Justice | Mercy | Faith

Justice | Mercy | Faith

đź§­ Walking From Identity in Christ: Understanding Freedom, Sanctification, and Daily Struggles

Difficulty Level: Intermediate-Advanced

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  1. In modern psychology, there is a term describing a dynamic between captors and hostages known as Stockholm syndrome. Israel, although crying out for deliverance, repeatedly longed for Egypt—even against the will of God. Could there be a similar psychological pattern at play here, and how does God respond to such behavior?
  2. “If the Son sets you free, you shall be free indeed” (John 8:36). Yet the lived experience of believers does not always reflect that freedom fully. The statement is true, but there seems to be a disconnect in everyday life—how do we understand this gap?
  3. Is this the same dynamic expressed in the tension between “by one sacrifice He has made perfect forever those who are being made holy” (Hebrews 10:14) and “we take captive every thought to make it obedient to Christ” (2 Corinthians 10:5)?
  4. “Your standing before God is complete, settled, not improving”—this is profoundly difficult to grasp or visualize, especially when our daily experience often preaches the opposite.
  5. “It’s not a fight for identity—it’s a fight from identity.” It seems that many of our defeats stem from misunderstanding a position that has already been granted, secured, and anchored in Christ. And if “you shall know the truth, and the truth shall set you free” (John 8:32), then this raises the need to explore more deeply what this identity truly is, and how this truth must be consciously acknowledged in the daily struggles of our lives.
  6. So, are the apostolic teachings essentially centered on declaring what is already true, so that we may walk in it from the position of who we already are, rather than striving to become someone through our own application of that truth? And is this ongoing process—with all its ups and downs—the very nature of sanctification?

đź§­ Walking From Identity in Christ: Understanding Freedom, Sanctification, and Daily Struggles

Biblical Themes | Christian Living & Ethics | Faith & Doubt | Salvation (Soteriology) | Spiritual Warfare

Why does Scripture boldly declare, “If the Son sets you free, you shall be free indeed” (John 8:36), while daily life often tells a very different story?

This tension has puzzled believers across generations. From Israel longing for Egypt despite their deliverance, to modern struggles with fear, failure, and inconsistency, the question remains: If freedom is already given, why is it not always experienced?

This discussion explores the powerful biblical dynamic of identity in Christ—the truth that believers are not striving to become accepted by God, but are learning to live from a position that is already secured in Him. Through key Scriptures such as Hebrews 10:14 and 2 Corinthians 10:5, we uncover how the apostles consistently declare what is already true before calling believers to walk in it.

At the heart of this journey is a shift in perspective:

  • Not fighting for identity
  • But living and fighting from identity

This Q&A traces that movement—from the question of human resistance, to the deeper reality of renewed minds, spiritual freedom, and the ongoing process of sanctification with all its ups and downs.

Ultimately, it invites us into a daily practice of aligning our thoughts, choices, and lives with the unchanging truth of who we already are in Christ—and discovering how that truth transforms the way we walk.

In modern psychology, there is a term describing a dynamic between captors and hostages known as Stockholm syndrome. Israel, although crying out for deliverance, repeatedly longed for Egypt—even against the will of God. Could there be a similar psychological pattern at play here, and how does God respond to such behavior?

That’s a really insightful connection you’re making—and it actually touches something very real in the human heart that Scripture exposes with surprising honesty.

Let’s walk through it carefully.

🧠 Is There a “Stockholm Syndrome” Pattern in Israel?

In modern terms, Stockholm syndrome describes when captives develop emotional attachment or even loyalty toward their captors, especially after prolonged dependency and survival under them.

Now look at Israel:

“For it would have been better for us to serve the Egyptians than that we should die in the wilderness.” (Exodus 14:12)
“We remember the fish which we ate freely in Egypt…” (Numbers 11:5)

This is striking. Egypt was a place of:

  • Forced labor (Exodus 1:13–14)
  • Oppression and bitterness
  • Infanticide (Exodus 1:22)

And yet… they remember it fondly.

So while the Bible doesn’t use psychological terminology, the pattern is very similar:

  • Bondage becomes normalized
  • Familiar suffering feels safer than unknown freedom
  • Dependence on the oppressor creates distorted memory

But Scripture goes even deeper than psychology.

đź’” The Biblical Diagnosis: More Than Psychology

God doesn’t frame this primarily as a coping mechanism—but as a heart issue rooted in unbelief.

