Below is an excerpt from my book Authentic Freedom – Claiming a Life of Contentment and Joy. Visit my Amazon bookstore to learn more.
If we look carefully at the life and teachings of Jesus, we see that he is inviting us to embrace an image of God that is a departure from the traditional image of the Hebrew religious authorities of his time. Jesus was constantly being challenged by the religious authorities who believed in a God whose approval needed to be earned. God’s love was thought to be conditional, at best, and only attainable through strict adherence to the law. If you were disobedient to the law, you were known to have lost favor with God and were considered to be a “sinner.”
Jesus invited those “who had ears to hear,” to consider another possibility. He set forth not only a new image of God, but an entirely new paradigm – a paradigm based on personal relationship and compassion. Having grown in the knowledge of God’s love and his Oneness with God, Jesus was able to lead us to his understanding as the truth which sets us free. The God that Jesus knew was a God of unconditional love, compassion and forgiveness. This is the God that Jesus invites us to embrace. When we know God in this way, sin is no longer “that which separates us from God,” but merely a symptom of our own false perception of separation. Jesus explains it this way in the noncanonical gospel of Mary Magdalene:
Peter said to Jesus: “Since you have become the interpreter of the elements and the events of the world, tell us: What is the sin of the world?”
The Teacher (Jesus) answered, “There is no sin. It is you who make sin exist, when you act according to the habits of your corrupted nature; this is where sin lies.”
Gospel of Mary Magdalene 7: 11-19
Sin, when viewed in this way, is no longer subject to judgment, but instead invites us into the greater depths of compassion. “Love the sinner and not the sin,” becomes our mantra. When sin is looked upon as a symptom of the fears that come about as a result of an unhealed core wound, then all sin becomes an invitation to healing.
From this perspective, we can now look upon even the Jeffrey Daumers and Charles Mansons of our society with compassion. This compassion does not excuse their behavior, but it allows us to see the deeper fears within them that drove them to such heinous acts of violence. In our own journeys, it allows us to let go of the blame, shame and guilt that so often plague our lives. Our compulsive behaviors (sins) are no longer something to look upon in anguish, but something to treat as a wake-up call to a deeper healing being called forth. The compulsive behavior becomes the trigger that alerts us to our false sense of separation, to the need for healing, and invites us to name the fear and allow God to heal us of these fears so that we may once again live in the knowledge that we are loved. In this knowledge of God’s love, we know peace, we know joy and we are able to openly and freely share our gifts in the world. It is to this place of Oneness that Jesus invites us when he proclaims, “Repent, for the kingdom of God is at hand.” (Matthew 4:17)
Learn Authentic Freedom
Authentic Freedom is a protocol and practice developed by Lauri Ann Lumby which supports you in identifying and then healing the fears that have kept you imprisoned by your past wounding and cultural conditioning.
Through recorded lessons, reading, discussion, mindfulness and creativity practices, you will be given the tools to identify, heal and transform the fears that:
There is not enough.
You are insignificant and have nothing of value to offer the world.
You cannot live as our most authentic selves.
You are not loved (or that love has to be earned or can be taken away).
You are not free to express our truth.
You do not know the truth.
You are alone.
At the end of this course, you will have the tools to support you in the continued liberation from your fears and the conditioning that has placed them there.
