Do you ever
feel like there are two equal powers inside you with completely opposite
desires? This is a very common feeling,
which seems to explain how we struggle to live a life which pleases God.
Believe it! It's the Gospel.
Live Free In Christ,
Mark Maulding, President and Founder
www.GraceLifeInternational.com All Content Copyright © 2015 Mark Maulding but feel free to pass it on!
For example,
when a sexually lustful thought enters your mind, it’s not that you know you
shouldn’t do that, it’s also in your new heart that you don’t desire to do it. (Ezekiel
36:27) Yet, there seems to be a sinister
opposite desire to do it, though you know you will regret it.
Another
example would be when a thought of not measuring up enters your mind. Though you know God loves you and you want to
stand on that reality, there is this other thought which urges you to agree
that you don’t measure up and to either give up, or try harder.
What or who is
this other player inside of us? Is it
the old nature, a.k.a. your old identity in Adam, or is it something else?
Romans 6:6
tells us, Knowing this, that our old self
was crucified with Him, in order that our body of sin might be done away with,
so that we would no longer be slaves to sin.
The Greek language
here, is much clearer than what we read in English. The verb, was crucified, means that our old
self (nature) was crucified once and will never rise from the grave to haunt us
ever again. It was left in that tomb
where Jesus was buried.
Here’s our
problem. When we read Scripture, we see
that something called the flesh is what we battle with. And, if you are like me, I was never taught
that the flesh and the old nature were different, but they are. The old nature is gone but the flesh is
not. To muddy the waters ever more, the
New International Version Bible translated the flesh as sinful nature, which
sounds a lot like old nature, doesn’t it.
(They did correct most of that in their most recent edition.)
The old
nature (old self or old man that remained in the grave) was the deepest core of
who and what we were in Adam. This is
what made us sinfully rotten to the core. (Jeremiah 17:9) It died and was replaced with the new nature
a.k.a. our identity in Christ. (Ephesians 2:6,
2 Cor. 5:17)
The flesh is
strategies we have developed from living, as if we are separated from God, though
we are united with Him. We had some of
these before we were saved but we may have developed new strategies since then.
I remember a
good pastor friend of my saying, “So what?
This is just semantics. It
doesn’t really matter.” Actually it
matters a lot. Here is why.
Because we
only have one nature, our identity in Christ, our new normal is a heart that
desires to live a loving, holy and righteous life. It’s not to sin, contrary to popular opinion.
This means it’s normal for you to live a pure life, rather than a sexually
lustful life. It’s normal for you to
live with a Biblical self-esteem, rather than a fleshly one of trying to
measure up. None of us will ever do this perfectly, but it is still the deepest
desire of our new heart, that is our true identity – our identity in Christ.
Believe it! It's the Gospel.
Live Free In Christ,
Mark Maulding, President and Founder
www.GraceLifeInternational.com All Content Copyright © 2015 Mark Maulding but feel free to pass it on!
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