Dead to Sin, Alive in Christ: Understanding Your True Identity
Caleb Dick Caleb Dick

Dead to Sin, Alive in Christ: Understanding Your True Identity

Do you really know who you are?

Not just your name or your role in life, but who you are at the deepest level? If you've placed your faith in Jesus Christ, your identity has fundamentally changed—yet many of us continue living as though nothing has shifted.

There's a peculiar phenomenon where people receive something transformative but continue operating as if they're still in their old circumstances. It's like the romantic comedy where someone with memory loss keeps reliving the same day, unaware that life has moved forward and everything has changed. While this makes for entertaining cinema, it's tragically common in the spiritual life of believers.

We put our faith in Jesus. We enter into a new reality with Him. Yet day after day, we live as though we're stuck in the past, as though our old identity still defines us.

The Question That Changes Everything

The apostle Paul, writing to the church in Rome, anticipated a logical question his readers might ask: If we're saved by grace and not by works, why not just keep sinning so grace can increase?

His response is emphatic: "By no means!"

Why? Because something fundamental has changed. Those who have died to sin cannot continue living in it. This isn't about behavior modification or trying harder. It's about recognizing a spiritual reality that has already occurred.

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The Gift You Cannot Earn: Understanding Righteousness Through Faith
Elijah Mayanja Elijah Mayanja

The Gift You Cannot Earn: Understanding Righteousness Through Faith

There's something deeply uncomfortable about receiving a gift we know we don't deserve. When a friend insists on paying for dinner and won't let us contribute even the tip, we squirm. We want to do something, contribute somehow, prove we're not just taking advantage of their generosity.

This discomfort reveals something profound about human nature: we struggle to accept grace.

The Problem with Religious Performance

Throughout history, humanity has wrestled with a fundamental question: How do we stand righteous before a holy God? The natural human response is to try harder, do more, and achieve enough good works to tip the scales in our favor.

Various religious systems have offered their answers. Some say it's faith plus following certain rules. Others suggest you need to be hopefully good enough, and perhaps God will accept you. Still others propose a mixture of grace and works, as if God's gift needs our help to be complete.

But the message of Romans chapter 4 cuts through all this religious striving with a radical truth: righteousness cannot be earned. It can only be received.

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The Profound Spiritual Reality of Baptism
Caleb Dick Caleb Dick

The Profound Spiritual Reality of Baptism

Water has always held a special place in human experience. We use it to cleanse our bodies, wash our hands before meals, and purify our homes. Rain falls from the sky, refreshing the earth and clearing the air. But water represents something far deeper than physical cleansing—it carries profound spiritual significance that transforms lives.

More Than Just Getting Wet

When we think about baptism, it's easy to see it as merely a ritual—a nice tradition where someone gets dunked in water in front of a congregation. But this perspective misses the extraordinary spiritual reality taking place in that moment. Baptism isn't just a physical act; it's a supernatural encounter where heaven meets earth, where the old dies and the new comes to life.

Consider the story of Jesus' baptism in Matthew 3. Here was the perfect Son of God, without sin, asking His cousin John to baptize Him in the Jordan River. John was confused—why would Jesus, who needed no cleansing, submit to baptism? Jesus' response reveals everything: "It is proper for us to do this to fulfill all righteousness." In other words, if Jesus did it, we're called to follow His example.

What happened next was remarkable. As Jesus came up from the water, heaven opened, the Holy Spirit descended like a dove, and the Father's voice declared, "This is my Son, whom I love. With him I am well pleased." The entire Trinity was present in one moment—Father, Son, and Holy Spirit—marking the beginning of Jesus' ministry and establishing baptism as a holy moment for all who would follow Him.

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