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Friday, May 15, 2026

Who Am I and Where is My True Identity?

When we ask, “Who am I, and where is my true identity?” we are really asking, “What gives my life worth, meaning, and stability when everything around me changes?” I have learned that if we build our identity on what we do, what we feel, what we’ve been through, or what others say about us, we will live on a roller coaster. But God gives us something better: an identity that is received, not achieved. 

 

1) Our First Identity Is What God Says About Us As His Creation. 

Before we talk about “purpose,” the Bible starts with design. God created us in His image (Gen 1:26–27). That means our value is not up for debate. We are not random. We are not disposable. We are not defined by trauma, failure, shame, or public opinion. We carry dignity because God stamped His image on us. And God did not create us carelessly. He formed us intentionally, and He knew our days before we ever lived one of them (Ps 139:13–16). That doesn’t mean our lives are easy; many of us have painful stories, but it does mean our lives are not pointless. Even when we can’t make sense of ourselves, God has never been confused about us. 

 

2) Our Identity Is Not What Our Past Says It’s What God Has Done. 

Many of our identity struggles stem from letting the past be the loudest voice. We are tempted to say, “I am what happened to me,” or “I am what I did,” or “I am what I can’t stop doing.” But Scripture draws a clear line between what happened and who we are. In Christ, God does not deny our past, but He refuses to let it rule our future. When we come to Christ, we become a “new creation” (2 Cor 5:17). That means our identity is no longer locked to our worst moment, our biggest wound, or our most persistent struggle. The old is not the final word. Christ is. This is also why Romans says there is “no condemnation” for those who are in Christ (Rom 8:1). That one verse is identity medicine for a guilty mind. Condemnation says, “You are finished.” Christ says, “You are Mine, and I’m not done with you.” 

 

3) Our True Identity Becomes Clearest When We Know Whose We Are. 

One of the most healing truths in Scripture is that God does not merely “tolerate” us; He adopts us. We don’t just become religious people; we become God’s children. We receive “the Spirit of adoption,” and we cry, “Abba, Father” (Rom 8:14–17). That is not a cold, distant relationship. That is family. John says it plainly: God has given us the right to become children of God through faith in Christ (John 1:12–13). And then he just marvels at it: “Behold what manner of love…” (1 John 3:1–2). If we want the bedrock of our identity, it’s this: we belong to God. And when God says, “You are Mine,” He is not speaking shallow comfort. He is speaking covenant. He is speaking redemption. He is speaking love that does not let go (Isa 43:1–4). 

 

4) Our Identity Is Not Just “Who We Are,” But “What We Are For.” 

God never gives identity without purpose. Ephesians says we are God’s workmanship, created in Christ for good works that He prepared beforehand (Eph 2:10). That means our lives are not wasted when they are surrendered. Even our scars can become places where God’s grace does real work through us. Peter adds language that shocks people who feel small: we are a chosen generation, a royal priesthood, God’s special people, so we can proclaim what He has done (1 Pet 2:9). In plain terms: God saves us, names us, and then sends us. 

 

So when we ask, “Who am I?” the Bible answers: 

  • We are created in God’s image (Gen 1:26–27). 
  • We are known and formed by God (Ps 139:13–16). 
  • We are redeemed and claimed by God (Isa 43:1–4). 
  • We are made new in Christ (2 Cor 5:17). 
  • We are adopted as God’s children (Rom 8:14–17; John 1:12–13). 
  • We are God’s workmanship with a prepared purpose (Eph 2:10). 

 

5) How Do We Live Out That Identity When Our Feelings Don’t Match It? 

This is where we get practical. Identity in Christ is true even when we don’t feel it. That is why Scripture calls us to renew our minds instead of being conformed to the world’s patterns (Rom 12:2). We don’t “discover ourselves” by listening to every feeling. We “discover ourselves” by learning to believe what God says about us, then walking it out. Colossians says our life is “hidden with Christ in God,” and that shifts what we chase and what we set our mind on (Col 3:1–3). Galatians reminds us that we are sons of God through faith in Christ, not through performance or comparison (Gal 3:26–29). And Galatians 2:20 takes it to the deepest level: Christ lives in us, and our life becomes faith-driven rather than fear-driven (Gal 2:20). So if we are struggling with identity today, the path forward is not self-loathing and not self-worship. It is surrender. It is trust. It is returning to the Father again and again, letting Him name us until His voice becomes louder than our past. 

 

So, to say this simply: Our true identity is not something we invent. It is something we receive because God made us, Christ redeemed us, and the Spirit assures us that we belong to Him. 

