Child of the Free
The radical message and promise of Normal Orthodox Christianity is an invitation from God to become by grace what Christ is by nature!
“…of the holy and righteous ancestors of God Joachim and Anna…” At every liturgy, at the end of every prayer service, the priest remembers the grandparents of Jesus, the parents of the Theotokos! If something like this is repeated long enough, humans start experiencing it as the familiar “noise” of prayer. The dangers of this “sound” becoming mere nostalgia increases, and the greater risk of us “forgetting” WHY we pray this way increases.
The story of Sts. Joachim and Anna is the story of hope, promise, and joy. They were an elderly couple past their child-bearing years. But they were pious and faithful lovers of God and continued praying for a child. They swore that any child God gave them would be dedicated totally to God.
And God saw this precious couple and granted them a daughter, Mary, the Theotokos. True to their word, this elderly couple raised the child to know God from her earliest days, and when she was just a girl, she was taken to be raised, educated, and trained in the place where the Presence of God was strongest, in the holy Temple in Jerusalem.
However, the couple was elderly and knew they would not live to see the child to adulthood, so they made provisions for their daughter to be betrothed to a good man they knew, Joseph, the widower. Joachim and Anna knew that their daughter was dedicated and destined to be a unique vessel for God and His plan to bring the Messiah to Israel, so they asked Joseph to be her protector when she came of marrying age. She could no longer stay in the Temple after she had become of marrying age as it would not be proper, so the elderly widow, Joseph, took Mary and provided protection for her before, during, and after she was visited by the Archangel Gabriel and told she would be the mother of the Messiah, the God-Man Jesus Christ.
And today’s passage helps us understand why we always remember the grandparents of Jesus at every service!
Look at our Lesson today in Galatians 4:22-27:
BRETHREN, Abraham had two sons, one by a slave and one by a free woman. But the son of the slave was born according to the flesh, the son of the free woman through promise. Now this is an allegory: these women are two covenants. One is from Mount Sinai, bearing children for slavery; she is Hagar. Now Hagar is Mount Sinai in Arabia; she corresponds to the present Jerusalem, for she is in slavery with her children. But the Jerusalem above is free, and she is our mother. For it is written, “Rejoice, O barren one who does not bear; break forth and shout, you who are not in travail; for the children of the desolate one are many more than the children of her that is married.”
St. Paul is still trying to correct the lousy story; someone came and told the Galatians about what these Gentile believers needed to do to be real Christians. Some “false brethren” had come and told these new believers that they had to be Jews before becoming Christians.
In other words, these Gentiles would have to start obeying all the Jewish Law and live like Jews before they could be true Christians. And their bishop, St. Paul, is writing them to say that this “false” story was not just wrong but that it was a horrible heresy and not Christian teaching at all.
And Paul uses a very familiar story from Jewish history to make his point. He uses the story of Abraham and his first two sons, Isaac and Ishmael. Ishmael was born of the servant girl Hagar. You remember the story, don’t you? God had promised Abraham a son that would be the heir of Abraham and become a great nation. But Abraham and his wife Sarah were very old, so they thought maybe we could have a child if Abraham took Hagar, Sarah’s slave, and had a child through her.
Bad idea! But Hagar did have Abraham’s son, and she named him Ishmael.
But that wasn’t God’s plan, and God told Abraham this.
So, after Sarah had been barren all those years and after she was well past the age for childbearing, she did give birth to a son, and they called him Isaac (by the way, his name means “laughter,” and there’s a remarkable story behind that).
So, Ishmael was the son of a slave woman, and Isaac was the son of a free woman.
Paul uses this story to illustrate that the days of the Law of Jewish ritual and religious observance were done. After all, they were only meant to show us that, no matter how hard we tried, we couldn’t follow all the rules ourselves.
But the Christian Faith was all about the freedom of mercy and grace and a much more complete and an even more difficult spiritual path of love and communion. Now, it isn’t about following all the rules but the much more life-changing message of a genuine change of heart into loving God and being motivated by communion with God. It’s about becoming by grace what Christ is by nature!
This distinction matters a great deal! And that’s because if I am merely to follow the rules as a slave to God, then where will the affection come from? No, I am meant not just to be an “obedient slave” but a free son of the Lord. The Christian Faith calls me to be family, not property. And the story of Isaac and Ishmael shows why! It matters to get this story straight! You see, the barren woman having a child proves God always takes the initiative to love and save His creation. God works this way to break the sickness of our false notions of self-sufficiency and turns us toward a life of gratitude to God for His love and grace.
The life of St. Anna, the mother of the Theotokos, reminds us of that same pattern of God’s love for us. God gave the barren couple a child. God using that same child for His glory to serve us in knowing God. God is reaching out in our helplessness when we can do nothing for ourselves; He rescues and saves us despite our weaknesses. All of this is enshrined in our regular remembering of the grandparents of Jesus at every liturgy. We NEED this regular reminder. We MUST always learn to depend on God for our salvation and we can NEVER FORGET our lives are meant to be lives of gratitude lived to embrace all God has done for us!
Today, are you the child of a slave or the child of the free? Are you burdened with the notion that you are bound to “follow the rules” and merely “submit” to the thundering presence of God, or are you ready to embrace and be embraced by the truth that God loves you and wants you as His child and not merely His slave? This is why it’s essential to get this story right and to live a Normal Orthodox life.
P.S. Since you were righteous under the law of grace, O Joachim and Anna, you gave birth to the God-given infant for our sake. Therefore, the divine Church radiantly keeps feast today, joyfully celebrating your honorable memory and giving glory to God who has raised up a horn of salvation from the house of David.
Fr. Barnabas Powell is the parish priest at Sts. Raphael, Nicholas, and Irene Greek Orthodox Church in Cumming, GA. He is also the founder of Faith Encouraged Ministries and produces the Faith Encouraged Daily Devotional on Substack.