mishmash of life,
that sense of freedom was taken from you
. . . like a thief came along and stole it?
LUCI: Yes. I’ve felt free, but freedom
can be short-lived, I think. It has to be “re-won,” so
to speak. There are a jillion things in daily
life that can rob us of our freedom. For
example, when I’ve been praying about
something very sincerely, wanting something
corrected in me, or when I have seen something
I’ve fretted about or been concerned
about, I’ve raised my head from that
prayer and felt tremendous freedom, knowing, That
problem’s not even mine anymore. I
gave it to God. But then, the very next
day I’ll drag it back up again and
start being concerned for the same old reasons.
MARILYN: Why do you think that happens?
LUCI: Reality sets in.
I look at my circumstances instead of the
fact that God has told me He is taking
care of that problem. I forget about my
prayer and start working on this really
elaborate way of “getting out” of
my dilemma instead of leaving it with God,
as I was doing yesterday. Human nature. I
can think of lots of reasons it happens
Luci Asks, “What
Does Freedom Mean To You, Marilyn?”
LUCI: If you had to recommend one book in
the Bible to really understand freedom in
Christ, what would that be?
MARILYN: I recommend
the book of Galatians. It teaches the basic
and liberating truth of freedom found in
knowing Christ personally. In the words
of Eugene Peterson’s introduction
to Galatians in The Message, he
says, “God is a personal Savior who
sets us free to live a free life. God did
not coerce us from without, but set us free
from within.”
LUCI: Have you had an experience when you
did not allow yourself to have inside freedom?
MARILYN: There have been
many times. For example, when I close down
my emotions so I don’t feel something I don’t
want to feel, I have lost my inner freedom.
My feelings can no longer flow. It’s
almost like having a blood clot. That blood
cannot flow freely if there’s a blood
clot. Refusing my emotions the freedom to
flow clots me up. Sorry, Luci, this is an
unattractive simile; it just occurred to
me as we’re talking. I’ll give
you an example of a specific time I shut
off my emotions. I’ll stop talking
about blood.
When our baby Joani was
born with spina bifida, I was not allowed
to hold her or even touch her. The doctor
and nurses warned me I could contaminate
the open wound at the base of her spine.
It killed me to just stare at her in her
little Plexiglas “cage” with
one set of armholes in it. I was not allowed
to stroke her, touch her little head covered
in luxurious black curls, or even caress
her tiny toes. Except for the ghastly open
wound in her spine, she was a perfectly formed,
utterly beautiful baby.
Within a week, Joani
developed spinal meningitis accompanied
by a raging fever. She was transferred
to another hospital by ambulance, and I
was allowed to ride in the back next to
her in her isolette. There was no nurse
present. I was overwhelmed with the desire
to just touch her. I gingerly placed my
right hand into the armhole of the isolette.
I lightly stroked her perfect little head
and then her tiny little shoulders with
my forefinger. She was my flesh and blood,
bone of my bone, flesh of my flesh. I pulled
my arm out then and sobbed, “Lord Jesus, heal her!
Please heal her!” My emotions at that
moment nearly drowned me. I did not think
I could contain or survive the feelings that
flowed. The intensity of them engulfed me.
Within a few days of
that hospital transfer, we were told by
one of Joani’s doctors
that Joani was not expected to live. Her
fever was destroying vital brain function,
and other organs were being compromised as
well. I went numb in my emotions. I stopped
the flow of feelings; I did not go to the
hospital. If God was going to take her little
life, I wanted my last memory to be of the
stolen moments I had of touching her hair
and feeling the baby softness of her skin.
Sometime after that phone call, little Joani
entered the portals of heaven.
Now, here’s where I judge myself,
Luci, and where I lost inner freedom. I needed
to go to the hospital and see her again,
even if the sight of tubes and respiratory
equipment devastated me. I needed to finally
hold her. I needed to get closure on that
heartwrenching experience. But that did not
happen because I chose to protect myself
from the flow of my intense emotion. I did
not want to see Joani’s final chapter.
I did not want to feel it. So I shut down.
LUCI: Oh, honey! That
story makes me cry. I so hate that pain
for you. But I have to admit, I don’t quite understand how
your responses to Joani’s death interfered
with your inner freedom.
MARILYN: I stopped my
emotions before they finished. I didn’t allow myself to
feel the death phase of that experience.
I felt the grief of her physical challenge
and my pain in it, but there was more I needed
to feel. I protected myself from it because
I didn’t think I could bear it. The
result is that even now, forty-one years
later, I regret that I did not see her before
she died. I regret I did not hold her at
least one time, even though her little spirit
was then in heaven. I missed a major part
of the reality of that baby’s life.
I regret I did not let my emotions finish
what they needed to do, which was to flow
freely.
Excerpted with permission from FREE
INSIDE AND OUT © 2007 Marilyn Meberg
and Luci Swindoll. Published by W
Publishing Group, a division of Thomas Nelson,
Inc. All rights reserved. No
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