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Being adopted into God's family demands a transformed life, not merely a corrected theology or occasional good intentions. Drawing on Romans 6, the preacher argues that union with Christ is more than theological truth: it is a decisive identity shift rooted in death with Christ and resurrection life. That union breaks sin’s rule—sin is dethroned, formerly ruling like a tyrant, and Christians are called to live as children of the new King. Baptism symbolizes this funeral and wedding: a public declaration that the old self is dead and the new life has begun among a people committed to help one another live it out. Two wrong reactions are exposed. Some treat grace as a license, minimizing sin until it grows and destroys; others burden themselves with the illusion that change depends only on personal will, clinging to grave clothes of shame instead of letting Christ strip them away. The remedy lies in understanding what has happened in the believer’s heart: a radical transfer from the domain of death to the domain of life, which must reshape identity, desires, and actions. Practical help follows. The text urges believers to “consider themselves dead to sin and alive to God,” insisting that how one thinks about oneself determines spiritual fruit. Identity shapes behavior; behaving like a child of God produces affection for kingdom things and weakens appetite for old sins. Three common obstacles—deceitful hearts, persistent temptations, and delayed repentance—are named so they can be fought in community with confession and accountability. The final appeal is pastoral and urgent: remember adoption. Recalling what Christ accomplished produces confidence to confess, courage to serve, and willingness to place one’s “yes” on the table for God’s work in others, especially in mission to vulnerable children. The call is twofold: for believers, live the new identity with joined hands; for those not yet united to Christ, respond to the cross and enter the family where helplessness meets inexpressible joy. KEY TAKEAWAYS 1. Grace evicts, not excuses sin Grace is not a theological loophole to accommodate favorite sins; it is the power that expels sin’s foothold. Treating grace as permission to linger with sin misunderstands the gospel’s effect—Christ’s death was an eviction of sin’s lordship, not its tolerated guest status. When grace is grasped as removal rather than merely pardon, the believer pursues holiness out of gratitude rather than obligation. [08:33] 2. Adoption changes identity and life Union with Christ is a decisive identity change that reorders every other identity a person holds. Baptism proclaims the old self crucified and the new self alive; this is not symbolic therapy but a real transfer of allegiance. Living in that new identity eases obedience because actions flow from who one now is, not merely from rules one tries to follow. [11:46] 3. Remember adoption to energize obedience The root of persistent spiritual drift is forgetfulness about what God did at the cross. Remembering adoption supplies both humility—acknowledging helplessness—and joy—the assurance of belonging—so obedience becomes a grateful response, not a burdensome duty. Regularly recalling the adoption story reorients motives and strengthens resolve to act like a child of the Father. [33:39] 4. Confession and community are guardrails Honest confession and faithful community are the pragmatic means God gives to prevent relapse into the old kingdom. Delayed repentance allows old patterns to re-establish dominion; immediate confession breaks that momentum and restores gospel realities. Community provides accountability, mutual encouragement, and a context where identity as heirs is reinforced through shared witness and service. [22:05] CHAPTERS [00:00] - Welcome [02:51] - Adopted into God's family [04:56] - Romans 6: structure and aim [07:20] - Sin’s danger: the baby tiger [09:45] - Abuse vs refusal of grace [11:46] - Baptism: death and resurrection [15:23] - Sin dethroned; new lordship [23:07] - Consider yourself dead and alive [28:55] - Identity producing action [33:39] - Remember adoption to obey 📖 Key Scripture: Romans 6:1-14 📢 Speaker: Daniel Thompson Welcome to the Mercy Hill Church YouTube channel. Here you will find our latest messages and content. Subscribe to the latest messages: http://bit.ly/2yV95Cv Follow us on Facebook: facebook.com/mercyhillnc Follow us on Instagram: instagram.com/mercyhillnc