Editor’s note: The following is excerpted with permission from Home with God: Our Union with Christ by Kyle Worley. Copyright 2024, B&H Publishing. Available for pre-order from B&H Publishing and wherever books are sold.
A well-wrapped gift creates curiosity, doesn’t it? Sitting under a Christmas tree or at a table next to a birthday cake, children can be driven crazy with the anticipation of unwrapping a gift, their minds racing with curiosity. “What goodness could this box possibly have inside?!” All too often, for all of us, the unwrapped gift doesn’t live up to the hype.
But the exact opposite is true when we begin to unwrap all God has for us in Christ Jesus. We are told that “every spiritual blessing in the heavenly places” (Eph. 1:3) is in Christ Jesus and that “all the promises of God find their ‘Yes’ in him” (2 Cor. 1:20). All of God’s good things for His people are in Christ Jesus. All of them. And at the core of these many gifts there is the gift of a new identity.
In Christ, we receive a “new me.” This new identity is radically different from our old identity in Adam, because in Christ we are justified. To be justified is to be declared righteous by God. Justification is one of the key benefits of salvation, for it remedies the essential problem of our alienation from God: that we are born into this world, in Adam and unrighteous.
There is no way of earning the righteousness of God, but there is a way of receiving it. In Christ and Christ alone.
Where do we receive this declaration of righteousness? In Christ. Is it because when we trust in God, all of a sudden our behavior is perfectly righteous? Absolutely not! Is it because once we have done enough stuff following Jesus’s righteous example, God accepts us as righteous? Absolutely not! We are declared righteous by God because we have entered into the righteous one by grace through faith.
We are justified in Christ. The condemnation that belongs to us by nature in Adam is exchanged for the righteousness that belongs to Christ by nature. It is on the cross that this great exchange occurs. By nature, we deserve condemnation, but God “made [Jesus] to be sin who knew no sin, so that in him we might become the righteousness of God” (2 Cor. 5:21). In Jesus, we are declared and made righteous. No longer defined by sin and shame, we are now defined by the righteousness we have been rewarded with in Christ.
In Christ, we receive all of God’s saving benefits. A gift that does not disappoint. And what we receive in Christ can never be lost, it can never be taken away, it can never be stripped away. God declares His people righteous in His beloved Son. To take back what He has given to His people in Christ would be to forsake His own Son. And that will never happen. Never.
I refer to the doctrine of union with Christ as our “home with God.” In Christ, we are welcomed into life with God.
How does this new home shape how God sees us? It means that we are now viewed by God the Father through the life, work, and victory of God the Son. So how does the Father see the Son? If we answer that, we will have our answer to how God sees us when we are in Christ.
Every Gospel account in the New Testament records the baptism of Jesus. In the Gospels we are told exactly how the Father sees the Son at Christ’s baptism: “This is my beloved Son, with whom I am well pleased.” Each of the baptism accounts presents this moment as one of the clearest pictures of the triune God’s beloved fellowship: God the Father declaring, the Holy Spirit descending, and the Son of God receiving.
And yet, the baptism of Jesus comes before His public ministry. When Jesus receives the declaration of “beloved,” His public ministry has not begun. After the baptism, He enters into the wilderness showdown with Satan. Why do I point this out? Jesus Christ, the Son of God, was beloved before the battle. In Jesus we, too, are beloved before the battle. Beloved by God in Christ before we ever do anything for the sake of Christ.
It is in being received as a child of God that we find the love for which we long. We are born longing to become beloved. To feel beloved. Due to our homeless hearts, we have a strong bent toward misplacing this desire in things and people that can never deliver on it.
When Christ receives the public declaration of “beloved Son,” He receives it on behalf of all who would be united to Him. “In love [God] predestined us for adoption to himself as sons through Jesus Christ” (Eph. 1:5).
Who is the Christian before God?
In Christ Jesus, they are a righteous and beloved child of God.
Why does this change everything?
To put it simply, if you are in Christ Jesus, God isn’t waiting on a future version of you He is going to love more. You are already righteous. For good. Forever. Because you are in the righteous one. You are already beloved. For good. Forever. Because, you are in the Beloved Son. How could this not change everything?
In Christ Jesus, we receive forgiveness and fellowship. In Him, we are not only acquitted, we are accepted. In Christ Jesus, we receive both the righteousness we desperately need and the relationship we desperately desire. We are justified in Christ and we are adopted in Christ Jesus.
And this changes everything because our new identity is unbreakable and unshakable. It cannot be lost or corrupted, and it will be kept by God forever because He is forever faithful to Himself. In Christ, God is covenantally bound to you. To forsake you would be to forsake the perfect faithfulness of Jesus Christ, and God will never break fellowship with Himself. This unbreakable union is set by the Father, secured by the Son, and sealed by the Holy Spirit. Even when we disobey God or settle for lesser loves, we are kept by Jesus as we are “sealed with the promised Holy Spirit, who is the guarantee of our inheritance until we acquire possession of it, to the praise of His glory” (Eph. 1:13–15).
Union with Christ gives us a new identity. In Christ, I receive a “new me.” Not the “new me” of self-help books, not a “new me” that is more productive, more efficient, and more successful, but a “new me” that is now a righteous and beloved child of God. You can’t life hack a new identity, but you can receive one.