If the Spirit of him who raised Jesus from the dead dwells in you, he who raised Christ Jesus from the dead will also give life to your mortal bodies through his Spirit who dwells in you. Romans 8:11
Harry Ironside, one of the first pastors of Moody Memorial Church in Chicago, said…“Christians are people whose past has been altered.” Jesus has forgiven my sins and forever stripped Satan of his right to condemn me. What power! Without His death, my sins would have been enumerated and posted on my own cross. I would have died the death of one condemned. Hell would have been my end.
If my past has been altered, forgiven, then why does my past still affect me so much? Why do old fears, old wounds, old default reflexes still rise up in me? That question matters. Because Paul speaks of the indwelling Spirit of Christ bringing resurrection life into the places in me that still feel like nothing much has changed. Aren’t there always tender places that seem like ‘same old’?
If I was raised by an angry person and still feel my body tense up in the presence of them, the resurrection power of Christ can make me calm and prayerful though others rage. If I was once compliant, easily controlled and raised to be someone’s puppet and never had a thought or dream of my own, Christ’s resurrection power can deliver me from the control of others. I can be free to follow Christ and follow His plans for me., If I was criticized so often that I still hesitate, still play it safe, still fear getting it wrong, His risen life can make me brave. He can teach me to move forward with the quiet courage of one who is no longer ruled by old accusations.
How does this happen? Not by a simple prayer and one-time event. While Jesus washed away my sins through one event, His own death, the process of being made new on the inside is progressive. It is the slow, holy work of resurrection life entering the old ruins and calling them back to life. I must keep bringing Him the grave clothes.
And that is what sobers me. What a tragedy it would be to reach the end of my life and realize how much more freedom was offered than I ever laid hold of. Not because Christ withheld it, but because I did not trust Him enough to let Him change me deeply. A radical disciple is not merely forgiven; she is being transformed. Little by little, she ceases to resemble the person she once was.
Lord, peel away what fear, shame, criticism, and old bondage have wrapped around my soul, and make me increasingly alive to You. Amen