Thursday, May 7, 2026

What Happens After We Die, and Is There an Afterlife?

Yes—according to the Bible, there is an afterlife, and death is not the end of us. When we talk about death, we’re not just talking about biology. We’re talking about the moment our bodies stop, and our souls step into eternity. Scripture says our bodies return to the dust, but our spirit returns to God who gave it (Eccles 12:7). That alone tells us we are more than a body. 

 

1. What happens the moment we die? 

The Bible teaches that after death, we remain conscious, and we immediately enter the next stage of existence. For believers, the Bible speaks with comfort and confidence: to be absent from the body is to be present with the Lord (2 Cor 5:8). Paul even says that to depart and be with Christ is “far better” (Phil 1:21–23). Jesus told the thief on the cross, “Today you will be with Me in Paradise” (Luke 23:43). That is not “someday,” and it’s not unconscious sleep. It is immediate. For those who die without Christ, Scripture also shows conscious existence, yet it is separation and torment, not comfort. Jesus’ account of the rich man and Lazarus depicts two very different outcomes after death and a fixed separation between them (Luke 16:19–31). That is sobering, but it is honest. 

 

2. Is there a final judgment? 

Yes. The Bible says it is appointed for us to die once, and after that comes judgment (Heb 9:27). That means death is not the end; it is the doorway to accountability. Jesus Himself taught that a day is coming when all who are in the graves will hear His voice and come forth, some to the resurrection of life and some to the resurrection of condemnation (John 5:28–29). Daniel also speaks of a resurrection to everlasting life, and a resurrection to shame and everlasting contempt (Dan 12:2). Scripture is consistent: our choices in this life matter forever. 

 

3. What is the Christian hope, specifically? 

The Christian hope is not just that our souls “float off” somewhere. The Christian hope is resurrection; real life, forever, with Jesus. Jesus said, “I am the resurrection and the life,” and He promised that whoever believes in Him will live even if they die (John 11:25–26). That matters because Christianity rises or falls on what happened to Jesus after the cross. The Bible teaches that Christ truly died, was buried, and truly rose again, and that He was seen by many witnesses (1 Cor 15:3–8). The Gospels show the empty tomb, the folded cloths, the multiple appearances, the conversations, and even Jesus eating with His disciples (John 20–21; Luke 24; Matt 28; Mark 16). Acts says He presented Himself alive “by many infallible proofs” over forty days (Acts 1:1–11). Our hope is not wishful thinking; it is anchored to the resurrection of Christ. And because Christ rose, we will rise. Paul calls Jesus the “firstfruits,” meaning His resurrection is the guarantee of what is coming for those who belong to Him (1 Cor 15). Scripture says our mortal bodies will be changed to incorruptible bodies (1 Cor 15:51–54). Our lowly body will be transformed and conformed to His glorious body (Phil 3:20–21). That is not fantasy; that is promise. 

 

4. What about the future kingdom and eternity? 

Scripture teaches that Jesus is coming again, and we will be with Him forever (1 Thess 4:13–17; John 14:2–3). Revelation shows a final judgment (Rev 20:11–15) and then a new heaven and new earth where God wipes away every tear and death is no more (Rev 21:1–4). It also teaches that believers will share in Christ’s reign, serving as priests and reigning with Him (Rev 5:10; Rev 20:4–6; Rev 22:5). Jesus even spoke of faithful servants being entrusted with responsibility in His kingdom (Matt 25:21–23; Luke 19:17–19). Daniel spoke of the saints receiving the kingdom (Dan 7:18, 27). Paul said we are heirs of God and joint-heirs with Christ (Rom 8:17). That means our lives now matter, because God is shaping us for what we will be entrusted with later. 

 

5. So what should we do with this truth right now?

This is where it gets personal. If we ask only, “Is there an afterlife?”, we might keep it theoretical. But Scripture pushes us toward a deeper question: Do we have the Son? Because the Bible says the one who has the Son has life, and the one who does not have the Son does not have life (1 John 5:11–12). The wages of sin is death, but the gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord (Rom 6:23). So the Christian answer is simple, but not shallow: we prepare for death by coming to Christ now. We don’t have to guess. We don’t have to fear like people with no hope (1 Thess 4:13). We can face the valley of the shadow of death knowing the Lord is with us (Ps 23:4–6). And if we’re honest, we all want to know that our life isn’t meaningless and our suffering isn’t wasted. The resurrection tells us it isn’t. Jesus overcame death (John 16:33), and He will bring us through, too. 

