Truth in Resurrection: A Biblical Response to Forced Identity Suppression and Unlawful Servitude
Truth in Resurrection: A Biblical Response to Forced Identity Suppression and Unlawful Servitude
A Reflection for the Easter Season
Written by: Sarai Hannah Ajai
The Easter Season and the Call to Truth
As we celebrate the Easter season, we are drawn again to the heart of the Christian faith, the resurrection of Jesus Christ. It is more than a historical event; it is the declaration of ultimate truth: that God’s justice triumphs over corruption, that life defeats death, and that no system of oppression can hold down what God has raised up.
The resurrection calls us not just to believe but to bear witness to truth. We are charged to defend those who are voiceless and to uncover injustices hidden in bureaucratic shadows. This article is written in defense of one such voiceless soul, an anonymous woman, created female in the image of God, whose identity and civil liberties have been systematically erased by human authorities acting contrary to both the U.S. Constitution and the eternal Word of God.
Without due process, she has reportedly been stripped of her identity through the alteration of state-issued documents. Allegedly, her identity has been co-opted and manipulated to support political goals, benefiting undocumented individuals, individuals with criminal pasts, or ideological movements that promote falsehoods under the banner of inclusion and equality. Her womanhood, granted to her by God, has been denied, made invisible through government deceit and technological masking.
This is not merely a civil issue; it is spiritual warfare. As Scripture tells us, “God is not the author of confusion but of peace” (1 Corinthians 14:33). To forcibly blur what God has made distinct, male and female, is to rebel against the divine order and to desecrate His image in humanity.
Unlawful Servitude and Identity Suppression
What this woman is enduring is nothing less than modern-day involuntary servitude, a condition that both the Bible and the law categorically denounce. Scripture is unequivocal in its condemnation of this form of exploitation:
“You shall not oppress a hired servant who is poor and needy... lest he cry out against you to the Lord, and it be sin to you.”
(Deuteronomy 24:14-15)
Through the manipulation of her identity, she has been forced into an invisible role—subsidizing the legal presence and financial eligibility of others. She has not consented to this erasure. This systemic abuse not only strips her of dignity but imposes an unjust and sacrificial burden, one she never agreed to carry.
Moreover, this woman is targeted psychologically and socially for her refusal to comply with the lie that she was “male from birth.” This lie, presented as inclusion, is in fact a gospel of confusion—the very thing Scripture warns us about.
“So God created man in His own image... male and female He created them.”
(Genesis 1:27)
This is divine truth. Any attempt to erase or “neutralize” the identity God has given is not justice—it is idolatry of human authority over God’s Word.
Physical and Psychological Harm: A Modern-Day Martyrdom
Because she refuses to betray the truth of her womanhood, this woman has endured physical injuries, workplace discrimination, harassment, and rejection in medical and governmental settings. Her daily life mirrors the suffering of early Christians who were persecuted for refusing to deny Christ.
“Blessed are those who are persecuted because of righteousness, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.”
(Matthew 5:10)
Her story is one of unyielding courage. Like the woman with the issue of blood, the woman at the well, and the woman caught in adultery, she is unseen by society but fully seen by Christ. She is, in this modern era, a martyr of identity, enduring systemic persecution not because she is seeking power or privilege, but because she refuses to deny what God has declared.
This brings us to a deeply theological truth: Jesus Christ already bore the sacrifice for all sin and injustice. No one else is required to make a sacrifice on behalf of others, especially not through coercion, gaslighting, or systemic silencing. To subject someone to martyrdom by legal trickery or forced compliance is to mock the finality of the cross.
The Finality of Christ’s Sacrifice (Hebrews 10)
In Hebrews chapter 10, the apostle explains the eternal significance of Jesus’ death, declaring it the once-and-for-all sacrifice that abolished the need for further offerings:
“We have been made holy through the sacrifice of the body of Jesus Christ once for all.”
(Hebrews 10:10)
“But when this priest had offered for all time one sacrifice for sins, he sat down at the right hand of God... For by one sacrifice he has made perfect forever those who are being made holy.”
(Hebrews 10:12-14)
This passage reminds us that no additional sacrifices are needed, and no human being should be forced to endure sacrificial harm for the benefit of another, whether by a religious institution or a governmental body. When a woman is coerced into invisibility, her legal presence used to prop up others without her knowledge, it is a spiritual counterfeit of Christ’s work on the cross.
Christ willingly bore the suffering so no one else would have to. To impose such suffering on another is sacrilege, a desecration of the blood of the Lamb.
