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Found 4 results for "conformation"

wintan @wintan · 22 days ago
Faith Journey ★ Featured Thread
Formation into Creation
The call of man has never changed. From the beginning, God’s intention has been conformity to His own image, the expression of the Eternal in a created vessel. This is not a secondary theme in scripture, it is the central thread that runs from Genesis to Revelation. “Let us make man in our image, after our likeness” establishes both the origin and the destiny of man. What God conceived in His heart, no corruption in time has been able to erase.
Though the fall introduced distortion, it did not cancel divine intention. The adversary altered formation, but he could not touch the original creation as it existed in God’s heart. This is why redemption is not merely about forgiveness, it is about restoration to divine purpose. As Jesus Christ declared and demonstrated, the goal is the bringing forth of a new creation. “If any man be in Christ, he is a new creature” (2 Corinthians 5:17). This is not improvement of the old, but the unveiling of what God had always intended.
The apostolic emphasis aligns with this. In Romans 8:29, we see that those whom He foreknew, He predestined to be conformed to the image of His Son. Conformity is not optional, it is the very definition of salvation’s outcome. Colossians deepens this mystery, speaking of “Christ in you, the hope of glory” and unveiling “the mystery of God, and of the Father, and of Christ” (Colossians 1:27, 2:2). This is the curriculum of heaven, God forming Himself within man.
Drawing from the spiritual weight often seen in the teachings of Watchman Nee and T. Austin-Sparks, we understand that God’s work is inward before it is outward. The cross is not only an event to be believed, it is an operation that dismantles the old formation so that the life of Christ may find full expression. The Spirit labors not just for activity, but for formation.
This perspective also resonates with the apostolic burden carried by ministers of the new testament, where emphasis is laid on spiritual growth as a structured journey. There are layers to this formation, dealings, teachings, seasons, and divine arrangements all aimed at producing Christ within. It is not accidental growth, it is intentional formation.
In contrast, the present world system is rapidly producing what scripture calls “vessels of wrath” and a generation aligned with perdition. Formation is happening on both sides. Darkness is discipling its own, accelerating corruption, shaping desires, and normalizing rebellion. This urgency makes the call of God even more critical. The church must not merely gather, it must form. It must become a spiritual institution where men are trained, broken, instructed, and built into the image of Christ.
The agency of this transformation is grace. “The grace of God that brings salvation has appeared to all men, teaching us…” (Titus 2:11-12). Grace is not passive, it instructs, disciplines, and empowers alignment with God. Yielding to grace is yielding to divine formation. It teaches us to deny ungodliness and to live in a way that reflects the nature of God.
Therefore, the call remains clear. In a time where false formations are multiplying, believers must uphold the banner of divine purpose. This requires intentional yielding, a willingness to be taught, corrected, and shaped by God. It requires embracing the full scope of God’s curriculum, from revelation to discipline, from doctrine to experience.
God is still after His image in man. What He conceived before time is what He is bringing to pass now. The question is whether we will submit to His process. For in the end, it is not activity that will stand, but formation. Not appearance, but conformity. Not mere belief, but the full expression of Christ in us.
Formation into Creation
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THE_Living @THE_Living · 3 days ago
Can we just stop trying to be a better version of ourselves and focus on becoming like the son of God 🤔🤔🤔.

Because the better version of ourselves is till flesh. Our predestination is to conformed to the image of the son. This should be our goal, Our purpose and Our Life.

"For whom he did foreknow, he also did predestinate to be conformed to the image of his Son, that he might be the firstborn among many brethren."
— Romans 8:29 (King James Version)
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wintan @wintan · 19 days ago
Flesh is not always appearing dirty based on the kind of personality or shape a soul has it can conform just to blend in but with the constant intent of spotting your garment or leavening your bread to make your service(life) unacceptable before the lord. You can really love to give to a point where you lose the weight of the service of giving but you now secretly permit flesh to create a cubicle of pleasure from it, you enjoy the thank you's  and the honour and preferences it brings to you stealing the aroma it is supposed to send to God,though you have given but you have stolen back the real content of what you gave(Mathew 6:1) ... We must learn to give substances and not take the praise and pleasure of what we have given,rather we should give as though Jesus sent us,you don't take glory (Corinthians 10:31)for being an errand boy,you return it back to your master(Galatians 5:13). Flesh is a thief and flesh can hide in our spiritual activities.
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Oluwatise_1 @Oluwatise_1 · 17 days ago
Thread
Christ is a spirit being that does not function solely based on personality/sexuality. 
Christ had certain nature's that have to override our manly natures.

In conforming to Christ, our personalities and sexualities have to be subject under the spirit.(Romans 12:2)
It does not mean these things are not there, were humans, our frame is still frail, but, they shouldn't be what we run by. 

That's why there are  commandments in church. 
If there's no need for certain nature's to change, there's no need for instructions and commandments. Many times, when commandments look difficult, it's because it's touching a nature that doesn't want to break.

True, Jesus Christ had sexuality and personality, but in his building, he didn't let them outweigh the spirit. While Christ had personality and sexuality, we are meant to prioritize our spiritual nature. This doesn't negate our humanity, but we should strive to let the spirit guide us above all else.

Same way we must not let this define us neither must we live by it (1 Corinthians 2:16)
That's why he was neither introvert nor extrovert. He was Christ and the Son of God.
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