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Freedom is one of the most abused words in modern life, and Romans 6 refuses to let us keep it vague. We say we want independence, but Paul pushes a sharper claim: everyone is already serving a master. The only real question is whether we are enslaved to sin or enslaved to God through Jesus Christ. That tension is not meant to shame us into behavior management. It is meant to wake us up to what is actually shaping our choices, our habits, and our conscience.
We walk through Paul’s repeated “slave” language with the historical reality of slavery in ancient Rome, then follow the argument where it gets personal: presenting yourself to something is never neutral. Sin multiplies into deeper bondage. Righteousness grows into sanctification. Paul’s phrase “obedient from the heart” becomes the turning point, because Christianity is not just external law or religious pressure. The gospel of grace remolds us from within, pouring our lives into the “form of teaching” that is God’s truth until our desires start to match our new Lord.
We also get painfully honest about the daily struggle. Why do Christians still sin if we’ve been redeemed? We name four reasons, including the tendency to redefine sin and the temptation to ignore how it insults the glory of God. Joseph’s refusal in Genesis 39 gives us a practical model for resisting when temptation feels unavoidable. If you want a clearer definition of freedom in Christ, a better framework for sanctification, and language for the fight against sin that actually matches real life, press play. Subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review with your answer: whose slave are you?
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