By Joe Slater According to the Federal
Trade Commission a fraction more than two people’s identity is stolen every minute
on average in the U.S. Specific incidents range from credit card fraud to
buying cars or taking out loans in someone else’s name. Whole companies exist
to warn you of suspicious activity and protect you in case your bank account
gets drained, or someone racks up a huge debt in your name (all for a fee, of
course). What about your
spiritual identity? If you’re a Christian, you aren’t the same person you were
before you came to Christ; you have a new identity. “Therefore, if anyone is in
Christ he is a new creation; old things have passed away; behold, all things
have become new” (2 Corinthians 5:17). Satan may bludgeon you
with your past sins to steal your new identity. Paul instructed the Corinthian
church to forgive and comfort their formerly incestuous brother “lest Satan
should take advantage of us; for we are not ignorant of his devices” (2
Corinthians 2:6-11). Satan would have liked nothing better than for the
repentant brother be “swallowed up with too much sorrow” (v. 7), thus giving up
on being a Christian at all. Paul himself was painfully aware of his wicked
past but refused to surrender his new identity in Christ. I wonder if any of the
Corinthians said, “Well, I’m just not sure he was sincere!” Folks tend to look
with a jaundiced eye at the repentance of people who have committed outrageous
sins. But what makes us think we should question anyone’s sincerity? Do we
doubt the sincerity of others whose sins are more like our own? |
- Joe Slater serves as
minister of the Church of Christ in Justin, TX. He may be contacted through the
congregation's website: http://justinchurchofchrist.com |
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