“How long will these people reject Me? And how long will they not believe Me, with all the signs which I have performed among them?” (Numbers 14:11)

Their longing for Egypt wasn’t just emotional—it was theological:

  • They doubted God’s goodness
  • They distrusted His promises
  • They preferred visible provision over invisible faith

Hebrews later interprets this:

“Take care… lest there be in any of you an evil heart of unbelief in departing from the living God.” (Hebrews 3:12)

So yes—there’s a psychological layer, but beneath it lies something deeper:
👉 Unbelief makes slavery feel safer than freedom with God

🔄 Why Do They Romanticize Egypt?

This is where it becomes very human.

  1. Selective Memory
    They remember the food, not the chains.
    (Numbers 11:5 vs Exodus 1:14)
  2. Fear of Uncertainty
    Freedom requires trust. Slavery only requires survival.
  3. Identity Crisis
    They had been slaves for generations. Freedom felt unfamiliar—even threatening.
  4. Delayed Gratification
    God was leading them to a promise—but through a wilderness.
    And the wilderness exposed what was in their hearts (Deuteronomy 8:2).

🔥 God’s Response: Firm, Patient, Transformational

God’s response is fascinating because it holds tension:

1. He Confronts Their Unbelief

He doesn’t excuse it.

“Your carcasses shall fall in this wilderness…” (Numbers 14:29)

There are real consequences. An entire generation misses the promise.

2. He Continues to Provide

Despite their complaints:

  • Manna (Exodus 16)
  • Water from the rock (Exodus 17)
  • Protection and guidance (pillar of cloud/fire)

“Yet He saved them for His name’s sake…” (Psalm 106:8)

3. He Uses the Wilderness as Formation

The wilderness wasn’t just punishment—it was retraining the heart.

“Who led you through that great and terrible wilderness… that He might humble you and test you, to do you good in the end.” (Deuteronomy 8:15–16)

God is not just delivering them from Egypt
He is delivering Egypt from them

đź§­ A Pattern That Repeats in All of Us

This isn’t just Israel’s story—it’s a mirror.

Even after being set free, people often:

  • Return mentally to old patterns
  • Miss what God is doing because it feels unfamiliar
  • Prefer control over trust

That’s why Paul says:

“Do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind…” (Romans 12:2)

Freedom is not just an event—it’s a process of reorientation.

✨ Final Thought

So yes—what you’re seeing resembles something like Stockholm syndrome.

But Scripture reframes it more profoundly:

👉 Not just attachment to the oppressor
👉 But resistance to trusting the Deliverer

And God’s answer is not just rescue—but transformation:

  • Of memory
  • Of identity
  • Of trust

And ultimately, that transformation reaches its fullness in Christ:

“If the Son sets you free, you shall be free indeed.” (John 8:36)

Not just out of Egypt…
but into a completely new way of seeing, trusting, and living.

“If the Son sets you free, you shall be free indeed” (John 8:36). Yet the lived experience of believers does not always reflect that freedom fully. The statement is true, but there seems to be a disconnect in everyday life—how do we understand this gap?

You’re putting your finger on something every honest believer eventually wrestles with:
How can something be absolutely true… and yet not fully experienced?

Let’s walk through that tension carefully, because Scripture does not ignore it—it actually explains it.

🔓 Freedom Declared vs Freedom Lived

Jesus says:

“If the Son sets you free, you shall be free indeed.” (John 8:36)

That is not potential freedom—it is objective, accomplished freedom.

And yet, Paul writes to believers:

“Stand fast therefore in the liberty by which Christ has made us free, and do not be entangled again with a yoke of bondage.” (Galatians 5:1)

Wait—if they are already free… why tell them to stand in it?

Because Scripture reveals two dimensions:

  • Position (what is true in Christ)
  • Experience (what is lived out daily)

The disconnect is not in the truth—but in the appropriation of the truth.

đź§  The Battlefield: Mind, Not Status

Notice how Paul frames the struggle:

“Do not be conformed… but be transformed by the renewing of your mind.” (Romans 12:2)

Freedom has been given—but the mind still:

  • Thinks like a slave
  • Reacts like a slave
  • Fears like a slave

Israel was physically out of Egypt in a moment…
But Egypt was not out of Israel for years.

That same pattern continues in us.

