Not You Who Lives — He Lives in You
“It is no longer I who live, but Christ who lives in me.” Not just Paul’s words — an invitation to everyone: to feel how life joins something greater than the separate self.
OnenessPresenceLight
Epistle
“It is no longer I who live, but Christ who lives in me.” Not just Paul’s words — an invitation to everyone: to feel how life joins something greater than the separate self.
OnenessPresenceLight
Paul wrote: “It is no longer I who live, but Christ who lives in me.” These words often remain a beautiful quotation. But they point to a lived experience.
The moment when you feel your life joining something larger than the separate self. When personal will stops being the center and something else begins — quieter, more steady, more real.
Jesus prayed: “You in Me and I in You.” And added: “Let them also be one.” Not a wish for the future. A description of a reality most haven’t yet noticed.
You are not a vessel God occasionally visits. You are the place He lives. Constantly. Without interruption.
When you grow weary of being “yourself” — the role, the effort, the management — and let yourself simply be, that is when what Paul called “Christ in me” begins to become palpable.
This is not a religious formula. This is coming home.