What does the Bible say about being in Christ?
Being in Christ signifies union with Him, leading to justification and sanctification.
Moreover, in being 'in Christ,' believers are justified, sanctified, and promised glorification. This relationship provides not only a sense of worth and dignity but also a state of security. The assurance that 'because I live, you shall live also' (John 14:19) unlocks a life filled with hope and expectation for eternal glory. This eternal perspective allows believers to withstand trials, knowing that they are accepted and loved by God through Christ.
John 14:19
Why is being a man in Christ important for Christians?
It provides security, identity, and hope for eternal life.
Additionally, this identity offers profound security, as it assures believers that nothing can separate them from the love of God (Romans 8:38-39). This assurance allows Christians to face life's challenges with confidence, knowing that their ultimate hope lies not in their own works but in Christ's finished work. Thus, the profound implications of being in Christ affect not only how believers view themselves but also how they engage with the world around them, bringing them a peace that surpasses understanding.
Romans 8:38-39
How do we know Christians are justified in Christ?
Christians are justified in Christ through faith, standing righteous before God.
Moreover, justification carries eternal significance, ensuring that Christians stand accepted before God, free from condemnation. The assurance of this legal declaration protects believers from the weight of guilt and shame, allowing them to approach God with confidence. As they grow in their relationship with Christ, they experience both the transformative effects of justification and the ongoing work of sanctification, emphasizing that their standing before God is secure in Christ alone.
Romans 5:1
"A man in Christ."—2 Cor. xii. 2.
My soul! thy last evening's meditation was sweet, (was it not?) in contemplating thy Jesus, as glorious in his own person, and as glorified in his people. Wilt thou add to that subject, for it is part of the same, for thy present thoughts, what is suggested in this motto, "a man in Christ?" Dost thou fully enter into the pleasing apprehension of what the phrase implies? Now, who shall fully describe it; or who is competent fully to conceive the whole extent of it? "A man in Christ," must imply every thing connected with a oneness, an union, a part of himself; yea, "a life hid with Christ in God." "A man in Christ" is as much a part in Christ's mystical body, as the head, or hand, or foot, is a part of that body to which those members belong. Hence, (which is indeed a sweet part of the subject) every one who is "a man in Christ," is, to all intents and purposes, interested in all that belongs to Christ, as the Christ of God. Hence also, it must as undeniably follow, that every member of Christ's body, the least, as well as the greatest, the humblest as well as the highest, becomes a part in him, is equally united to him, and participates in what belongs to him. The life of grace here, and the life of glory hereafter, being both derived from Christ, and enjoyed wholly from an union with him, are therefore equally enjoyed; just as the smallest leaf or branch united to a tree becomes a part of that tree, as much as the largest branches. Dost thou enter, my soul, into an apprehension of these outlines of the subject? Art thou "a man in Christ," by regeneration, adoption, justification, and grace? Oh! then, turn over the transporting thought, with holy and unceasing delight, in thy constant meditation. Calculate, if thou art able, the blessed inheritance, to which thou art begotten by it, of grace here, and glory to all eternity. "A man in Christ," is accepted in Christ, justified in Christ, sanctified in Christ, and must assuredly be glorified in Christ. Oh! who that thinks of these things, and through the Holy Ghost is conscious of an interest in them, can suffer the exercises of a dying world to bring affliction into the soul? What a life of dignity, is" a man in Christ" brought into! He is brought nigh unto God, through the blood of the cross. What a state of security is "a man in Christ" placed in! "Because I live," (saith Jesus) "ye shall live also." And what an endless prospect of glory, hath "a man in Christ" opening before him; when Christ hath said, "Father, I will that they also whom thou hast given me, be with me where I am, that they may behold the glory which thou hast given me!" O the unspeakable blessedness of "a man in Christ!"
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