⚔️ The Inner Conflict Is Real

Paul doesn’t pretend this is easy:

“For the flesh lusts against the Spirit, and the Spirit against the flesh…” (Galatians 5:17)

Even in a truly freed person, there is:

  • A new nature (aligned with God)
  • Residual patterns (habits, desires, reflexes)

So the disconnect you’re describing is not hypocrisy—it’s conflict.

And that conflict is evidence of life, not absence of it.

đź§­ Why Freedom Feels Incomplete Sometimes

Let’s name a few reasons Scripture points to:

1. Unrenewed Thinking

You can be free—and still believe lies.

“You shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free.” (John 8:32)

Freedom is realized as truth is known, not just declared.

2. Habitual Patterns

Old ways don’t disappear instantly.

“Put off… the old man… and put on the new man.” (Ephesians 4:22–24)

This is an ongoing action.

3. Walking vs Being

Paul makes a distinction:

“Walk in the Spirit, and you shall not fulfill the lust of the flesh.” (Galatians 5:16)

You are in the Spirit—but you must still walk in it.

4. Partial Trust

Sometimes we are free—but we don’t fully trust that freedom.

So we return to “Egypt patterns”:

  • Control
  • Fear
  • Self-reliance

🔥 God’s Response to This Tension

Here’s what’s beautiful—God does not revoke the freedom.

Instead, He works within the believer:

“For it is God who works in you both to will and to do for His good pleasure.” (Philippians 2:13)

So even the process of learning to live free is sustained by Him.

And when we stumble:

“If anyone sins, we have an Advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous.” (1 John 2:1)

Freedom is not fragile—it is anchored in Christ, not in our consistency.

🌱 A Helpful Way to See It

Think of it like this:

  • Freedom is given instantly (new birth)
  • Freedom is learned progressively (renewal)
  • Freedom is perfected ultimately (glorification)

Or in Paul’s language:

“Where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is liberty.” (2 Corinthians 3:17)

And yet:

“We all… are being transformed… from glory to glory.” (2 Corinthians 3:18)

Already free…
Still being transformed.

✨ Final Thought

The tension you’re describing is not a contradiction—it’s the space where growth happens.

The believer is not:

  • Trying to become free
    But:
  • Learning to live from the freedom already given

And that changes everything.

It means even when the experience lags behind the truth, the truth remains untouched.

So the question is no longer:
“Am I free?”

But rather:
“Will I walk today in what is already true of me in Christ?”

Is this the same dynamic expressed in the tension between “by one sacrifice He has made perfect forever those who are being made holy” (Hebrews 10:14) and “we take captive every thought to make it obedient to Christ” (2 Corinthians 10:5)?

Yes—that’s exactly the tension you’re tracing, and those two passages sit side by side like two pillars holding the same truth from different angles.

Let’s bring them together.

✝️ A Finished Reality: “Made Perfect Forever”

“For by one offering He has perfected forever those who are being sanctified.” (Hebrews 10:14)

This is staggering language.

  • “Perfected forever” → a completed, decisive act
  • “Being sanctified” → an ongoing process

So in Christ:

  • Your standing before God is complete, settled, not improving
  • Your daily life is being conformed to that reality over time

This is not contradiction—it’s two layers of the same salvation:

  • Position: perfect in Christ
  • Process: being shaped into His likeness

You are not becoming acceptable to God.
You are learning to live as someone who already is.

🧠 An Ongoing Battle: “Take Every Thought Captive”

“We demolish arguments… and take captive every thought to make it obedient to Christ.” (2 Corinthians 10:5)

Now we step into the experience side.

If Hebrews shows what Christ has done,
Corinthians shows what we are engaging in daily.

Why is this necessary?

Because even though:

  • The heart has been made new (Ezekiel 36:26)
  • The spirit is alive to God (Romans 8:10)

The mind is still a contested space.

Thoughts come:

  • Old narratives
  • Fears
  • Lies about God, yourself, and reality

And those thoughts can either:

  • Align with truth → experienced freedom
  • Resist truth → experienced bondage (even if not actual bondage)

⚔️ Where the Two Meet

Here’s the connection:

  • Hebrews 10:14 → declares your freedom and perfection in Christ
  • 2 Corinthians 10:5 → describes how that freedom becomes lived reality

In other words:

👉 You don’t take thoughts captive to become free
👉 You take thoughts captive because you are free

It’s not a fight for identity—it’s a fight from identity.

