
Many people love God, believe in Jesus, pray regularly, and still feel stuck.
You try to change.
You promise yourself, “This is the last time.”
Yet somehow the same patterns keep repeating.
That’s the frustrating reality of spiritual bondage. It isn’t always obvious, but it’s deeply felt.
And the enemy loves that place.
Because if he can’t stop you from getting saved, he will try to convince you that you’ll never be free.
But Scripture tells us something very different.
Through Jesus Christ, you have every right to be free.
Freedom is not something you earn through perfect behavior. It’s something Jesus already paid for. And the place where freedom begins is not with behavior—it begins with identity.
Before God changes what you do, He reminds you who you are.
John 1:12 tells us:
“But to all who believed him and accepted him, he gave the right to become children of God.”
The word “right” in this passage comes from the Greek word exousia, which means authority, permission, or legal standing.
In other words, becoming a child of God isn’t something we sneak into. God intentionally brings us into His family.
When you belong to God’s family, you receive incredible spiritual benefits:
A close relationship with God
Freedom from fear
The help of the Holy Spirit
Authority over sin and the enemy
Forgiveness and grace
A new spiritual family
But the enemy understands something important. If he can’t stop you from being saved, he will try to confuse you about who you are.
Identity confusion is one of the most effective weapons the enemy uses against believers. When we forget who we are in Christ, we begin living like spiritual orphans instead of children of God.
That’s why the Word of God constantly reminds us of our true identity.
You are not defined by your past.
You are not defined by your failures.
You are defined by your relationship with Christ.
Second Corinthians 5:17 declares:
“If anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation; the old has passed away; behold, the new has come.”
Salvation doesn’t just change your destination.
It changes your identity.
Christianity is not about behavior modification—it’s about identity transformation.
When you come to Christ, you are not simply a repaired version of your old self. You are a new creation.
Yet many believers still live as if they are stuck in their old identity. Instead of living in freedom, they spend their lives managing their past.
But God didn’t save you so you could manage sin.
He saved you so you could live a new life.
Your past no longer has authority over your future.
You are not what you used to be.
You are who God says you are.
Romans 6:12–13 reminds us:
“Do not let sin control the way you live… Instead, give yourselves completely to God.”
Paul describes our bodies as instruments. The Greek word used here actually means a weapon of war.
That means your life is a weapon.
Your hands.
Your mouth.
Your mind.
Your choices.
They will either serve sin or serve righteousness.
Freedom doesn’t happen accidentally. It happens when we surrender our lives back to God.
Sin may still try to knock at the door, but it no longer has the authority to control your life.
Through Jesus Christ, sin is no longer your master.
Many believers stay stuck because they spend more time beating themselves up than resisting the enemy.
But the truth of the Gospel is this:
You are not your failure.
You are not your past.
You are not the mistakes you’ve made.
Through Jesus Christ:
You are a child of God
You are a new creation
And you have every right to be free
The more you understand your identity in Christ, the more the chains that once held you begin to lose their power.
Freedom starts when you believe what God says about you.
Pastor Clayton Hicks leads Resurgence Church, a vibrant community where people connect with God, family, service, and purpose.
Pastor Clayton Hicks leads Resurgence Church, a vibrant community where people connect with God, family, service, and purpose.



