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Restored to Royalty

We’ve all been asked the question – “What do you want to be when you grow up?”

As a toddler, an adolescent, a high school grad, a college grad and even a young professional, this question haunts us. It drives us to dream as children, choose majors as students, and even select certain careers as we get older.

What do you want to be when you grow up?

Much of our culture says that your Instagram defines who you are – a wanderlust traveler or an average Joe. Or that even a certain spot on a team or in an organization defines who you are – wow, a CEO! Or “just” a waitress.

The problem is, I think we’ve confused being with doing. This is especially true in light of the stereotypical, American dream. Yes, taking action and being “doers of the Word and not hearers only” (James 1:22) is absolutely important –

However, I believe the greatest tragedy on behalf of the enemy is not the sin we may commit, but the identity he begs us to forget.

From the very beginning, we find the enemy’s attempt to beg humankind to forget plastered to the pages of Genesis. It’s all too familiar.
“‘You will not certainly die,’ the serpent said to the woman. ‘For God knows when you eat of it your eyes will be opened, and you will be like God, knowing good and evil.’” (Genesis 3:4-5 emphasis added)

The debilitating brokenness that ensues from this decision to depart from the original way given by God traipses throughout the history that follows. As we turn each page to each story, we are confronted with the reality of a broken world riddled with murder, jealously, adultery, hatred, genocide, pain, suffering and death.

In that moment found in the garden, we see our identity, “made in God’s image”, is traded for slavery to a lie.

Today we see this bondage continues. Overwhelmingly literal in the prevalence of human trafficking and domestic violence and even more sly, as we become slaves to social media and social agendas.

We allow ourselves to be slaves to the approval of others and we hide behind facades of the significant “us” we want people to see and accept. We fear that if others truly knew who we were, they would reject us and that fear breeds control that leads to an even tighter grip on our fragile masks.

Jesus Christ lived perfectly, died tragically and rose triumphantly and in one final breath, broke the grip of the shackles of sin and introduced us to our true identity: sons.

What we were – wanderers, slanderers, murderers, coveters, has now been restored to warriors.

In exchange for our chains, Jesus gives us crowns. In exchange for our mess, Jesus gives us the kingdom.

We have been restored to royalty through the sacrifice and power of Jesus Christ. And now we have a choice to live as a son or slave. As a slave, we are bonded to silence and shadows. As sons (and daughters) we are bestowed with power and prize.

The biggest threat to the reign of darkness is for us to wake up and realize our true identities as those raised to new life in Christ. Restored to royalty is the truth of our identity.


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