What We Were; What We Are in Christ

To most of us, what we were before we found Christ so dominates our minds, so rules us, that we forget what we are now, in Him.
We do not appropriate our redemption and we magnify our failures.

Our weakness is ever with us.
We have forgotten that Christ is within us.

We have the “cross” of religion rather than the “cross” of the resurrected life of the Son of God.

If we would persistently fix our thoughts upon what we are in Christ and what Christ is doing for us at the right hand of the Father, it would lift us out of weakness and failure, into His strength.

Set your mind on things that are above, where Christ is seated at the right hand of God. (See Colossians 3:1–2.)

“In Christ”

“In Christ” is one of the key expressions in the Epistles.
Few have understood all that the Holy Spirit meant when this expression was used by Paul.

You see, there are two expressions used: “In Christ” and “Christ in us.”
“In Christ” is our legal standing. “Christ in us” is the vital aspect of redemption.

“In Christ” is what He has done for us in redemption, what He has done for us in the courtroom of heaven.

When we speak of our being “In Christ,” that place began historically on the cross of Christ when he said it is finished!

Jesus was never a substitute until He hung there.

He identified Himself with us when He took a physical body.

We did not become identified with Him until He hung on the cross and God laid our sin upon Him.

So, the expression “In Christ” is the legal side of our redemption.
We were “in Him” in the mind of justice when He was nailed to the cross.

We were “in Him” when our sin was laid upon Him.

We were “in Him” when He paid the price and God legally justified us.

Christ also suffered for sins once, the righteous for the unrighteous, that he might bring us to God; being put to death in the flesh but made alive in the spirit. (1 Peter 3:18 ASV)

We were “in Him” when He put His heel upon the neck of Satan and took from him the keys of death and hades.

We were “in Him” when He rose triumphantly over all the host of the enemy.

We were “in Him” when He ascended from Mount Olivet with His own blood into the holy of holies and there poured that blood on the mercy seat before the throne of God.

We were “in Him” when He sat down on the right hand of the majesty on high.

We were “in Him” when His work on the cross was finished and we were seated with him in the heavenly place in Christ.

We are “in Him” today, for Paul tells us God “raised us up with him and made us to sit with him in the heavenly places, in Christ Jesus” (Ephesians 2:6 ASV).

We are “in Him” in this sense. This is the legal side.
This is the courthouse side of the plan of redemption.

When the Father looks upon us, He invariably looks upon us as “in Christ” legally equal with our substitute.

Whatever He attempts to do in us experientially is on legal grounds.
This legal position in Christ guarantees an experiential fellowship with the Lord here on earth.

Our position is limitless.
All that He is to us legally, He can be experientially in us.

When I speak about being “in Christ,” I mean that we are in all fullness, all might, grace, authority, and dominion that Christ is in Himself.

When I speak about being “in Christ,” that is “as Christ.”
It is identification in the holiest, highest spiritual sense.

It is a oneness with Him that absolutely surpasses any verbal description.

These two wonderful words, “in Christ,” cover it. You see, the fact that we are “in Christ” means that from heaven’s point of view, Satan cannot reach us, nor touch us. His power is absolutely destroyed as far as we are concerned.

When Satan does touch us, it must surprise all heaven to think that such a thing could take place.

Satan must look upon it as a satanic miracle that he can break through the defenses of God and put diseases and sickness upon us and bring us under condemnation.

The Father is expecting us to occupy our position “in Christ,” where there is no condemnation, where we stand complete in Him, where His fullness and completeness become ours, and where the very strength of Christ becomes ours.

I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me. (Philippians 4:13)

We are in a place where all grace abounds, where we are in the very grasp of omnipotence.

You see, there is no such thing as failure. There is no such thing as being defeated when one really knows that that they are “in Christ,” for we were “in Him” in all His marvelous victories in redemption.

We are “in Him” now, seated in the heavenly places in Christ, the place where we exercise our authority upon the earth.

All it requires is faith on our part to bring the power of God down upon our needs, whether for spirit, soul, body, finances, or deliverance. If our God is for us, who can be against us.

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