It is for freedom that Christ has set us free. Stand
firm, then, and do not let yourselves be burdened again by a yoke of
slavery. Galatians 5:1 NIV
As an African/Edenic
person living in a Eurocentric-oriented racist society, I understand that Jesus
is the only Revolutionary I can follow because He came to earth to set me, and people
of all hues who are similarly situated, completely free from every vestige of
slavery and its attendant indicia of bondage. The freedom that Jesus offers us
is three dimensional.
First, it is physical
in that it affects how we function in the world. Second, it is philosophical in
that it affects our understanding of the world and how we process ideas that
counter reactionary and backward-looking Eurocentric assumptions that have previously
usurped our independent thought processes. Third, it is psychological in that it affects
the way we think about ourselves, others and God.
True freedom, at its
most fundamental level, is that state of being in which a person,
without being enslaved, dominated or otherwise held under constraint, restraint,
duress or undue influence, can of her or his own volition make decisions, plan courses
of action consistent with those decisions, have unlimited access to and control
over resources, and exercise the necessary power to concretely actualize those
decisions.
Given this definition
of freedom, it is manifestly clear that the last, least and lost of African/Edenic
and similarly situated people in America have never experienced true freedom. Despite
this, Jesus is offering all of us an unfettered freedom that is firmly rooted
in the truth and in the reality.
The truth is that, without a revolutionary
relationship with and understanding of Jesus, we are slaves in a world-system matrix inimical
to our best interests, opposed to our limitless capacity for personal human
growth and development, and bent on our total destruction.
The reality is that the only road to freedom
is our connecting with Jesus and submitting ourselves to his radical leadership
so that we can effectively engage in counter-hegemonic (revolutionary) struggle
in order to develop our critical
understanding—our ability to be transformed from non-critical, incoherent
“common sense” people (objects) to kingdom-oriented “organic intellectuals”
(subjects) who are willing and able to provide principled revolutionary leadership for establishing the kingdom of God on this earth.
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