Who are you? Every day you and I are being confronted with and challenged as to who we are in the world we live in. Culture screams at our youth (and adults) trying to sway their allegiances in order to be identified with a group, team or cultural genre. One of the primary tactics culture and marketing uses is fear. If it can instill the fear in you that you are not going to be accepted by others and ultimately will be rejected, then it’s got you.
What if we truly began to believe in who God says we are? If you have come to a point of belief in your life by placing your faith and trust in Jesus Christ, you are not a sinner; you’re a saint. You are a new creation, something completely different than what you once were (
So what’s the problem in our lives? We know more about being a sinner than being a saint; therefore, we default to being the creature we know more about. However, God has called—commanded—us to grow in who we are by knowing Him and learning what it is to live life in our new identity.
The proof is in the struggle. If we’re not sinners, but saints, how do we explain sin in our lives? We are saints who struggle with sin. Paul articulates this in
God, because He is holy, has made us holy (
Why is this article important? When we as Christians forget who we are, we forget whose we are. The idea that we are less than who God made us cripples our walk with Christ. When we begin to understand who we are in Christ, it is freeing and empowering, exactly how Christ has called His followers to live. Yet, we regularly hear comments such as, “I’m just a sinner.” If we buy into that, we start believing we are less than who Christ has made us.