Living Freed, Virtuous, and Moral

This July, we celebrate America’s 250th anniversary, while imploring your prayers and support for the Lutheran Center for Religious Liberty’s efforts to contend for the freedom to proclaim the faith. Your willingness helps ensure that Lutherans remain free to proclaim biblical truth without government coercion or cultural intimidation. Click here to learn more or to donate.‍ ‍

On July 4th, we are reminded that our temporal liberties are always in service to something bigger. We are reminded that it is a worthy thing to celebrate and even to fight for “the protections and responsibilities of religious liberty;” it is a worthy thing to fight for “equal protection under the law.” But all of those blessings are not enough. For God didn’t create and redeem this world merely so that we might live freely among its sinfulness and brokenness. God didn’t engage the world through the person and work of Jesus merely to make a sinful world a little bit better place. He ushered in a new and eternal kingdom amidst the temporal kingdoms of the world so that all might receive His everlasting kingdom by grace through faith and then live in service to others, both now and forever. Wow!

It’s proper, then, to say that temporal freedom is a blessing; it is to be cherished. But it is also proper to say that it is not enough for the human flourishing that God wishes the world to have. The freedoms we enjoy (temporally and eternally) compel us to live freed, virtuous, and moral lives that are motivated and empowered by God’s grace and mercy for the sake of our neighbor. In other words, we are freed to be faithful to God and then to our neighbor in His name. Temporal, religious liberty and the protections of the Constitution are precious. We celebrate them, but as John Adams, one of our Founding Fathers, reminds us:

We have no government armed with power capable of contending with human passions unbridled by morality and religion … Our Constitution was made only for a moral and religious people. It is wholly inadequate to the government of any other.[1]

 On Memorial Day, we were reminded that in life, there are some things worth dying for. We honored the men and women who gave their lives so that we might have liberty and freedom in our country. But on the Fourth of July, we are reminded that there is something even more important to our lives than mere temporal, political, or civil freedom. It is the freedom that comes from God’s redeeming work on the cross through Jesus alone. In that gracious work, God in Christ literally took upon Himself the sin that destroys us and enslaves us in eternal bondage to death. He then gifts us with the reality of a life of freedom and liberty not just for now but forever. Such a freedom, received in faith, is worth celebrating and even fighting for, not merely for ourselves, but also for the right to share it humbly and graciously with others.

So let this July 4th be one of those times when you cherish both temporal and eternal freedoms. But also realize that, while both are precious, one matters most of all. It is a precious thing to have temporal freedoms and liberty. But let us never think such things are “enough.” For we were meant to put those freedoms to work for the sake of the ultimate freedom in Christ that comes by grace through faith in Christ alone. Happy Fourth!

The Rev. Dr. Gregory Seltz is the executive director of the Lutheran Center for Religious Liberty.

 

Be Informed
It’s time for a pro-life update on all things pertaining to life from conception to natural death! Listen here to get up-to-speed with Dr. Michael New of the Charlotte Lozier Institute.

Be Equipped
A recent study of 3,000 Americans shows just how many don’t understand the risks of IVF nor what happens with the “leftover” children created by the process.

Be Encouraged
“The Fourth of July is an ideal time to thank God if you have a good homeland … or in the U.S., a free country. What a blessing! Just like Job or Jonah, this isn’t the case for everyone. And we should continually pray for those whose homelands or countries are ravaged by war, politics, or disease. Praise God for giving us a country where we can worship Him and live our lives in relative freedom and peace.” –Katrina Harrmann, Time of Grace

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July 2026 Prayer Partner Thursday