🔄 Why This Matters Practically

This dynamic explains the “disconnect” you mentioned.

A believer can be:

  • Fully accepted by God
  • Yet internally struggling with fear, guilt, or old patterns

Not because the sacrifice was insufficient…
But because the mind has not yet fully aligned with the truth of that sacrifice

That’s why Scripture keeps calling believers to:

  • Remember (2 Peter 1:12–13)
  • Renew (Romans 12:2)
  • Set their minds (Colossians 3:2)

🔥 A Powerful Pattern in Scripture

You’ll notice this rhythm everywhere:

  1. God declares what is true
    → “You are holy” (Colossians 3:12)
  2. Then calls them to live accordingly
    → “Put on… holiness” (Colossians 3:12)

Not:

  • Become what you are not
    But:
  • Live out what you already are

🌱 Final Thought

So yes—those two verses are describing the same dynamic from two sides:

  • One anchors you in unshakable finished work
  • The other invites you into intentional participation

And together they say:

👉 You are already perfected in Christ
👉 Now let every thought, habit, and reaction come into alignment with that reality

That’s not striving—it’s alignment.

And that alignment is where freedom stops being just a truth you believe…
and becomes a life you actually experience.

“Your standing before God is complete, settled, not improving”—this is profoundly difficult to grasp or visualize, especially when our daily experience often preaches the opposite.

You’re not alone in feeling that tension. In fact, Scripture anticipates it—because everything in our daily experience seems to argue the opposite direction.

Let’s slow this down and look at why this feels so difficult.

⚖️ Why Daily Life “Preaches the Opposite”

Our experience speaks in a very different language:

  • When we do well → we feel accepted
  • When we fail → we feel distant or disqualified

But that is a performance-based instinct, not a gospel-based reality.

Yet Scripture says:

“There is therefore now no condemnation to those who are in Christ Jesus.” (Romans 8:1)

Notice: now… not after a good day.

And also:

“Having been justified by faith, we have peace with God…” (Romans 5:1)

That peace is not fluctuating with your performance—it is rooted in Christ’s work.

🪞 The Difficulty: We Read God Through Ourselves

Here’s the core struggle:

We tend to interpret God’s posture toward us based on:

  • Our emotions
  • Our consistency
  • Our recent behavior

But Scripture flips that completely:

👉 We are meant to interpret ourselves through God’s finished work

“For you died, and your life is hidden with Christ in God.” (Colossians 3:3)

That means:

  • Your truest identity is not your last action
  • Your standing is not your last failure

✝️ What Does “Complete and Settled” Actually Mean?

Let’s make it more concrete.

When Scripture says:

“He has perfected forever those who are being sanctified.” (Hebrews 10:14)

It means:

  • God is not grading you in real time
  • He is not re-evaluating your acceptance daily
  • He is not moving you in and out of favor

Why?

Because your standing is not based on you standing well
But on Christ standing in your place

“He made Him who knew no sin to be sin for us, that we might become the righteousness of God in Him.” (2 Corinthians 5:21)

So your position before God is:

  • As secure as Christ’s righteousness
  • As stable as His finished work

🔄 Then Why Does It Feel So Unstable?

Because there are two different relationships happening at once:

1. Relationship (Unchanging)

You are a child.

“See what manner of love… that we should be called children of God.” (1 John 3:1)

That doesn’t fluctuate.

2. Fellowship (Experiential)

This can feel affected by:

  • Sin
  • Distance in awareness
  • Lack of alignment

“If we walk in the light… we have fellowship…” (1 John 1:7)

So when we sin:

  • We don’t lose sonship
  • But we feel the disruption in fellowship

And many times, we confuse the two.

đź§­ A Way to Visualize It

Think of it like this:

  • Standing → like being placed on solid ground (unchanging)
  • Walking → how steadily you move on that ground (variable)

You don’t fall out of the ground when you stumble.
But you can stumble on the ground.

🔥 God’s Posture in Your Weak Moments

This is where the gospel becomes deeply personal.

When you fail, God’s response is not:

  • “Come back when you’ve fixed yourself”

But:

“For we do not have a High Priest who cannot sympathize… but was in all points tempted as we are, yet without sin.” (Hebrews 4:15)

And therefore:

“Let us therefore come boldly…” (Hebrews 4:16)

Not retreat…
Not hide…
But come.

