Who I Am in Christ is a foundational discipleship teaching that helps believers understand their new identity through salvation in Jesus Christ. Many Christians struggle with insecurity, condemnation, and spiritual instability-not because they lack sincerity, but because they have never been taught who they are according to Scripture. This book addresses that gap by grounding identity in what God has declared, not in feelings, past experiences, or performance.
Rooted in New Testament truth, this teaching explains what it means to be born again, justified, accepted, and positioned in Christ. Identity is presented not as positive affirmation, but as spiritual reality established through Christ's finished work. Written in plain language and structured for teaching, Who I Am in Christ is ideal for: Foundations and discipleship classes New believer instruction Small groups and ministry training This book equips believers to stand confidently in their God-given identity, reject condemnation, and live from who they are in Christ rather than striving to earn acceptance.
Who I Am in Christ is a foundational discipleship teaching that helps believers understand their new identity through salvation in Jesus Christ. Many Christians struggle with insecurity, condemnation, and spiritual instability-not because they lack sincerity, but because they have never been taught who they are according to Scripture. This book addresses that gap by grounding identity in what God has declared, not in feelings, past experiences, or performance.
Rooted in New Testament truth, this teaching explains what it means to be born again, justified, accepted, and positioned in Christ. Identity is presented not as positive affirmation, but as spiritual reality established through Christ's finished work. Written in plain language and structured for teaching, Who I Am in Christ is ideal for: Foundations and discipleship classes New believer instruction Small groups and ministry training This book equips believers to stand confidently in their God-given identity, reject condemnation, and live from who they are in Christ rather than striving to earn acceptance.