Having just retired after nearly
fourteen years driving up and down this fair land of ours, I’ve exchanged my (trusty
but very tired!) van for a small car. I
chose one that is said to be very economical, and has the same dashboard configuration and engine capacity as the
vans I’ve driven for the last ten years, so I feel completely at home behind
the wheel. However, although small and
diesel-powered, its description of ‘Sport’ is not misplaced: its acceleration is something to be respected!
So I’m reminded of an article that
I wrote some years ago for publication in a trade magazine, in which I advocated the complete
abolition of speed limits on our roads!
With freedom, I suggested, must come responsibility, and I put forward the
idea that the resources presently used in speed limit enforcement should be
re-deployed to prosecute severely those who drive carelessly or dangerously.
You are probably wondering how these
thoughts of my personal history and present circumstances fulfil the obligatory
link between everyday life and our Christian Faith. The place of driving and speed in modern life
is obvious; perhaps the laws that lie behind the speed limits on our roads are
too readily dismissed from our consideration.
In his letter to the Romans, St Paul wrote about the Jewish Law, and
our freedom from it through the death and resurrection of Jesus (Rom.
7:1-6). Re-reading it recently, I was
heartened to find that my views on speed limits, and the restrictions they
place on our behaviour and on our freedom to enjoy the open road, seem to be in
harmony with the spirit of these verses.
If my suggestion of abolishing
speed limits were implemented, we would have the same freedom as the woman
whose husband died (v.3) or that from the restrictions of the Old Testament laws
that Christians enjoy as a result of the death of Christ on the Cross
(v.6). But just as my proposal carried
with it a responsibility to behave sensibly on the roads, so the freedom that
we have from the Law also carries responsibility. In this case, it carries a duty to serve God
in the freedom of His Holy Spirit alive within us.
I have to appreciate that reform
on the scale of my proposals is not just unlikely but virtually
unthinkable. In the meantime, I make
every effort to keep to the legal limits.
Sometimes this is easy; at other times I find I am very much the ‘odd
one out’, as those around me apply their own interpretation of what ‘30 mph’
means in reality. Any mental strain caused
by keeping to the limit in the path of others who would prefer not to do so, is eased
a little as I recall Jesus’ teaching recorded by St Matthew: “Give to Caesar
what is Caesar’s.” (Mt. 22:21).
My prayer is that my life also
fulfils the other half of that instruction!
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