🌱 Why This Truth Feels Hard to Hold

Because it requires something that goes against our instincts:

👉 Trusting what God says over what we feel

And that is exactly why faith is central:

“The just shall live by faith.” (Romans 1:17)

Not by emotional consistency…
Not by perceived performance…
But by trusting what has already been accomplished.

✨ Final Thought

You’re feeling the weight of a real tension—but it’s actually a sign that you’re seeing clearly.

Daily life says:
“You are what you did today.”

The gospel says:
“You are who Christ has made you—now learn to live from that.”

And the entire Christian walk is learning, slowly and sometimes painfully:

👉 Not to climb into acceptance
👉 But to walk from it

“It’s not a fight for identity—it’s a fight from identity.” It seems that many of our defeats stem from misunderstanding a position that has already been granted, secured, and anchored in Christ. And if “you shall know the truth, and the truth shall set you free” (John 8:32), then this raises the need to explore more deeply what this identity truly is, and how this truth must be consciously acknowledged in the daily struggles of our lives.

You’re seeing something foundational. Most of the inner battles are not lost because Christ’s work is insufficient—but because we forget where we are standing while we are fighting.

Let’s go deeper into that.

🧬 Identity: Not Achieved, But Received

Scripture doesn’t present identity as something we build—it presents it as something we are given in Christ.

“As many as received Him… were born… of God.” (John 1:12–13)
“You are all sons of God through faith in Christ Jesus.” (Galatians 3:26)

This means:

  • Your identity is not your behavior
  • Your identity is not your struggle
  • Your identity is not even your progress

👉 Your identity is your union with Christ

“He who is joined to the Lord is one spirit with Him.” (1 Corinthians 6:17)

That’s not poetic language—that’s reality.

🔍 What Is True About You (Whether You Feel It or Not)

Let’s anchor this in Scripture, because this is where truth becomes concrete.

In Christ, you are:

  • Righteous → “the righteousness of God in Him” (2 Corinthians 5:21)
  • Accepted → “accepted in the Beloved” (Ephesians 1:6)
  • Seated with Him → (Ephesians 2:6)
  • Dead to sin, alive to God → (Romans 6:11)
  • Not condemned → (Romans 8:1)
  • A new creation → (2 Corinthians 5:17)

None of these say: “become…”
They say: you are

đź§  Why Truth Must Be Acknowledged Daily

Jesus said:

“You shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free.” (John 8:32)

Notice—He didn’t say:

  • “The truth exists…”
    But:
  • “You shall know the truth…”

Freedom is not just about truth being real—
It is about truth being recognized, embraced, and applied

That’s why Scripture calls us to:

“Reckon yourselves to be dead indeed to sin, but alive to God…” (Romans 6:11)

“Reckon” means:
👉 Count it as true
👉 Align your thinking with reality

Even when your feelings disagree.

⚔️ Where Battles Are Actually Won or Lost

You said it beautifully—misunderstanding position leads to defeat.

Let’s make that very practical.

Scenario: You Fail or Fall

The immediate thoughts might be:

  • “I’m not who I thought I was”
  • “God must be disappointed”
  • “I’ve gone backward”

But truth says:

  • You are still righteous in Christ (2 Corinthians 5:21)
  • You still have an Advocate (1 John 2:1)
  • You are still a child, not rejected (Romans 8:15)

So the real battle is:

👉 Which voice will define reality in that moment?

🔄 The Daily Practice of Identity

This is not about positive thinking—it’s about truth alignment.

Here’s what that can look like daily:

1. Remind Yourself of What Is True

Not vaguely—but specifically.

“Today, I stand accepted in Christ (Ephesians 1:6).
Not because I performed—but because He did.”

2. Confront Lies Immediately

When a thought contradicts truth:

“bringing every thought into captivity…” (2 Corinthians 10:5)

You don’t entertain it—you measure it against truth

3. Act From Identity, Not Toward It

Instead of:

  • “I need to try harder to be holy”

Shift to:

  • “I am set apart in Christ—let me walk accordingly”

“Walk worthy of the calling…” (Ephesians 4:1)

4. Return Quickly When You Fall

Not in shame—but in confidence.

“Let us come boldly…” (Hebrews 4:16)

Delay often comes from forgetting identity.

