4 min read

Connected to Christ — Always!

Why Jesus died so we'd never be cut off from Him…
Connected to Christ — Always!

The truth we must not let slip

There's a truth at the very heart of the gospel that we must never let slip. Jesus Christ didn't go to the cross simply to forgive us once and leave us to fend for ourselves. He died so that every believer could be joined to Him — connected to Him — at all times. Not on Sundays only. Not when we feel spiritual. Not when life is calm. At all times.

That word connected is not a religious add-on. It is the whole point.

He died to bring us in, not just bail us out

The cross was not a rescue boat that drops you back on shore and sails away. The cross was the bridge that joined us to the living God. Paul puts it plain:

"For ye are dead, and your life is hid with Christ in God." [Colossians 3:3 KJV]

Did you catch that? Your life — the life you live now — is hid with Christ. Not near Him. Not following Him at a distance. Hid in Him. That is connection. That is the position every born-again believer has been brought into the moment they trusted Christ.

Jesus said it Himself before the cross:

"I am the vine, ye are the branches: He that abideth in me, and I in him, the same bringeth forth much fruit: for without me ye can do nothing." [John 15:5 KJV]

A branch that snaps off the vine doesn't struggle on for a few days — it dies. Christ did not die so we could live disconnected, occasional, part-time Christian lives. He died so we would be permanently joined to the Vine.

Connection isn't a feeling — it's a fact

Here's where many believers get tripped up. They think their connection to Christ rises and falls with their mood, their performance, or their last quiet time. It doesn't. The cross settled the connection once and for all.

"For by one offering he hath perfected for ever them that are sanctified." [Hebrews 10:14 KJV]

For ever. That's not a sliding scale. That's the finished work of Christ. Your feelings can move all over the place this week — the connection He bought with His blood does not.

But — and this matters — if the connection is a fact, the walking out of that connection is our daily responsibility.

The connection is given; the abiding is ours to do

Jesus told His disciples:

"Abide in me, and I in you." [John 15:4 KJV]

He doesn't say, "try to get connected." He says abide — stay where you have been placed. Live there. Move there. Decide there.

That is what walking with Christ looks like in plain practice:

  • Opening the Bible because the One you are joined to speaks through His Word.
  • Praying because the Father you are connected to is listening through His Son.
  • Obeying because "if ye love me, keep my commandments" [John 14:15 KJV] is not a slogan — it is the natural fruit of a connected life.

Disconnection is a feeling we get when we stop abiding. The connection itself never breaks for the born-again child of God — but our awareness of it does. And when our awareness fades, our walk weakens.

Why this matters today

Look around. We live in a world built to disconnect you. Disconnect you from God's Word. Disconnect you from prayer. Disconnect you from the local body of Christ. Disconnect you from the still, small voice of the Holy Spirit by drowning you in noise.

The enemy doesn't have to make you lose your salvation to make you ineffective — he just has to make you forget you are connected.

That's why Paul writes:

"Set your affection on things above, not on things on the earth." [Colossians 3:2 KJV]

Setting your affection is a deliberate, daily, practical act. It is choosing to live aware of Christ — aware that He is in you and you are in Him — at all times, not just at the Communion table.

What a connected Christian actually looks like

Plain, practical, powerful — that's what we are after. A connected believer:

  • Carries Christ into the kitchen, the office, the school run, and the supermarket queue.
  • Talks to the Father throughout the day, not only at bedtime.
  • Treats Scripture as the voice of the One they are joined to, not as a religious duty.
  • Faces trouble without panic, because the One they are connected to has overcome the world — "In the world ye shall have tribulation: but be of good cheer; I have overcome the world." [John 16:33 KJV]
  • Refuses to live in the rhythm of disconnection that the world is selling.

This is not super-spirituality. This is normal Christianity. Jesus died for this.

The doing part

Here is the step of obedience. Today — not next week — answer one question honestly:

Where am I living disconnected, even though Christ has connected me?

Then bring it to Him. Open the Word on it. Pray over it. Take the next plain step. Because "be ye doers of the word, and not hearers only, deceiving your own selves." [James 1:22 KJV]

The cross secured your connection. Your job is to live like a connected believer. Every hour. Every conversation. Every decision.

Christ didn't die to give you a relationship you visit. He died to give you a relationship you live in — at all times.

Walk worthy of that. "That ye might walk worthy of the Lord unto all pleasing, being fruitful in every good work, and increasing in the knowledge of God." [Colossians 1:10 KJV]


Key Takeaways:

  • Christ died to join us to Himself — not merely to forgive and walk away — [Colossians 3:3 KJV]
  • Apart from Him we can do nothing — [John 15:5 KJV]
  • The connection He bought is settled and permanent — [Hebrews 10:14 KJV]
  • Abiding is our daily responsibility — [John 15:4 KJV]
  • A connected life shows up in obedience — [James 1:22 KJV]
  • Walk worthy of the One you are joined to — [Colossians 1:10 KJV]