The Bible Isn’t a Myth: Why I Trust It With My Life

When I say the Bible is reliable, I don’t mean I’ve never had questions. I mean I have found it to be truthful, consistent, and proven faithful in history, in what has been uncovered in the ground, in prophecy fulfilled, and in how God’s Word has worked in real lives, including mine. The Bible doesn’t ask us to believe in fairy tales. It tells us God speaks, God acts, and God keeps His word. Jesus Himself treated Scripture as unbreakable truth (John 10:35). He said, “Heaven and earth will pass away, but My words will by no means pass away” (Matt 24:35). And when He rose from the dead, He pointed the disciples back to Scripture and said it all “must be fulfilled” (Luke 24:44–45). So yes, the Bible is reliable.

 

H.A.P.S.

1) Historical 

The Bible reads like real history because it is rooted in real places, real rulers, real nations, real wars, real travel routes, and real people. The New Testament doesn’t present Jesus as a myth floating in the clouds. It places Him in the middle of the real world: Jewish leaders, Roman authority, public execution, named towns, public teaching, eyewitnesses, and a message that spread outward under pressure, not comfort. Even Acts ends on a note that shows the gospel moving into the Gentile world and continuing forward with “no one forbidding him” as Paul preached Christ (Acts 28:28–31). That’s a historical thread: the message didn’t die with the first generation. It multiplied. And the Bible’s historical claim is not vague: it centers on Jesus, His life, ministry, death, and resurrection, and it says Scripture was pointing to Him the whole time (John 5:39). 

 

2) Archaeological

Archaeology doesn’t “prove” God like a lab experiment, but it does confirm that the Bible is not making up the world it describes. Here’s the simple point: when people said, “That place didn’t exist,” or “That kind of detail is wrong,” over and over, the ground has answered back, “It was there.” That matters because it supports the basic conclusion that the writers were describing reality rather than inventing a fantasy. The Bible’s own claim is that God left witness of Himself in creation and in history (Rom 1:19–20), and even in the ordinary gifts of life, seasons, provision, and goodness (Acts 14:15–17). If God is real, then it makes sense that His Word fits the real world.

 

3) Prophetical

This is where the Bible separates itself from every “religious book” that is just good advice. The Bible doesn’t only tell us what happened. It tells us what would happen, especially about Jesus Christ, and then shows us the fulfillment. Jesus didn’t show up as a random religious teacher. Scripture says the Law, the Prophets, and the Psalms pointed to Him (Luke 24:44–45). And after His resurrection, He opened their understanding to see it (Luke 24:45). The biggest prophetic “weight” is this: the Messiah would suffer, and God would use that suffering to save. 

That is exactly what we see in the life of Christ: 

  • His ministry wasn’t about building an earthly empire. He came to do the Father’s will and to give His life (John 14:6–9 shows He is the revelation of the Father; if we want to know God, we look at Jesus). 
  • His death wasn’t an accident. The Bible says Christ’s crucifixion happened according to God’s “determined purpose and foreknowledge” (Acts 2:23), and again that people did what God’s hand and purpose determined beforehand (Acts 4:27–28). 
  • After the resurrection, Jesus didn’t say, “Now forget the Old Testament.” He said Scripture was speaking about Him all along (Luke 24:27; 24:44–45). 

And here is the point I want to underline: the prophecies about Christ weren’t written by a single person in a single generation. They are spread out across Scripture, and yet they land on one Person. That is not normal human writing. That is the hand of God across time. 

 

4) Statistical Probability

Because people use “statistics” to sound smarter than they are, and in my days in school, I too am guilty of doing the same. I’m going to expand on this point because of its importance: Christianity, in itself, stands and falls on the validity of the life of Christ. So, here’s what I mean by statistical probability: the more specific prophecies you stack together, the harder it becomes to say, “That all happened by accident.” One fulfilled prophecy could be brushed off as coincidence. But multiple independent prophetic lines, about the Messiah’s suffering, rejection, death, and the worldwide spread of His message, coming together in one historical Person makes the “chance” argument weaker and weaker. That’s the basic logic: the pile gets too heavy. And when you add this to it, God says His Word will accomplish what He sends it to do (Isa 55:10–11), the Bible tells us ahead of time that His Word is not random information. It is purposeful. 

Thus, when we talk about God being purposeful, God knew this question would come up in the minds of some and, God being God, already knew some would reject the idea of prophecy, and of thinking that there is an outside source beyond what man knows who knows all things; God eliminated that illogical thinking in itself, doing away with that position. 

