![]() |
OnWatch Australian Marketplace Connections Inc. |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Home | OnLine | Events | Groups | Subscribe | Unsubscribe | AboutUs
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
How do you identify yourself in the marketplace: saint or sinner? This is a very important question because what you believe about yourself will determine how you react in daily circumstances. Your resulting behaviour will then define the credibility of your Christian witness in your sphere of influence.
Now every Christian is a witness. The only question is this: are you a good or a bad one? The purpose of this article is to encourage every believer to keep on growing into great ambassadors of the Kingdom of God in the their daily occupation.
To do this we need to understand our identity correctly.
Perhaps you respond to this question in a measured way as an expression of your humility before God, readily acknowledging that it is all too easy to fall below the standard of grace to which we are called.
On the other hand you are grieved by sin in the world and you don't want to identify with the following description of the wicked in Psalm 36:1-2
Well there's an insight...
Do I excuse self-centred focus, unforgiveness, pride, injustice, failure to make apology, abuse of others, anger, ethical compromises, jealousy, impurity and so on? After all 'we're all fallen creatures and we will sin until the day we die'... right?
Is that it then? If you call yourself a sinner is this the foundational theology you are going to take with you into the marketplace on a daily basis? Is this your default theology of life?
Well what kind of fruit do you think this kind of thinking is going to produce?
No way! This kind of negative, un-biblical, defeatist, self-deprecating, deceptive attitude does not honour the work of Jesus dying on the Cross to give you new life. Jesus overcame death to make you his friend and an integral part of his work of reconciling all things to himself.
The good news is we are called to be saints in the marketplace. Our identity is no longer that of "sinner" because we have been recreated into something new! We have a new identity because we are a new person in Christ.
We have to own this as an integral part of our faith or we will never grow up into our calling to be an ambassador of the Kingdom of God in our respective sphere of influence (2 Cor 5:20). If too many Christians fail to realise their calling, then our common faith will continue to shrivel to the detriment of the nation.
THIS IS THE BIGGEST ISSUE FACING OUR NATION TODAY! What's happening in our country today is happening on our watch!
Os Guinness, leading Christian apologist, asks this question: "why has the West abandoned its Judeo-Christian roots?" (click here for more info on Os Guinness).
How would you answer this question?
In a nutshell Os answers this way: The separation of "belief from behaviour" has all to often resulted in daily behaviour that discredits Jesus. In the West we have often accomplished this by dividing Sunday from Monday, sacred from secular, physical from spiritual and church from work. From this understanding we can ask:
If we are to bring a transforming influence to our culture then we need to be saints in the marketplace who do not settle for a sinners identity. Why? because we become who we believe we are!
So who does the Bible say we are in Christ?
Jesus has called us to be incarnational in the world - ie: he wants to reproduce himself in us. We are his body and part of his plan to reconcile all things in the world to himself (John 17:18 and Col 1:20).
Well OK, if that's the truth,
How would you answer these questions?
We are not talking about "sinless perfectionism" here. However from the beginning of Genesis men and women have been called into battle in a war between good and evil - and God has called us to work with him for the good (Gen 1:28).
As a sinner you were doomed to failure in this war. You had no hope of victory in your own strength. Your natural end was failure, death and destruction. This is the outcome of the story of Gen 2 and 3.
As a saint (a new person in Christ) we are partakers of the victory of the Cross and our discipleship is progressively teaching us how to walk in this victory. The process of maturation in this battle is called sanctification (1 Thess 5:22-24).
If we fail from time to time other people will usually respond to our undergirding Christian character. In this way our lives are intended to be a window into the likeness of Christ expressed through humility, love and faithfulness. It is the evidence of these values that conveys who we are in Christ (2 Cor 3:3).
In summary:
Listen to the wonderful good news from the scriptures (NIV):
Therefore to be a great ambassador for the Kingdom of God in the marketplace we are called to rise to who we are - not fall back to who we were.
Blessings to you in Jesus name,
Peter
OnWatch
Your Occupation is Your Mission |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Notice Board |
OnWatch - Mark 13:37 Being Disciples - grow your faith on-line Touchdown - Finding fellowship when away from home Christian Articles relating to the marketplace Christian Events coming up in the marketplace Christian Groups operating in the marketplace Christian Ministries with a marketplace focus Christian Training organisations with a marketplace focus |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Contacts |
or
Unsubscribe
Web site: www.marketplaceconnections.com |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||