✨ Who Do You Think You Are? — Rediscovering Identity Through Christ
In a world obsessed with self-definition, personal branding, and chasing validation, the question “Who do you think you are?” can feel like a challenge, a rebuke, or even a crisis. But what if it’s actually an invitation? Not to look inward for answers, but upward.
🙏 Identity Isn’t Self-Made—It’s God-Given
We live in a culture that tells us to “find ourselves,” “be true to ourselves,” and “define our own truth.” But Scripture paints a radically different picture: You didn’t make you. Just like a car can’t fix itself or understand its own design, we too need the One who created us to reveal who we truly are.
“Before I formed you in the womb I knew you…” — Jeremiah 1:5
God is the only one who fully understands the blueprint of your soul. He knows your purpose, your potential, and your pain. When we try to define ourselves apart from Him, we step away from the very identity He lovingly crafted.
💡 When You Know Who You Are, You Know What to Do
Clarity of identity leads to clarity of action. When you know you are a child of God, you begin to live like one. You walk in grace, truth, and purpose—not confusion, compromise, or fear. But when we act contrary to God’s Word, we’re not just making bad choices—we’re distancing ourselves from who we were created to be.
🛑 The World Doesn’t Get to Name You
The world will try to label you: not enough, too broken, too late, too much. But those labels don’t stick when you know the name God has given you: Chosen. Loved. Redeemed. His.
Even your own voice doesn’t get the final say. Your insecurities, your past, your doubts—they don’t define you. Jesus does. And He calls you worthy.
🔍 Weekly Reflections: Confronting Insecurity with Truth
This journey isn’t a one-time revelation—it’s a weekly renewal. Each week, we’ll confront a different lie the world tells us:
- “I’m not enough.”
- “I’m too broken.”
- “I don’t matter.”
- “God can’t use me.”
And we’ll replace each one with the truth of who God says you are.
💬 Final Thought
So, who do you think you are?
Better yet—who does Jesus say you are?
Let that answer shape everything.