IDENTITY
The way you see your life shapes your life.
We’re
tempted to see ourselves as everyone else does. You know the way it goes. You
see yourself as broken and beaten up. You see yourself as an addict or former
addict. You see yourself as a failure.
If that’s
what you believe about who you are, you’ll never become who God wants you to
be. How you define your life determines your destiny.
That’s one
of the reasons why, when John Baker first started Celebrate Recovery®, he
didn’t ask people to identify themselves by their addictions.
Instead, in
Celebrate Recovery, participants each identify themselves as “a believer who
struggles with” a specific issue.
There’s a
huge difference between the two. Your identity isn’t your sin. Your
identity is in your Savior.
Don’t let
the ugly words in your past (or even in your present) define you any longer.
Other people
may see you as broken and damaged goods. But that’s not how God sees you.
I don’t know
where you are in your walk with God today, but if you truly understand how God
sees you—and how you fit into what he is doing in the world—it’ll change your
life. You’ll never be the same again.
If you’re a
born-again follower of Jesus, the Bible says you’re a child of God. It’s your
spiritual birthright.
John 1:12-13
says, “Yet to all who did receive him, to those who believed in his
name, he gave the right to become children of God—children born not of natural
descent, nor of human decision or a husband’s will, but born of God” (NIV).
As a
born-again believer, your birthright will last forever. Imagine that. There
will never, ever be a time when you won’t be a child of God.
When God
looks at your right now, he isn’t looking at your failures. He isn’t counting
your flaws. He isn’t logging your past sin.
When God
looks at you, he sees a child of God.
That means .
. .
1. God sees you as acceptable.
Nothing
hurts us more in life than rejection. As a result, we spend most of our lives
doing all we can to avoid it. It drives what we wear, what we drive, where we
live, and more.
But God
settled this long ago for you. “[God] saved us. It was not because of
any good deeds that we ourselves had done, but because of his own mercy that he
saved us, through the Holy Spirit, who gives us new birth and new life by washing
us . . . so that by his grace we might be put right with God and come into
possession of the eternal life we hope for” (Titus 3:5, 7 GNT).
It doesn’t
matter what you’ve done. It doesn’t matter whom you’ve done it with. God
accepts you. You’re not accepted because you’ve always done what’s right.
You’re accepted because of what Jesus has done on your behalf.
2. God sees you as valuable.
Your
self-worth and your net worth aren’t tied together. You determine the worth of
something by looking at who owns it and what someone is willing to pay for it.
You win on
both accounts. You’re not just anyone. You’re a child of God. And
God paid the ultimate price to get you back. He sent his Son to the cross for
you.
3. You’re lovable.
You may not
always feel loved. But the consistent message of the Bible is that you are
unmistakably loved by the One who created you. God says, “The mountains
and hills may crumble, but my love for you will never end; I will keep forever
my promise of peace” (Isaiah 54:10 GNT).
God’s love for
you will never, ever end. You don’t have to earn it. It’s a free gift.
4. You’re forgivable.
Before you
were born, God knew the mistakes you’d make. God knew the sins you’d commit.
Ephesians 1:4 reminds us that God had already decided he would forgive you: “Even
before the world was made, God had already chosen us to be his through our
union with Christ, so that we would be holy and without fault before him” (GNT).
Your faults
have never surprised God. He has known them all along, yet he still offers forgiveness.
5. God sees you as capable.
You’re not
an accident. God created you for a purpose. He has made you completely capable
of doing what he has called you to do. Jesus himself gives you the power you
need.
The Bible
says, “I have strength for all things in Christ Who empowers me [I am
ready for anything and equal to anything through Him Who infuses inner strength
into me; I am self-sufficient in Christ’s sufficiency]” (Philippians
4:13 AMP).
To see your
life how God sees it, you also have to see beyond yourself. See that God has
big plans for you—plans so big that you can’t complete them on your own.
But you
don’t have to try on your own. Together, we’re Jesus’ church and we’re God’s
family. We’re the most powerful force on the planet when we come together for
his sake.
Think about
what we’re doing together through Celebrate Recovery. More than 35,000 churches
around the world are using Celebrate Recovery to help people overcome their
hurts, habits, and hang-ups. So far, more than 5 million individuals have
completed a Step Study.
Our task is
huge. I’ve said this, many times before, there are two types of people: those
who need recovery and know it, and those who need recovery and don’t know it.
Everyone needs recovery.
God is at work in so many places through our partnership
together. I
can’t wait to see what God will do next!
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