Worthy Brief - June 12, 2026

 Worthy Brief - June 12, 2026


Understand that you are a new creation!


2 Corinthians 5:17  Therefore, if anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation. The old has passed away; behold, the new has come. 


1 Corinthians 15:47-49  The first man was from the earth, a man of dust; the second man is from heaven.  48  As was the man of dust, so also are those who are of the dust, and as is the man of heaven, so also are those who are of heaven.  49  Just as we have borne the image of the man of dust, we shall also bear the image of the man of heaven. 


When Paul summarizes what happens to the person who believes in Yeshua (Jesus), he reaches for a breathtaking phrase: “new creation.” He could have simply said “saved,” and that would have been true. But Paul chooses language that is far more expansive. He is not describing a better version of the old life, a repaired heart, or a revised story. He is announcing the arrival of an entirely new order of existence breaking into the present world.


The Greek phrase is "kaine ktisis" (2 Corinthians 5:17). Kaine does not merely mean new in the sense of recent; it means new in kind, something qualitatively different from what existed before. Ktisis refers to creation itself - the created order, the cosmos spoken into existence by God. Together, these words proclaim far more than personal transformation. They declare that the new creation has already begun, and everyone who is in Messiah is part of it.


This would have resonated deeply within the Hebraic worldview. The rabbis often spoke of ha-olam hazeh, “this present age,” and ha-olam ha-ba, “the age to come.” Between them stood the hope of resurrection, restoration, and the full unveiling of God’s Kingdom. But through the resurrection of Yeshua, Paul declares something astonishing: the age to come has already broken into the present. The believer is not merely waiting for the new creation -- he is already living from it while the old creation still groans around him.


This is the heart of the Kingdom message. Yeshua did not come merely to rescue people from a fallen world and carry them safely to heaven. Paul calls Him “the second man … from heaven” [1 Corinthians 15:47], the beginning of a new humanity and the firstfruits of the coming Kingdom breaking into the present age. Just as we once bore the image of the man of dust, Adam, we are now being conformed to the image of the Man of heaven. His resurrection was not simply His victory over death -- it was the first dawn of a new creation, the unveiling of a new order of life. And everyone united with Him by faith and sealed by the Ruach HaKodesh (Holy Spirit) already belongs to that heavenly reality, living today as a citizen of the Kingdom that is coming in fullness.


Hopefully, when you understand this it will change how you live. You do not strive to become a new creation -- you live from the reality God has already declared. Paul says "the old things have passed away" -- completed, final, irreversible. The old order no longer defines you because you no longer bear merely the image of the man of dust. You have been united to the Man from heaven and are being conformed to His image. Your identity is no longer sourced from your failures, your history, your fears, or even your natural abilities -- it is sourced entirely from the resurrection life of the King. The Kingdom is not God improving the old humanity. It is God introducing a wholly new humanity in Messiah, and inviting you to live from that heavenly reality today.


Do not allow yourself to be defined by the person you once were or by the struggles that still surround you. In Yeshua, you are kaine ktisis -- a new creation -- and the very life of the coming Kingdom is alive within you today. The same Spirit who raised Yeshua from the dead now dwells in you, not to polish the old life but to reveal the new one. So stop measuring yourself by the standards of a world that is passing away and begin walking in the reality that the Kingdom has already broken through. The old no longer has the final word over your identity, your future, or your purpose. Every step you take in faith is a declaration that the Kingdom is here, that resurrection life is real, and that the new creation is already unfolding through you until the day it fills the whole earth.


Shabbat Shalom -- enjoy resting in His presence this weekend -- we'll see you first thing on Monday!


Your family in the Lord with much agape love,


George & Baht Rivka (Maryland)

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Charles Spurgeon's "Faith's Checkbook" Devotional for January 1

Wayside Chapel Daily Devotional 1st January 2026