More than 100 messianic prophecies were fulfilled in Jesus’s first coming, though estimates vary depending on how prophecies are counted. Jesus accurately fulfilled all 109 prophecies about His first coming, while several hundred prophecies concerning Jesus Christ have been fulfilled in His first advent; one scholar identified 332 references to Christ in the Old Testament that are expressly cited in the New Testament as predictions fulfilled in His life and ministry. 

The statistical improbability of these fulfillments strengthens their evidential weight. According to the law of mathematical probability, there would be one chance in 84, followed by 98 zeros, that all these predictions would occur in the case of a single individual, a probability so remote that only an omniscient and omnipotent God could accurately predict so many events and details and then bring them to pass. Allow me to paint you a picture of those 98 zeros. 

The state of Texas is far and wide, so, for example, one foot of silver dollars is laid out across the state, with one silver dollar marked with a red x. An individual has an opportunity to find that one red x-marked silver dollar. The way that individual can look is by flying across the state in a helicopter and landing, stepping out, bending down, and picking up that one red x-marked silver dollar. The chances of that individual doing that are one chance in 84, followed by 98 zeros. The reality of that happening is only possible if the individual seeking the marked silver dollar knows exactly where it is in advance. That would mean the individual planned for that to happen in advance. Something of that statistical magnitude could only come about through foreknowledge. And God, the maker of heaven and earth, is the one with that ability of being omniscient. I believe you understand the point. 

Here are a few of the literally fulfilled prophecies; that the Messiah would be born of a virgin (Isaiah 7:14), from the line of Abraham (Genesis 12:2-3), from the line of David (2 Samuel 7:12-16), in the city of Bethlehem (Micah 5:2), would be betrayed for 30 shekels of silver (Zechariah 11:12), be pierced for our sins (Zechariah 12:10) and crucified with criminals (Isaiah 53:12), and would be resurrected from the dead (Psalm 16:10). The convergence of these specific predictions across centuries of texts, each capable of independent verification, creates a cumulative case that transcends coincidence. When dozens of these prophecies converge in the lifetime of one man, it becomes nothing less than miraculous. 

 

After H.A.P.S. 

5) Textual Reliability 

Now we talk about transmission; did the words get preserved? Here is the simple answer: compared to other ancient works, the Bible is supported by an unusually large and early manuscript tradition, and that matters because it lets scholars compare copies and identify mistakes. But let me keep this in the lane you want: 

The Bible itself claims permanence and stability: 

  • “The entirety of Your word is truth” (Ps 119:160).
  • “The grass withers… but the word of our God stands forever” (Isa 40:8). 
  • Jesus said Scripture “cannot be broken” (John 10:35). 
  • And Jesus said not even the smallest stroke would pass until all is fulfilled (Matt 5:18). 

God is not confused about whether His Word will survive. He promises it will. 

 

6) Spiritual Reliability 

This is what people don’t want to hear, but it’s true: The deepest proof that the Bible is reliable is not just that it matches history, archaeology, or prophecy; it is that God uses it to expose us, correct us, and change us. Scripture says the Word of God is living and powerful, and it discerns what is really going on inside us (Heb 4:12). It says Scripture is “God-breathed” and equips us for every good work (2 Tim 3:16–17). And it says when we receive God’s Word as God’s Word, not man’s words, it works effectively in us who believe (1 Thess 2:13). That is exactly what happens when the gospel hits a person. Faith comes by hearing the Word of God (Rom 10:17). And then we begin to see what we never saw before, not because we became smarter, but because God opened our eyes. Even demons believe God exists (James 2:19), so mere belief isn’t the goal. The goal is knowing God through Jesus Christ (John 17:3). And Jesus makes the Father known (John 1:18; John 14:6–9). So when I ask, “Is the Bible reliable?” I also ask, “What does it do to a human heart?” 

·      It humbles proud people. 

·      It comforts broken people. 

·      It warns us. 

·      It calls us to repentance. 

·      It points us to Christ. 

·      It gives hope. 

·      It tells the truth about sin. 

·      And it tells the truth about God’s mercy. 

That is reliability you can live on. So, to summarize this in one sentence: The Bible is reliable because it is rooted in real history, confirmed in real places, fulfilled through Christ’s life and death, and proven true by the way God’s Word endures and transforms lives. God transformed my life through His Word; He can transform your life as well. 

Who Am I and Where is My True Identity?