
True freedom means our desires align with God’s; we want what he wants. Pastor John answers three questions from Galatians about Christian liberty.
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Memorial Day. To those of you in the States, it's a holiday set aside to celebrate those who gave their lives for our freedom. Everywhere you look today, that's the word that you see. Freedom. Freedom is a precious gift to be celebrated, but sometimes people talk about it like. Like freedom is a blank check to just sort of do whatever it is you want. You know, wake up in the morning, do whatever you feel like. No rules. But of course, doing whatever we want will eventually leave us feeling empty and trapped and regret our decisions that we made under the influence of freedom. So it's a good time to be reading Galatians together because Paul wants us to talk about freedom in totally different ways than the world does today on Ask Pastor the Freedom that Kills Regret. Pastor John Providentially, we're in Galatians 5 in our Bible reading plan right now in time for this question from Vicki in Edinburgh, Scotland. Pastor John, thank you for this podcast. I write because in Galatians 5. 1, and then again in verses 13 to 26, Paul teaches that Christians are called to live in the freedom that Christ has won for us, a freedom not to indulge in the flesh, but to live by the Spirit. So if you are struggling to live free, what do you think it means to be set free in Christ? How does freedom in Christ differ from the freedom of the world, which is basically to do whatever you want to do whenever you want to do it? And what does it mean that we are freed in order to love in Galatians 5:13.
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So I hear three questions. Let's take them one at a time. First, what do you think it means to be set free in Christ? Now, that phrase set free is taken from Galatians 5. 1, and so we can get our answer from the context. Here's verse one. For freedom, Christ has set us free. Stand firm, therefore, and do not submit again to a yoke of slavery. So what's the yoke of slavery that we were set free from? Here's the next verse. If you accept circumcision, Christ will be of no advantage to you. I testify again to every man who accepts circumcision that he is obligated to keep the whole law. You are severed from Christ, you who would be justified by the law. So what does it mean when he says, if you accept circumcision, Christ will be of no advantage to you. We know from verse 6 of this chapter, Galatians 5:6, that neither circumcision nor uncircumcision counts for anything. Paul doesn't require Circumcision. Paul doesn't require uncircumcision. So when he says that Christ will be of no advantage to you if you accept circumcision, what he means is if you accept it as a requirement for justification. So he says in verse four, you are severed from Christ if you try to be justified by law keeping. In this case, by circumcision. Why is that? Because if you're going to base your justification on law keeping, it's going to have to be perfect. Law keeping. That's what verse three says. He is obligated to keep the whole law. So the answer to Vicki's first question is to be set free in Christ is to be set free from justification by law keeping. To be set free from the law means that we do not have to obey the law in order to be justified. That is to enter into God's favor. We are justified by faith alone. Galatians 2:16 says, we know that a person is not justified by works of the law, but by faith in Jesus Christ. So we also have believed in Jesus Christ in order to be justified by faith in Christ and not by works of the law, because by works of the law no one will be justified. All of our obedience is not in order to get God's favor. It is because we are in God's favor by faith alone. That's Christian freedom. Second question Vicki has, How does freedom in Christ differ from the freedom the world offers, which is basically to do whatever you want whenever you want to? Now we might be tempted to answer that question. Well, Christians don't do whatever they want. They do God's will. But that's not the way to say it, because it assumes that God's will and what the Christian wants aren't the same thing. It assumes that we are always having to do what we don't want to do. That's not Christian freedom. That's the old bondage. The difference between Christian freedom and the freedom of the world is that the world gets to do what it wants. But it is in bondage to want what is not the will of God. That's their bondage. Because whatever is not from faith is sin. Romans 14:23. Non Christians by nature do not love God with all their heart. They don't love God above all things. Therefore their behavior is not an expression of love for God, and therefore it is sinful. When they do what they want, they will regret it. And that's not freedom. You're skydiving and you fall feels good, but if you don't Have a parachute. It's going to end badly. But the freedom of a person justified by faith comes into being when the Holy Spirit changes that person's desires to love the will of God so that we can do what we love to do, which is great freedom. For example, Romans 6:17, thanks be to God. That's important. God gets the thanks that you who were once slaves of sin, which is