Called into the Freedom of Christ in a Postmodern Age and the Moral Debate
Abstract
Within Postmodernity we are facing tremendous ethical challenges while upholding a strong sense of freedom. In this essay I argue that this freedom is often still interpreted within a modern paradigm as an essential freedom of presence which has its roots in Neo-Platonic thinking. In Paul� s letter to the Galatians there are insights to a different interpretation of the freedom we have in Christ as an eschatological freedom of calling and promise.� This freedom can only be grasped in faith and is never the possession of any one individual or community, but rather a continuous challenge. It is a freedom that creates space for the other (for that, that seemed impossible) to become present (possible) and therefore it finds itself between justice (dike) and mercy � justice, as that which creates space for those who do not have space (presence), the unheard voices and the marginalised voices; and mercy which brings these unheard voices (the non-present) into being. This is the freedom to which the Cross beckons and the Resurrection inspires.Date
2005-10-01Type
ArticleIdentifier
oai:doaj.org/article:eda9dc52bc5147fdaf09f19d3666b10d1609-9982
2074-7705
10.4102/ve.v26i3.248
https://doaj.org/article/eda9dc52bc5147fdaf09f19d3666b10d