Romans 8:19 NIV
The Bible does not teach us how to become like Jesus. The Bible teaches that Jesus lives in us so that He can be revealed in us. There is a huge difference between the two, and unless you understand that Christlikeness is not a goal to be achieved, but a gift to be experienced, you will miss genuine Christianity.
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For much of my life, I was taught that my goal should be “Christlikeness.” The process, as I was taught, went something like this: I get a picture of Jesus through His word, measure myself against it, and find “areas I need to work on.” Interestingly enough, I was assured that I would never actually reach this goal, but that this was the way it was intended to be.
As ludicrous as that seems to me now, like many people I know, I bought into that system for many years of my Christian life. I worked to be more Christlike through Bible study, prayer, Church involvement, ministry projects, etc. I even chose full-time ministry as a means to keep myself focused on becoming more Christlike, but in the end, I was no more Christlike than when I began.
In fact, as an adult, I have often looked back on my High School years as being the most effective time in my Christian life…the time when I was most Christlike was the few years immediately following a re-dedication of my life to God as a ninth grader. The truth is, the time in my life during which Christianity worked best for me was before I had any opportunity to “become Christlike.” Why? Because that’s the way it works.
The Bible does not teach us how to become like Jesus. The Bible teaches that Jesus lives in us so that He can be revealed in us. There is a huge difference between the two, and unless you understand that Christlikeness is not a goal to be achieved, but a gift to be experienced, you will miss genuine Christianity.
True Christianity is a bit like being a superhero. The process of Christian maturity is not about becoming something we are not, but being revealed for who we actually are. Like Peter Parker,
