15 August 2023

The truth will set you free. An editorial Op-Ed by Barney Zwartz

 Barney is a Jewish man I first met in Sydney over 15 years ago. I hope you like what he wrote in today's The Age newspaper from Melbourne. 


"“The truth will set you free” is surely one of the most quoted of all Bible verses, often cited by people who have no idea where it comes from. But it is also one of the most misunderstood. It is found in the Gospel of John, chapter eight, where Jesus is speaking to both supporters and opponents. The full verse reads: “To the Jews who had believed him, Jesus said, ‘If you hold to my teaching, you are really my disciples. Then you will know the truth, and the truth will set you free.’”

“The truth will set you free” is a misunderstood bible verse.

“The truth will set you free” is a misunderstood bible verse.CREDIT:AP

The non-believing members of his audience say they have never been slaves; what does Jesus mean by free? They are slaves to sin, he tells them – that is why they are looking to kill him.

Jesus is not endorsing the 21st-century interpretation of freedom, which is understood mostly as personal autonomy. Today freedom is chiefly described as the power to choose, whether between 142 brands of washing powder, to watch Netflix or Amazon, or to do what we want with our own bodies.

In the ancient world, whether Christian or pagan Greek philosophy, what counted was not the freedom of choice itself but the nature of that choice. What was utterly essential was to make the right choice. That is why Socrates said the unexamined life is not worth living.

As American philosopher David Bentley Hart puts it, freedom is the ability to realise one’s essential nature, which is what leads to human flourishing. Hart says we become free in the same way, to use Michelangelo’s metaphor, that the statue is “liberated” from the marble by the sculptor.

“This means we are free not merely because we can choose, but only when we have chosen well. For to choose poorly, through folly or malice, in a way that thwarts our nature … is to enslave ourselves to the transitory,” Hart says.

In other words, all choices are not equal, and neither is all freedom. Freedom itself is not the virtue; the virtue is in its proper exercise.

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Australian church historian John Dickson describes God’s statutes, precepts and commands, especially the Ten Commandments, as “a charter of freedom”, which is how they were read in the Old Testament and through much of Western history.

The law of God, says the Bible, brings joy, blessing and life.

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