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I wish I knew how to convey the thought I believe in, but that is difficult to the temporal mind.
Our Identity is Christ's. We are not our own.
Often we arrange our ordo salutis with a careful separation between what God does, and what we do, and rightly so. But we fail to observe the hierarchy to its full extent. (No, I'm not saying we are able to do so, but, in fact, that is the point, here.) God is that much above us that even what we do is by his establishing it so, and whatever good we do is God doing it in us. For those of us who are 'in Christ', he is our very identity before God. I will not say we ARE him, but we are OF him. We are the body of Christ. THAT is what he sees---not just Christ's righteousness, but Christ's body.
Am I taking a figure, an analogy, a symbol, too far? I don't think so. There's too much scripture specific to the terminology of what we are, who we are, as God's creation, for this to be a figure of speech or any of the usual ways we have of separating ourselves from the need to understand what at first seems beyond our comprehension. Our body is a temple, he lives in us, we are not our own, we live in him, (and the list goes on and on.)
I see this even without my usual attempt of demonstrating God's point of view ---that he spoke the finished product into existence. (But that does kinda affirm this, that we do not belong to ourselves.)
Thoughts?
Our Identity is Christ's. We are not our own.
Often we arrange our ordo salutis with a careful separation between what God does, and what we do, and rightly so. But we fail to observe the hierarchy to its full extent. (No, I'm not saying we are able to do so, but, in fact, that is the point, here.) God is that much above us that even what we do is by his establishing it so, and whatever good we do is God doing it in us. For those of us who are 'in Christ', he is our very identity before God. I will not say we ARE him, but we are OF him. We are the body of Christ. THAT is what he sees---not just Christ's righteousness, but Christ's body.
Am I taking a figure, an analogy, a symbol, too far? I don't think so. There's too much scripture specific to the terminology of what we are, who we are, as God's creation, for this to be a figure of speech or any of the usual ways we have of separating ourselves from the need to understand what at first seems beyond our comprehension. Our body is a temple, he lives in us, we are not our own, we live in him, (and the list goes on and on.)
I see this even without my usual attempt of demonstrating God's point of view ---that he spoke the finished product into existence. (But that does kinda affirm this, that we do not belong to ourselves.)
Thoughts?
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