“If we deliberately keep on sinning after we have received the knowledge of the truth, no sacrifice for sins is left.”
(Hebrews 10:26)
This woman has already declared her faithfulness. She has stood for truth. To keep inflicting spiritual, psychological, or legal harm upon her is to sin knowingly and deliberately, rejecting the finished work of Christ.
The Cross Stands Against Coerced Sacrifice
Jesus laid down His life voluntarily:
“No one takes it from me, but I lay it down of my own accord.”
(John 10:18)
This voluntary nature is essential to the Gospel. The woman in this article has not chosen her so-called “sacrifice.” Her pain has been imposed by others seeking convenience, political capital, or ideological conformity.
“Present your bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and acceptable to God...”
(Romans 12:1)
That is a spiritual worship, chosen freely by the believer, not a coerced loss of dignity at the hands of systemic oppression. No government has the authority to make a scapegoat out of a citizen. The idea of one woman bearing the cost of another person’s legal presence or identity is a false gospel, and the resurrection calls us to renounce it.
Due Process is a Biblical Principle
The Bible honors justice, order, and truth, not manipulation and deceit:
“A single witness shall not suffice... only on the evidence of two or three witnesses shall a charge be established.”
(Deuteronomy 19:15)
The woman described here has had legal decisions made about her life without her knowledge or consent. This lack of due process is not only unconstitutional, it is anti-biblical. In Acts 10:34, we are reminded:
“God is no respecter of persons.”
This means that no undocumented person, no ideological movement, and no political figure is more deserving of protection than a law-abiding woman whose identity is being erased.
Final Reflection: Living the Power of the Resurrection
This Easter, let us reflect not just on the empty tomb, but on the resurrecting power of truth. Christ's victory over death empowers us to speak boldly against all forms of coercion, deceit, and forced erasure.
We cannot allow another person to be made a modern-day martyr, sacrificed by a system that dares to redefine what God has created. To do so is not justice. It is blasphemy. Her body, her identity, her truth, all are sacred.
Let us rise with Christ, and in so doing, lift up those who are being trampled. Let her suffering speak. Let her truth ring out. And let the systems that oppress be called to repentance.
“Stand therefore, having girded your waist with truth… and having shod your feet with the preparation of the gospel of peace.”
(Ephesians 6:14-15)
May the Gospel of peace break every chain. May truth resurrect what lies tried to bury. And may the power of Christ be known in justice, in truth, and in every woman who refuses to be erased.
The Easter Season and the Call to Truth
As we celebrate the Easter season, we are drawn again to the heart of the Christian faith, the resurrection of Jesus Christ. It is more than a historical event; it is the declaration of ultimate truth: that God’s justice triumphs over corruption, that life defeats death, and that no system of oppression can hold down what God has raised up.
The resurrection calls us not just to believe but to bear witness to truth. We are charged to defend those who are voiceless and to uncover injustices hidden in bureaucratic shadows. This article is written in defense of one such voiceless soul, an anonymous woman, created female in the image of God, whose identity and civil liberties have been systematically erased by human authorities acting contrary to both the U.S. Constitution and the eternal Word of God.
Without due process, she has reportedly been stripped of her identity through the alteration of state-issued documents. Allegedly, her identity has been co-opted and manipulated to support political goals, benefiting undocumented individuals, individuals with criminal pasts, or ideological movements that promote falsehoods under the banner of inclusion and equality. Her womanhood, granted to her by God, has been denied, made invisible through government deceit and technological masking.
This is not merely a civil issue; it is spiritual warfare. As Scripture tells us, “God is not the author of confusion but of peace” (1 Corinthians 14:33). To forcibly blur what God has made distinct, male and female, is to rebel against the divine order and to desecrate His image in humanity.
Unlawful Servitude and Identity Suppression
What this woman is enduring is nothing less than modern-day involuntary servitude, a condition that both the Bible and the law categorically denounce. Scripture is unequivocal in its condemnation of this form of exploitation:
“You shall not oppress a hired servant who is poor and needy... lest he cry out against you to the Lord, and it be sin to you.”
(Deuteronomy 24:14-15)
Through the manipulation of her identity, she has been forced into an invisible role—subsidizing the legal presence and financial eligibility of others. She has not consented to this erasure. This systemic abuse not only strips her of dignity but imposes an unjust and sacrificial burden, one she never agreed to carry.
Moreover, this woman is targeted psychologically and socially for her refusal to comply with the lie that she was “male from birth.” This lie, presented as inclusion, is in fact a gospel of confusion—the very thing Scripture warns us about.
“So God created man in His own image... male and female He created them.”
