corollary, but Paul would have regarded it as necessary to be consistent with (even though not a prerequisite for) genuine justifying faith. We humans tend to identify ourselves in terms such as (naturally) our personal past, our family models, or our social embeddedness within external culture; parental models and others’ views of us are among the influences that shape our identity formation.3 Paul, however, argues that our strongest level of identification should be our identity
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