I concluded my last post with Paul’s teaching that new
Christians are to “put on the new self,
created to be like God in true righteousness and holiness. (Eph. 4:24) The
concept of somehow becoming a new person, a “better” person, has always
intrigued me but while I was trying to live apart from God, pretending there is
no God, I didn’t even have a standard by which to measure whether or not I was
becoming “better.” All I could do was observe other people, but different people
had different criteria. Some thought “better” meant having more money or more
degrees or a more likable personality. Some thought it meant going to church
more often or going to the right church, but all seemed to agree that the
change for the better could be accomplished by trying harder and getting a little
help (or a lot of help) from the establishment. All that was needed was better
government, a better education, a better counselor, a better self-improvement
manual.
Then I came to realize there really is a Creator and I
was created to “be like God in true righteousness and holiness.” He is the
standard, and I not only fell short, but I was sinking deep in sin. That
conviction was the driving force behind my conversion to Christ’s kingdom of
light many years ago. I had come to know I needed a Savior and when I received
Jesus Christ into my heart I became a child of God, I had a new identity. But
some Christian leaders were saying there is no real change in the basic
character of a Christian until we get to heaven. Then we will be changed, but for
now we are “just sinners saved by grace.” What a downer! I wanted to be a new
person right now, and I was!
I’m so glad I started to read about the life of the
apostle Paul, and learned how radically he was changed after his encounter with
Jesus on the road to Damascus. Saul of Tarsus, persecutor of Christians, became the
great Apostle Paul, missionary to the Gentiles, who Christ used to establish his
church on earth. Paul knew he was a sinner saved by grace, in fact he thought
of himself as “the chief of sinners,” but he also knew he was not just
that. He wrote, “I have been crucified with Christ and I no longer live, but Christ
lives in me. The life I now live in the body, I live by faith in the Son
of God, who loved me and gave himself for me.” (Galatians 2:20). This
verse is about the life all Christians should be living by faith, as we daily “put
on the new self,” experiencing who we really are in Christ, .