the opposite of freedom, have become obedient from the heart. That's the key phrase. From the heart to the standard of teaching to which you were committed. So Paul thanks God, not us, because God is the one who set us free from slavery to loving sin and changed us so that from the heart, that is, from our own accord, from our own desire, we obey God's will. You could say Christian freedom is doing what you want to do and not regretting it in a thousand years, because it was what God wanted you to do. Here's Vicki's last question. What does it mean that we are freed in order to love? In Galatians 5:13, freed in order to love. Verse 13 says, you were called to freedom, brothers only. Do not use your freedom as an opportunity for the flesh, but through love, serve one another. So if Christian freedom is doing what you want to do, when what you want to do is what God wants you to do, this makes sense because love is a summary of what God wants you to do. That's what the next verse says, verse 14. For the whole law is fulfilled in one shall love your neighbor as yourself. But we can go deeper than this. Why is love the clearest expression of Christian freedom? It's the same reason God's love is the clearest expression of his freedom. God did not create the world or send Jesus to die for sinners because he was under some kind of external obligation, some law outside of him that he had to obey. He was acting in complete freedom. He didn't have to do it. Doing it was the overflow of his fullness, not to supply something to his deficiency. That's what freedom is, and that's what love is. And the very same thing is true of those who are born again sons of God. Love is the overflow of the fullness of joy in God. Here's the picture of love and freedom. In Second Corinthians 8:2, it says, In a severe test of affliction, their abundance of joy overflowed in a wealth of generosity. Love is the overflow of joy in God, and joy is the opposite of bondage. So, Vicki, press on in your quest for Christian freedom. Embrace all that God is for you in Jesus as your supreme treasure and the result will be that your joy will be your freedom and your freedom will become love.
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No better reminder of true freedom on this Memorial Day. The difference between Christian freedom and the freedom of the world is that the world gets to do what it wants, but it is in bondage to want what is not the will of God. So that Christian freedom is doing what you want to do and not regretting it in a thousand years because it was what God wanted you to do. Wow. That is so. It is a lot to think about. Pastor John, thank you and thanks for joining us on this Memorial Day. If you have a question to ask Pastor John, find a link to email us and find our complete episode archive at the same place@askpastorjohn.com next time. The Secret Superpower of Silence when we get treated unfairly, there is a secret superpower of silence. I'm Tony Reinke. We'll see you on Thursday.
Date: May 25, 2026
Host: Tony Reinke
Guest: Pastor John Piper
This Memorial Day episode explores the true meaning of Christian freedom, contrasting it with the world’s concept of freedom. Responding to a listener question about Galatians 5, Pastor John Piper unpacks what it means to be set free in Christ, how Christian freedom is different from worldly freedom, and how this freedom enables believers to love as God loves—freely, joyfully, and without regret.
(00:04 - 04:10)
“To be set free in Christ is to be set free from justification by law keeping…We are justified by faith alone.” (02:45)
(04:12 - 07:11)
“You could say Christian freedom is doing what you want to do and not regretting it in a thousand years, because it was what God wanted you to do.” (06:46)
(07:12 - 09:20)
“Love is the overflow of joy in God, and joy is the opposite of bondage.” (08:32)
“Press on in your quest for Christian freedom. Embrace all that God is for you in Jesus as your supreme treasure and the result will be that your joy will be your freedom and your freedom will become love.” (09:13)
“To be set free in Christ is to be set free from justification by law keeping. To be set free from the law means that we do not have to obey the law in order to be justified. That is to enter into God’s favor. We are justified by faith alone.”
— Pastor John Piper (02:40)
“The world gets to do what it wants. But it is in bondage to want what is not the will of God. That’s their bondage.”
— Piper (05:12)
“Christian freedom is doing what you want to do and not regretting it in a thousand years, because it was what God wanted you to do.”
— Piper (06:46)
“Love is the overflow of joy in God, and joy is the opposite of bondage.”
— Piper (08:32)
On this episode of Ask Pastor John, Pastor John Piper reframes freedom—not as the world defines it (“do whatever you want”), but as the Spirit-enabled delight to do God’s will and to love others, without regret, for eternity. True Christian freedom means being released from the impossible burden of law-keeping for justification, having your heart transformed to want what God wants, and letting your joy in God overflow as love to others. “Christian freedom,” Piper reminds us, “is doing what you want to do and not regretting it in a thousand years, because it was what God wanted you to do.” (06:46)