The obvious fact that we all sin can create  an atmosphere of false security among us, leading us to accept with ease  the idea that sin is so commonplace that we ought not to be too  bothered by it lest we surrender our mental health to a self-deprecating  neurosis. Yet in our desire to console ourselves and maintain a good  self-image, we may push to the back burner the mandate of God, “Be you  holy, even as I am holy.”
Evangelical Christians are most vulnerable to  succumbing to this distortion. We stress the fact that our  justification is by faith alone and insist that our righteousness is  found in Christ alone. Though these assertions are true, it is equally  true that the faith by which we are justified is a faith that brings  forth fruit in our lives. The slogan of the Reformation was that we are  justified by faith alone, but not by a faith that is alone. 
The instant true faith is present in the  heart of the believer, the process of sanctification begins. Change  begins at once. The Christian begins to be conformed to the image of  Christ. We are becoming holy. If we are not becoming holy, then Christ  is not in us and our profession of faith is empty.
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