We aren’t saying that believers have no sin, but rather that our identity is not bound up with sin. Paul recognized that he “kept on doing evil” even though he wanted to do good, but then he makes an amazing statement. “It is no longer I who do it!” Wow! Well, who does it then, Paul? “Sin living in me.”
And this is the condition of all believers. We still have “sin living in us.” This is called the flesh, that part of us that is yet unredeemed. We all have it.
And yet it is very important to separate our true selves from our sin. Our true identity is one who is redeemed by Christ, one who is a partaker in God’s own nature, one who loves and lives for righteousness. That is who we are, that is our identity. When Paul sinned, he said, “It is no longer I who do it.”
Obviously, we can take this thought too far. When getting a speeding ticket, it wouldn’t work to tell the judge, “it wasn’t I who did it.” That’s clearly an abuse of this truth. Likewise, if we sin we should confess the sin to God which in Greek means to speak the same thing. We agree with God and His truth and confess our sin, acknowledge that we have sinned, and thank Him for the forgiveness He purchased for us on the cross. As we turn and face the cross once again we are humbled and broken at the sight we see, and yet we are healed and made whole by a view of that same cross. In this way, we agree with God and turn away from our sin.
The right use of Romans 7:17-18 is to acknowledge that when we stumble and fall, which always leads to confusion and slavery, it is not our “new man”, our true nature, but rather it is our flesh that is weak and faltering. In other words, don’t connect yourself with your sin, rather, find your identity in Christ.
As I said in the previous lesson, the world teaches us the opposite of God’s Word. They teach us to find our identity in our temptation and in our sin. This does nothing but keep us in bondage to the sin, since we believe that is who we are.
Friend, get used to saying when you stumble, “That’s not who I am! It is sin living in me.” Keep your identity clear! If you are a Christian, you love holiness and righteousness, you love what is good and right and true. That is your true identity. But your new self has flesh which is unredeemed, and that can trip us up.
Question 4. Why do you think it is important to not find our identity in sin? Share your thoughts:
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Let’s notice Paul’s conclusion to this whole matter:
“So I find this law at work: Although I want to do good, evil is right there with me. 22 For in my inner being I delight in God's law; 23 but I see another law at work in me, waging war against the law of my mind and making me a prisoner of the law of sin at work within me. 24 What a wretched man I am! Who will rescue me from this body that is subject to death? 25 Thanks be to God, who delivers me through Jesus Christ our Lord!”
Romans 7:21-25 NIV
Question 5. What is the solution to this “waging war within”?