"We shouldn't need to talk about race. Race is a man-made concept to keep us divided and our identity is in Jesus!"
I've heard this line so many times throughout my life and spent many years accepting it as truth. Granted, for the first 18 years of my life, I rarely perceived the effects of racial division around me- and not because they weren't present. But I didn't know anyone who would be okay with Jim Crow laws or racial hate crimes, so it didn't seem pertinent to keep discussing race or any other forms of "identity"- in fact, it felt borderline idolatrous to talk about other forms of identity because, as a Christian, my identity was supposed to be in Jesus.
But what does it mean to have "Identity in Jesus?" Is Jesus some sort of "generic model" sans any other form of identity?
In Jesus' time on earth, He pointed people to His Father in Heaven. He demonstrated a level of compassion and integrity that His followers should strive for. He lived a sinless life and became the sacrifice for the sins of humanity, making a way for us to be reconciled onto God, and He defeated death when He rose from the grave. He proclaimed Himself to be the Son of God (Luke 22:70) and the only way to God the Father (John 14:6). His identity above all else- His purpose- was to bring glory to His Father and to reconcile humanity with God (while He was fully God Himself- but I don't know how far into seminary I'll have to get to be able to explain the Trinity!).
But, Jesus' primary identity didn't erase His earthly identities. He was male. He was Jewish, both in faith and heritage, living under Roman rule. He was a refugee early in His life, and He was likely from a lower socioeconomic background. He was a tradesman.
God could have come to Earth in any form He chose, and He chose the form of a human. In Evangelical Christianity, we are quick to celebrate that God became one of us and walked among us, but we can forget that He embraced earthly forms of identity. Nothing could take the place of His primary identity or purpose, but the earthly forms of identity were still there and were still a part of His ministry.
"Okay, but He was in human form. He also got sick, tired, injured- things that only happen because we are in a fallen world. None of those things will matter in Heaven, right?"
'Salvation belongs to our God,
who sits on the throne,
and to the Lamb.'”