Conversatio Divina

Part 5 of 5

Set Free in Christ

Part 5

Ken Boa

We need to choose our audience. If we only seek to please people, we will walk according to the flesh. But if we seek to please an audience of One, we will strive to walk by the Spirit. Those who walk by the flesh cannot please God and are dead, but those who walk by the Spirit have life in God (Romans 8:1–8). The good news is that we are set free in Christ to walk by the Spirit and have eternal life.

Originally published at kenboa.org

01.  Set Free in Christ

If we reckon ourselves to be dead to sin in Christ (Romans 6:6–7, 11, 13), then we will find true significance, security, and satisfaction. We have been set free in Christ to experience God’s unconditional love and acceptance. If we look for this type of love and acceptance from people, they will fail us. God, however, is the One who loves us in spite of us. In Christ, He makes us new.

Once we have been made new, we are free to walk by the Spirit. The problem is that spiritual warfare rages in our lives, and we always have a choice to make: will we choose to walk by the Spirit, or will we submit to the flesh?

When tempted to submit to the flesh, we need to recognize and admit that we are being tempted to sin. It helps to name the particular sin in order to combat that particular temptation with God’s Word.

Because we have been set free in Christ, we do not need to hide our sin in darkness. If we have a secret that we are keeping that no one knows about—particularly regarding our flesh signature, the sin we struggle with the most—we are in danger. We need to bring all our sin to God. Having an accountability partner also helps because they can aid us in resisting temptation and bringing our sin into the light. They can remind us that we are no longer under the power of sin but have been set free.

02.  Walk by the Spirit

When we resist temptation, we are choosing to walk by the Spirit and live out out of our freedom in Christ. If there are any sins that particularly tempt you—your flesh signatures—it is wise to acknowledge them and prepare to resist them. After all, if you do not prepare, they will catch you off guard again and again.

For my own flesh signatures, I wrote out four words beginning with “G” that remind me to combat temptation with God’s truth:

  • Temptation Toward Anger: Gratitude (I cannot be angry and grateful at the same time)
  • Temptation to Seek Revenge: Grace (God gave me grace, not justice, when He saved me)
  • Sexual Temptation: Glory (others are not objects but divine image-bearers)
  • Temptation to Covet: Goodness (God has given me what He knows I need)

Try writing out your own flesh signatures and as well as the truth that combats them. The prayerful pursuit of humility as you acknowledge these sins will aid you as you seek to walk by the Spirit.

Footnotes

Ken Boa is engaged in a ministry of relational evangelism and discipleship, teaching, writing, and speaking. He holds a BS from Case Institute of Technology, a ThM from Dallas Theological Seminary, a PhD from New York University, and a DPhil from the University of Oxford in England. He leads three weekly Bible studies in the Atlanta area, including two men’s fellowships and one at Christ Church of Atlanta. Dr. Boa is the president of Reflections Ministries, Trinity House Publishers, and Omnibus Media Ministries.

The purpose of Reflections Ministries is to encourage, teach, and equip people to know Christ, follow Him, become progressively conformed to His image, and reproduce His life in others.