Wednesday, November 19, 2025

Heinrich Schlier on "being made free" (ἐλευθερόω) from sin in Romans 6:18, 22

  

Freedom from sin and the Law culminates in freedom from death. Here, too, we shall consult the ἐλευθερία passages in answer to our question as to the concrete fulfilment of this freedom. Works done in freedom aim intrinsically at ζωὴ αἰώνιος (R. 6:22). As earthly, human works they produce in themselves that which underlies and creates them, namely, the eternity disclosed in the event of the love of Jesus Christ. As they are performed, they thus give knowledge of eternal life. The existence which by the work of the Spirit through word and sacrament is liberated from self-seeking in faith, expresses this freedom in works which make possible for one’s neighbour the life which one enjoys oneself, namely, the life which is assured by the love of God in Christ. The man who is no longer fallen, but who rests on the will of God in Christ, brings in the future of God in his works and makes it available to his neighbour in the believing work of love. It is true that this freedom from death is enacted only within an existence which is still given up to death. Existence is still fallen of itself. It knows freedom from death only in the resurrection of Jesus Christ, in which the will of God accomplished this freedom. This freedom, as it is accomplished in the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead, has taken place for it in the word of the Gospel, and has been made present to it by the action of the sacrament, as that on the basis of which there can be life in self-forgetful dying. Even in its works existence has it only as that in relation to which it can be. Freedom from death is thus disclosed to it, even in its action, as the future enacted in Jesus Christ. In this ruined existence it will thus be known only as a sign of itself. The works of freedom will manifest eternity as that which is still to come to us in Jesus Christ, But in this way they do manifest it. Thus those who have the Spirit working freedom within them sigh expectantly that they may become the children of God, which will take place only when they are released from the carnal existence which in its bondage seeks to play the lord. Similarly the creation ruined by man cries out with longing that it may be delivered from the deceptive instinct of life and the bondage of death. This liberation will take place with the manifestation of the glory of the children of God revealed in Jesus Christ. (Heinrich Schlier, “Ἐλεύθερος, Ἐλευθερόω, Ἐλευθερία, Ἀπελεύθερος,” in TDNT 2:502)