In a speech of August 16, 1967, Martin Luther King Jr.
identified the most powerful and pervasive form of slavery:
- As long as the mind is enslaved, the body can never be free. Psychological freedom, a firm sense of self-esteem, is the most powerful weapon against the long night of physical slavery.
Without a stable and assured source of self-esteem, we
condemn ourselves to psychological slavery. This is because we all need to
believe that we have value, but we relentlessly pursue this by trying to prove
ourselves. In order to believe that we are good and even superior to others, we
become obsessed with ourselves, comparisons with others, money, success,
popularity, and power – by whatever standard society grants worth.
In the pursuit of these, we deny our faults, rationalize our
failures, become dependent on the opinions of society, and ultimately become
alienated from both self and others in the process. We convince ourselves that:
- If I could only have this mate (or house, or job, success or money, or…), I will have arrived and will be able to feel good about myself.
However, this moment will never arrive. The richest man in
the world, John D. Rockefeller, was asked:
- How much more money will you have to make in order to be happy?
His answer was very revealing:
- Always a little bit more!
We never arrive! We desperately pursue an unattainable goal.
Is there any answer to our internal prison, our morbid self-obsessions?
We
must find our worth outside of the arbitrary, changing, and often uncaring
standards of society, even outside of our desperate selves! As strong as we
might be, there is no way that we can lift ourselves off the ground. We need
someone else to do this for us, but a someone who possesses the strength,
gentleness, wisdom, and authority to define us in absolute and unchanging
terms. Jesus assured His followers:
- "If you hold to my teaching, you are really my disciples. Then you will know the truth, and the truth will set you free." (John 8:31-32)
We are enslaved by the need to relentlessly prove ourselves.
Instead, Jesus invites us to define ourselves by His unfailing love and
forgiveness. Consequently, it no longer matters what we or others think of us.
Instead, if Jesus accepts us, we can begin to accept ourselves and find
liberation.
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