Skip to main content

New Creation

Evangelist, when souls respond to Christ, transformation begins immediately. 2 Corinthians 5:17 says, “Therefore, if anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation. The old has passed away; behold, the new has come.” Your calling is to help believers understand and live out their new identity, walking in the fullness of freedom, purpose, and the Spirit’s guidance. Every message you deliver should remind them that salvation brings profound change.

New life in Christ affects every area of existence: thoughts, actions, relationships, and destiny are all redefined. As an evangelist, you must emphasize that salvation is not only a spiritual reality but a daily, practical transformation. People need encouragement to live in obedience, pursue holiness, and embrace God’s purpose for their lives. Your preaching ensures that their faith is both experiential and visible in daily living.

You are also called to remind new believers that their past no longer defines them. Through Christ, they are God’s children, chosen and beloved. This truth strengthens faith, builds confidence, and fosters alignment with God’s plan. Evangelists are uniquely positioned to nurture this understanding, ensuring that new converts embrace their identity fully and live as new creations.

Reflect: how will you guide new believers to consistently live out their new identity in Christ? Understanding and embracing this truth ensures that your ministry bears lasting fruit, transforming lives and fulfilling the eternal mandate God has given you.

Assessment Questions:

1. How can you guide a new believer to live out their identity in Christ?


2. Why is understanding one’s new identity important for growth and purpose?

Prince Victor Matthew 

Hope Expression Values You 

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Evangelist and the Calling to Reveal Christ

As an evangelist, you are not sent to win arguments but to win hearts. Every time you slip into defending yourself or debating endlessly, something essential is lost. People begin to see your strength instead of Christ’s mercy, your knowledge instead of His grace. The gospel is not a battlefield for intellectual war. It is a doorway that leads broken men and women into the love of Jesus. When you speak, let your words carry the fragrance of the One who rescued you. The calling of an evangelist is simple and pure. Use the scriptures as a lamp that guides people to Jesus, not as a weapon to intimidate or silence them. When someone challenges you, remember that the aim is not to prove a point but to reveal a Person. Arguments can win minds, but only Christ can win souls. Let the word you preach lift their eyes to Him. Let your conversations create a hunger to know Him personally. There will always be people who want to drag you into controversies. Some will ask questions not because they ...

A Call for Evangelical Ministers to Return to the Secret Place

There is a subtle danger that confronts many evangelical ministers, and it often begins quietly. The work of God becomes so demanding that time with God becomes secondary. Sermons are prepared, meetings are attended, people are counseled, yet the heart slowly drifts from deep fellowship with the Father. Ministry activity increases, but spiritual intimacy decreases. What should be an overflow begins to feel like pressure. Jesus reminds us in Luke 5:16 that He often withdrew into the wilderness to pray. If the Son of God needed consistent retreat into the secret place, then every evangelical minister must recognize this as a non-negotiable foundation. The truth is that public ministry was never designed to replace private devotion. In Matthew 6:6, Jesus teaches that what is done in secret with the Father is what produces open reward. When this is neglected, the voice of God becomes faint, direction becomes unclear, and strength becomes limited to human capacity. The oil that sustains min...

Invite to Relationship, Not Religion

Dear evangelist, you are not calling people into religion but into relationship. Religion demands performance, but relationship invites intimacy. The gospel is not about rituals but about reconciliation—God restoring His connection with humanity through Christ. When you preach, make it clear that Christianity is not a list of rules but a love story written in blood. Your mission is to help people meet a Person, not a system. The world is tired of empty religion; it longs for genuine encounter. Speak of Jesus not as a distant Savior but as a present Friend who forgives, heals, and walks with His own. Evangelism must lead people into fellowship, not formality. As you minister, let your life reflect that relationship. People listen more to your walk than your words. Let your compassion, patience, and humility reveal the Christ you preach. You are a bridge between the broken and the Father’s embrace—cross that bridge often and invite others to follow. When people experience relationship wi...