I hope this essay about Doug Wilson (of Moscow, Idaho, fame) is accessible; I got the link from Facebook, so it should be. The term "American evangelicalism" has become challenging to me. It seems to be so immersed in politics and revisionist history. Why anyone would feel the need to portray antebellum slavery as anything but brutal, anti-Christian, and anti-American, I cannot fathom. Christian Nationalism seems to be a re-interpretation" of everything Jesus, Paul, Peter, and John wrote. I used to depend on identity labels for myself; I avoid them now. This does not make me virtuous, just more comfortable with how I might be perceived by others, which can be regarded as cowardice as well as a form of intellectual honesty.
In this passage the word "together" is repeated twice. He made us alive together, raised us up together, and made us sit together. Christ's victories are ours because we give our faith allegiance to Him. I wonder, though, if the together is not also a statement about the Church as a whole. We won't sit with Him individually. The whole Church will be given these places of authority, honor, and esteem with Him. My Bible notes say "These positional privileges will in the future be experientially realized and enjoyed." That is a Baptist note! I don't think it is that simple. Does it have to be in the future only?