You Are Not Who the World Told You
Day 10 — Unseen: Ephesians 1:3-8, 1 John 3:1
Introduction
Somewhere along the way, you absorbed a verdict about yourself.
Actually — not just one. A hundred of them. Maybe more.
They arrived at different times, from different directions, in different voices. The parent who was never quite satisfied. The teacher who made you feel invisible. The relationship that ended and took your confidence with it. The failure that confirmed what you’d always quietly feared. The way the social hierarchy sorted itself out in middle school — and you ended up on the wrong side of it. The careless word spoken by someone who probably forgot they said it the moment it left their mouth — but you never did.
Here’s what’s true about the human brain: it keeps score unevenly. The negative verdicts accumulate. They stack on top of each other, layer by layer, each one reinforcing the ones beneath it, building a case over years and decades until the weight of them feels like simply the truth about who you are. Meanwhile the good words — the affirmations, the moments when someone saw something real in you — slip through. They don’t stick the same way. They don’t build the same case.
So most of us are walking around with a lopsided ledger. A composite verdict assembled from every voice that ever spoke something diminishing over us — and we’ve been living inside it ever since, either spending our energy trying to prove it wrong or slowly, reluctantly accepting it as fact.
But Jesus has something to say about that verdict. And what He says changes everything.
The world didn’t make you. It doesn’t get to define you.
Scripture
Praise be to the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who has blessed us in the heavenly realms with every spiritual blessing in Christ. For he chose us in him before the creation of the world to be holy and blameless in his sight. In love he predestined us for adoption to sonship through Jesus Christ, in accordance with his pleasure and will — to the praise of his glorious grace, which he has freely given us in the One he loves. In him we have redemption through his blood, the forgiveness of sins, in accordance with the riches of God’s grace that he lavished on us.
— Ephesians 1:3-8 (NIV)
See what great love the Father has lavished on us, that we should be called children of God! And that is what we are!
— 1 John 3:1 (NIV)
Reflection
Before the World Had a Chance to Say Anything
Paul opens Ephesians 1 at a specific moment in time — and it’s not your birth. Not your first memory. Not the moment the verdict arrived.
It’s before the creation of the world.
Before you existed. Before anyone had a chance to form an opinion about you, assign you a role, hand you a label, or deliver a verdict — God chose you. Specifically. Intentionally. In love.
Let that land for a moment. The one who spoke the universe into existence, who holds all of it in His hand, who was and is and is to come — looked across the expanse of time before time existed and chose you. Not the performance version of you. Not the you that has it together. Not the you that has earned it. Just you. As you are. Before you were.
And He didn’t choose you to manage you from a distance. He chose you for adoption. To bring you into His family. To give you His name. To make you — not metaphorically, not poetically, but actually and legally — a child of God.
John can barely contain himself when he writes about it: See what great love the Father has lavished on us. That word again — lavished. Not measured. Not rationed. Not given carefully with conditions attached. Poured out. Extravagant. More than enough.
The Verdict That Overwrites All Others
Here is what Jesus reveals about your identity: it was established before the world began, secured by His blood, and it cannot be revoked by anything the world has said about you since.
Not by the parent who withheld approval. Not by the relationship that failed. Not by the mistake you can’t stop replaying. Not by the voice that got in early and has been whispering its verdict ever since.
Those voices had a beginning. They can have an end.
Because there is a verdict older than all of them. Spoken before the creation of the world, confirmed at the cross, sealed by the Spirit. And it says: chosen. Adopted. Forgiven. Loved. Mine.
This is not self-help language. This is not positive thinking. This is the Creator of the universe telling you who you actually are — based not on your performance or your history or the opinion of people who were never qualified to define you, but on His own love, His own choice, His own extravagant grace.
The world gave you a verdict. Jesus gives you an identity. And only one of them was spoken before the foundation of the world.
Grace Note
“But you are a chosen people, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, God’s special possession, that you may declare the praises of him who called you out of darkness into his wonderful light.” — 1 Peter 2:9 (NIV)
Chosen. Royal. Holy. His special possession. Called out of darkness into light. This is not who you are working toward — this is who you already are in Christ. The identity was given, not earned. Received, not achieved. And it was given by the only one whose verdict about you actually counts.
Prayer Prompt
Jesus, I’ve been living inside a verdict for a long time. I’m not sure I even fully know where it came from — it arrived so early and stayed so long that I started to think it was just the truth about me.
But You were there before any of those voices. You chose me before the world began. You looked across all of time and said — that one. In love.
I want to believe that. I want it to be more real to me than the verdict I’ve been carrying. But I’ll be honest — it’s going to take more than one devotional to undo what years of the other story have done.
So I’m asking You to start. Begin the work of replacing the verdict with the truth. Show me who I actually am — not through the eyes of the world, but through Yours.
Amen.
Response
1. Name the Verdict: Write down the core message you’ve received about yourself from the world — the one that has shaped how you see yourself most deeply. Where did it come from? Who delivered it? Name it clearly. You can’t replace what you haven’t identified.
2. Read the Identity List: Look up and slowly read the following verses — each one is a statement of who you are in Christ: John 1:12, Romans 8:1, Romans 8:17, 2 Corinthians 5:17, Ephesians 2:10, Ephesians 3:12. Read them as statements of fact, not aspiration. This is already who you are.
3. Let the Older Voice Speak: Take the verdict you wrote down in Response 1. Cross it out. Then write over it — in the largest letters that fit on the page — the word chosen. Not because the feeling has changed yet. Because the fact has.
To read all the posts in this devotional series, visit: https://www.thisistheway.live/t/unseen
© Steve Peschke / This Is The Way



Thank you for this, Steve.