Living to Die, Dying to Live

Ezekiel 37:1-10

This is what the Sovereign Lord says to these bones: I will make breath enter you, and you will come to life.”

When I thought I had to try hard to live the Christian life, I was ignorant of the revelation of Romans 6. I didn’t know that I actually died already. So I thought I had to conform my life and get my act together to look like Christ. That led to defeat after defeat, even plunging me into despair and atheism.

But I died already. I was buried with Christ in baptism. The old self was crucified with Christ. This became real for me when I realized that there was no longer any life in me except my spirit in union with Christ’s Spirit. I’m a non-issue. My old self died. He suffered a real death. This can only be revealed to you by the Holy Spirit because you don’t look dead or feel dead. You didn’t experience a death in the seen and temporal realm. But remember, the seen, temporal facts are not the highest authority. They aren’t the primary truths. These seen and temporal facts are always overruled by the unseen, eternal truths of God.

You Died Already

The answer is not in fighting against sin. The answer is in reckoning yourself dead to sin.

This is why Paul could say, “I have been crucified with Christ and I no longer live, but Christ lives in me. The life I now live in the body, I live by faith in the Son of God, who loved me and gave himself for me,” (Galatians 2:20). I no longer live. If you have believed in the name of Jesus and been baptized into His death and resurrection, you no longer live either. You died already, too.

The reading of Galatians 2:20 above is found in less literal translations, like the English Standard Version and the New International Version. They aren’t wrong, but they sometimes miss important shades of meaning from the original language. Look how it reads in a more literal translation, like the King James Version:

“I am crucified with Christ: nevertheless I live; yet not I, but Christ liveth in me: and the life which I now live in the flesh I live by the faith of the Son of God, who loved me, and gave himself for me.”

Did you catch the difference? It is so subtle that if we read on autopilot, we might miss it. In case you missed it, check out the Berean Literal Bible:

“I have been crucified with Christ, and I no longer live, but Christ lives in me. And that which I now live in the flesh, I live through faith from the Son of God, the One having loved me and having given up Himself for me.”

So, who’s faith is it? Yours, or Christ’s? Read it again. Slowly. The very faith you need to live this Christian life is not even yours! It comes from Christ. You live, not by your faith, but by Christ’s— “by the faith of the Son of God.” The more literal translations try to bring this out.

You died already. There is no more “you” involved. Yes, we now live by faith in the Son of God. But even more powerfully, we live by the faith of the Son of God. It’s not my faith, it’s Christ’s. I died already. Only Christ actually lives in me. So, if I died already, who’s doing the living? Christ! If I died already, who’s doing the believing and acting and doing in me? Jesus Christ! I don’t even keep myself in the faith, because it is not my faith. It’s Christ’s faith.

When you really get revelation of this down in your spirit, you begin to see that the whole Christian life is simply one of reckoning—of catching up with the Spirit’s revelation that your old self died and all that is left is Christ in your dead vessel, enlivening it and living His life unto the Father, as if it were you. You have exited the building. You’ve been removed from the equation. Oh, there’s still a “you,” but there’s also not. It’s a paradox. “…nevertheless I live; yet, not I,” says the King James version. My spirit has been melded, immersed into Christ’s Spirit; a union took place. The two have become one. One can no longer tell where Christ ends and I begin. That is one of the profound mysteries of the Gospel.

This is how the New Covenant differs so radically from the Old Covenant. There’s no more “you” who is separate from God, down here trying to keep moral rules and laws, and failing miserably. You and God are one, in Christ Jesus. You were swallowed up in Christ. A divine exchange took place where He lives as you and you were immersed (baptized) into Him, so that your life is now hidden with Christ in the heavenly realm:

“For you died, and your life is now hidden with Christ in God” (Colossians 3:3).

See the paradigm shift? It’s radical, isn’t it? Nothing about this is intuitive. Nothing about this makes all that much sense to our rational, natural minds. That is why I keep saying: brain understanding is not spiritual understanding. In fact, often spiritual understanding seems totally backwards and foreign to brain understanding.

Listen to Pastor Cliff teach us about how our heavenly Father breathes life into the dead places of our lives.

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