(Genesis 1:27)
This is divine truth. Any attempt to erase or “neutralize” the identity God has given is not justice—it is idolatry of human authority over God’s Word.
Physical and Psychological Harm: A Modern-Day Martyrdom
Because she refuses to betray the truth of her womanhood, this woman has endured physical injuries, workplace discrimination, harassment, and rejection in medical and governmental settings. Her daily life mirrors the suffering of early Christians who were persecuted for refusing to deny Christ.
“Blessed are those who are persecuted because of righteousness, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.”
(Matthew 5:10)
Her story is one of unyielding courage. Like the woman with the issue of blood, the woman at the well, and the woman caught in adultery, she is unseen by society but fully seen by Christ. She is, in this modern era, a martyr of identity, enduring systemic persecution not because she is seeking power or privilege, but because she refuses to deny what God has declared.
This brings us to a deeply theological truth: Jesus Christ already bore the sacrifice for all sin and injustice. No one else is required to make a sacrifice on behalf of others, especially not through coercion, gaslighting, or systemic silencing. To subject someone to martyrdom by legal trickery or forced compliance is to mock the finality of the cross.
The Finality of Christ’s Sacrifice (Hebrews 10)
In Hebrews chapter 10, the apostle explains the eternal significance of Jesus’ death, declaring it the once-and-for-all sacrifice that abolished the need for further offerings:
“We have been made holy through the sacrifice of the body of Jesus Christ once for all.”
(Hebrews 10:10)
“But when this priest had offered for all time one sacrifice for sins, he sat down at the right hand of God... For by one sacrifice he has made perfect forever those who are being made holy.”
(Hebrews 10:12-14)
This passage reminds us that no additional sacrifices are needed, and no human being should be forced to endure sacrificial harm for the benefit of another, whether by a religious institution or a governmental body. When a woman is coerced into invisibility, her legal presence used to prop up others without her knowledge, it is a spiritual counterfeit of Christ’s work on the cross.
Christ willingly bore the suffering so no one else would have to. To impose such suffering on another is sacrilege, a desecration of the blood of the Lamb.
“If we deliberately keep on sinning after we have received the knowledge of the truth, no sacrifice for sins is left.”
(Hebrews 10:26)
This woman has already declared her faithfulness. She has stood for truth. To keep inflicting spiritual, psychological, or legal harm upon her is to sin knowingly and deliberately, rejecting the finished work of Christ.
The Cross Stands Against Coerced Sacrifice
Jesus laid down His life voluntarily:
“No one takes it from me, but I lay it down of my own accord.”
(John 10:18)
This voluntary nature is essential to the Gospel. The woman in this article has not chosen her so-called “sacrifice.” Her pain has been imposed by others seeking convenience, political capital, or ideological conformity.
“Present your bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and acceptable to God...”
(Romans 12:1)
That is a spiritual worship, chosen freely by the believer, not a coerced loss of dignity at the hands of systemic oppression. No government has the authority to make a scapegoat out of a citizen. The idea of one woman bearing the cost of another person’s legal presence or identity is a false gospel, and the resurrection calls us to renounce it.
Due Process is a Biblical Principle
The Bible honors justice, order, and truth, not manipulation and deceit:
“A single witness shall not suffice... only on the evidence of two or three witnesses shall a charge be established.”
(Deuteronomy 19:15)
The woman described here has had legal decisions made about her life without her knowledge or consent. This lack of due process is not only unconstitutional, it is anti-biblical. In Acts 10:34, we are reminded:
“God is no respecter of persons.”
This means that no undocumented person, no ideological movement, and no political figure is more deserving of protection than a law-abiding woman whose identity is being erased.
Final Reflection: Living the Power of the Resurrection
This Easter, let us reflect not just on the empty tomb, but on the resurrecting power of truth. Christ's victory over death empowers us to speak boldly against all forms of coercion, deceit, and forced erasure.
We cannot allow another person to be made a modern-day martyr, sacrificed by a system that dares to redefine what God has created. To do so is not justice. It is blasphemy. Her body, her identity, her truth, all are sacred.
Let us rise with Christ, and in so doing, lift up those who are being trampled. Let her suffering speak. Let her truth ring out. And let the systems that oppress be called to repentance.
“Stand therefore, having girded your waist with truth… and having shod your feet with the preparation of the gospel of peace.”
(Ephesians 6:14-15)
May the Gospel of peace break every chain. May truth resurrect what lies tried to bury. And may the power of Christ be known in justice, in truth, and in every woman who refuses to be erased.
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