🔥 Why This Changes Everything

When identity is unclear:

  • You fight to earn
  • You fear losing ground
  • You live in instability

When identity is clear:

  • You fight from security
  • You recover faster
  • You grow in freedom

🌱 A Simple but Powerful Anchor

Paul summarizes it like this:

“Your life is hidden with Christ in God.” (Colossians 3:3)

That means:

  • Your truest reality is not visible to your emotions
  • Your security is not exposed to your failures
  • Your identity is hidden in Christ, not in your performance

✨ Final Thought

The Christian life is not:

  • Trying to become someone God will accept

It is:

  • Learning, day by day, to live as someone He already has accepted in Christ

So the question in every struggle becomes:

👉 “What is true of me right now in Christ?”

And then:

👉 “Will I align my thinking, my response, and my next step with that truth?”

That’s where freedom moves from theology…
into lived reality.

So, are the apostolic teachings essentially centered on declaring what is already true, so that we may walk in it from the position of who we already are, rather than striving to become someone through our own application of that truth? And is this ongoing process—with all its ups and downs—the very nature of sanctification?

You’re very close to the heart of it—and what you’re seeing really does capture a major thread of apostolic teaching. But let’s refine it just a little so we keep the full balance Scripture holds.

📜 Declaration First, Then Exhortation

The apostles consistently follow a pattern:

  1. They declare what is already true in Christ
  2. Then they call believers to live in light of that truth

For example:

“You are light in the Lord. Walk as children of light.” (Ephesians 5:8)

Not:

  • “Walk so that you may become light”

But:

  • “You are light—now walk accordingly”

Same pattern:

“Put on the new man which was created according to God…” (Ephesians 4:24)

So yes—you’re right:

👉 The Christian life begins from identity given, not identity achieved

⚖️ But Not Passive—Participatory

Here’s the important nuance.

It is not:

  • “We become someone by applying truth”

But neither is it:

  • “Nothing is required of us”

Scripture holds both:

“Work out your own salvation… for it is God who works in you…” (Philippians 2:12–13)

So:

  • God is the source, power, and initiator
  • We actively respond, align, and walk

Sanctification is not self-construction
But it is also not passive drifting

👉 It is participation in what God is already doing within you

🌱 What Sanctification Actually Is

You said it well—let’s sharpen it:

Sanctification is:

👉 Not becoming someone God will accept
👉 But becoming in experience what you already are in Christ

That’s why Paul says:

“Reckon yourselves to be dead indeed to sin…” (Romans 6:11)

He doesn’t say:

  • “Try to die to sin”

He says:

  • “Count as true what already happened in Christ”

And then:

“Do not let sin reign…” (Romans 6:12)

So:

  • Truth declared → Identity established
  • Truth believed → Mind renewed
  • Truth obeyed → Life transformed

🔄 Why There Are “Ups and Downs”

Yes—this is exactly where sanctification lives.

Because:

  • Identity is perfect and complete
  • Experience is progressive and uneven

Paul himself acknowledges this tension:

“Not that I have already attained… but I press on…” (Philippians 3:12)

So the ups and downs are not:

  • Loss of identity
    But:
  • Fluctuations in alignment with that identity

⚔️ Where the Real Danger Lies

The danger is not struggle itself—it’s misinterpreting the struggle.

Two common distortions:

1. “I must not be who God says I am”

→ Leads to discouragement and striving

2. “Since I am already that, nothing matters”

→ Leads to passivity

But Scripture says neither.

Instead:

“Those who belong to Christ have crucified the flesh…” (Galatians 5:24)
“If we live in the Spirit, let us also walk in the Spirit.” (Galatians 5:25)

Live → already true
Walk → daily expression

🔥 A Clear Way to Hold It Together

You could summarize it like this:

  • We don’t obey to become
  • We obey because we are

But also:

  • Who we are will increasingly shape how we live

And that shaping process—that ongoing alignment—is sanctification.

✨ Final Thought

So yes, apostolic teaching is deeply rooted in:

👉 Declaring truth so we can walk in it from identity

But that walk is real, active, sometimes messy, and deeply relational.

Sanctification is not:

  • You building yourself into something new

It is:

  • God unfolding, through your life, what He has already placed in you in Christ

With all the ups, downs, recoveries, and growth along the way.

And through it all, one thing remains untouched:

“He who began a good work in you will complete it…” (Philippians 1:6)

So even your sanctification is not ultimately secured by your consistency…
but by His faithfulness.