
Most people find it easier to feel guilty than to believe they’re already free. This message breaks that illusion. Discover why unworthiness is the greatest lie ever told — and how the audacity to believe what Christ finished changes everything.
The hardest struggle for man isn’t sin — it’s belief. Not belief that God exists, but belief that His finished work in Christ has already made us free. Humanity has learned to confess its sins with trembling lips, yet finds it almost impossible to confess its righteousness with confidence. It feels safer to stay in guilt than to step into grace. False humility bows its head low, but true faith dares to look God in the eye and see what He sees.
We call it humility when we say, “I am unworthy,” yet Heaven calls it unbelief.
The Death That Ended It All
Paul’s question in Romans 6:2 cuts through every shadow of doubt:
“How shall we who died to sin live any longer in it?”
He’s not arguing for moral perfection — he’s pointing to identity. Those who are baptized into Christ’s death have already crossed the line. Sin’s dominion ended at the cross. The old man was crucified, not reformed.
To live as though sin still defines us is to stand at an empty tomb, searching for a body that’s no longer there.
False Humility: The Mask of Unbelief
There’s a kind of piety that loves to feel broken — the endless confession of failure, the language of unworthiness. It sounds spiritual, but it denies the victory of the cross. The enemy doesn’t mind your repentance if it keeps you from renewal.
Unworthiness is a lie from the pit — crafted to keep you powerless, to rob you of the abundant life Christ secured. The power of God flows through identification: knowing you are a new creation. The Spirit doesn’t visit you to make you feel better about the old nature; He lives in you to reveal that the old nature is gone.
The Audacity of Renewal
“Be transformed by the renewing of your mind.” (Romans 12:2)
This isn’t a call to self-improvement — it’s an invitation to think from resurrection ground. The renewed mind doesn’t beg for what grace already gave; it reckons it true. It dares to say, I am the righteousness of God in Christ, not as a boast, but as alignment with truth.
Faith is audacity — the courage to agree with God even when feelings protest.
Living from Possession, Not Pursuit
Hebrews 6:1 urges us to
“Leave the elementary teachings and go on to maturity.”
The writer isn’t belittling repentance; he’s pointing us beyond it. We’re not meant to live at the doorway of forgiveness, forever repeating the same entry prayer. The house has rooms — joy, peace, sonship, authority, and fellowship with God.
You were never meant to chase freedom. You were meant to live from it. The Spirit of Christ has furnished you with everything needed for godliness and victory. The abundant life isn’t a promise hanging in the future; it’s a possession now.
The Assurance of Forgiveness
The English reading of 1 John 1:9 seems to suggest that God continually forgives each time we confess, but the Greek reveals something deeper. The verb ἀφῇ (aphē) stands in the aorist subjunctive — describing not a recurring process, but a complete act. John’s point isn’t that believers must live in constant cycles of confession and guilt; it’s that forgiveness has already been accomplished in Christ. Confession, then, is not a means to earn cleansing but an honest walk in the light — agreeing with God about what’s already true.
The surrounding verses clarify John’s audience. “If we say we have no sin, we deceive ourselves” (1 John 1:8) speaks to those who denied their need for redemption, not to those already cleansed. And “If anyone sins, we have an Advocate with the Father” (1 John 2:1) offers assurance, not reapplication of atonement. Christ’s advocacy is not a fresh sacrifice but the enduring voice of His finished work.
John’s message harmonizes perfectly with Paul’s: believers live not in sin-consciousness but in truth-conscious fellowship. The light doesn’t condemn — it confirms – Romans 8:1. The believer’s heart rests, knowing forgiveness is not pending approval but a settled reality secured by the faithfulness and justice of God through His Son.
The Boldness of the New Mind
To believe you are free is not arrogance — it’s agreement. The mind renewed by the Spirit no longer wrestles with whether it deserves love. It simply abides in it. This is the hardest thing for man: not repentance, but reception; not striving, but resting in what Christ has already accomplished.
The cross ended the question of worthiness. Resurrection began the life of the new creation.
And the world still waits for those who dare to believe it.
Many Christians believe that Jesus died for them, yet few reckon that they themselves died with Him on the cross — a truth symbolized in baptism. They celebrate His resurrection but seldom grasp that they too have already risen with Christ, seated with Him in heavenly glory. The essence of the gospel is not just what Christ accomplished on our behalf, but what happened to us in Him: our old, sinful nature was crucified, and a new creation was born. This new creation — God’s workmanship (poiēma), His masterpiece — is not a reformed sinner but a wholly new nature. Righteousness is not a goal to be achieved, but a gift already received by faith, and Romans 5:17 promises that those who receive this abundance of grace and the free gift of righteousness reign in life. Reckoning this reality, especially that we are the righteousness of God in Christ, is crucial; failure to do so grieves the Holy Spirit. Dwelling in false humility, sin-consciousness, or continual confession of what is already done away in Christ disrupts our reigning and chokes the life of God in us. Believing only in what Christ did, without embracing what He made us to be, keeps many walking in the shadow of the grave, striving to improve a self that is already dead, instead of living fully in the resurrection life they’ve already been given.
