Obedience 2: Obedience and freedom
Obedience and freedom God created us free. Freedom is a gift of God, a necessary one, that can never be denied to anyone. Without freedom the person cannot make the important choices in life, and especially there cannot be true love. Love can only be true when is free. Many people say that obedience and freedom are not compatible, and therefore obedience is wrong. This idea comes from a wrong understanding of the word “freedom”. If obedience is first of all to do the will of God, and freedom is the greatest gift of God, how can they be in contradiction?
The word freedom is often understood as “to do whatever a person likes”. This is a very wrong definition. This mistake comes from the libertarian ideas that started after the French Revolution in the XVIII century.
The real meaning of the word freedom is “to be always in the condition to make the right choices for what is really the best for the person, his family and the society”; or “That all obstacles may be removed that hinder the capacity of a person to pursue his welfare and happiness”.
Real freedom involves all the aspects of human life: the emotions (what I like), the intelligence (what is really good), the sociality (what makes better relationships with the others), the morality (what is according to the law), and the spiritual (what is in the plan of God). So a person, in order to make a free choice, must be free from external bondages, but also have the right knowledge and understanding of the reality. If a 7 years old boy one day does not want to go to school, can we let it “free” to do so? He clearly lacks the knowledge of the importance of school. A thief who wants to rob a bank, is he free to do so? When we sin against God, are we free to do so?
The vow of obedience is always looking at the plan of God, which is the highest good, and in the name of it, sometimes, he requires us to give up some of our desires, ideas, choices. Freedom stands in the fact that this giving up is our free choice. That is the reason why, in every application for religious life or for professions, the word “freely” should always appear. For further references refer to the previous blog “The need and use of rules".