WHAT AM I BECOMING?
With everything that we are doing, let's pause for a moment and ask ourselves this question: WHAT AM I BECOMING?
The greatest question a believer can ask is not merely, “Am I successful?” or “Am I progressing?” but, “Am I becoming like Jesus, or someone else?” Because every day, consciously or unconsciously, we are being shaped into the image of whatever we constantly behold, follow, admire, and obey.
Becoming like Jesus is more than carrying the title of “Christian.” It is the gradual transformation of the heart, mind, character, and conduct. It is learning to love the way He loved, forgive the way He forgave, serve with humility, speak with grace, walk in truth, and remain obedient to God even when it is difficult. Christlikeness is not perfection overnight; it is daily surrender and continual growth.
The danger is that many people can know about Jesus without actually becoming like Him. A person may attend church regularly yet become more prideful than humble. They may speak spiritual language yet lack compassion. They may appear religious outwardly while inwardly becoming cold, angry, impatient, selfish, or consumed by worldly validation. This is why self-examination is necessary.
Every influence in our lives is shaping us into someone. Social media shapes desires. Culture shapes values. Pain shapes reactions. Friendships shape behavior. Ambition shapes priorities. If we are not intentional, we can slowly become reflections of the world around us rather than reflections of Christ. Some people become like their fears. Some become like their idols. Some become like the wounds they never healed from. Others become versions of themselves built entirely around approval, ego, or survival.
But Jesus calls us to something higher. He calls us not merely to imitate His actions outwardly, but to allow Him to transform us inwardly. The evidence of becoming like Christ is seen in the fruit we produce: love instead of hatred, peace instead of chaos, patience instead of anger, humility instead of pride, purity instead of compromise, and faithfulness instead of inconsistency.
This question also forces honesty. When people encounter us, do they experience kindness, truth, mercy, and integrity? Do our private lives reflect the same values we display publicly? Are we growing in character, or only in appearance? Are we becoming softer toward God or more distant from Him?
To become like Jesus requires intentional communion with Him. We become like what we consistently spend time with. Prayer changes us. Scripture renews us. Obedience refines us. Trials mature us. The Holy Spirit transforms us. God’s goal is not only to bless us externally, but to shape us internally into the likeness of His Son.
So the question remains deeply personal:
In my thoughts, habits, relationships, ambitions, speech, and lifestyle — am I becoming more like Jesus, or am I slowly becoming someone else?