The born again are
justified (
declared righteous
once and for all with God
imputing the righteousness of Jesus Christ to them)
by faith (
Romans 1:17,
Romans 3:20-24,
Romans 3:28), just as the guilt of the first Adam was
imputed to them (
Romans 5:18).
This is confused. Rom 5 tells us that through Adam all become sinners, truly sinners. The antidote for that would be that, through Jesus we become righteous, truly righteous. Not merely imputed to be sinners, and not merely imputed to be righteous. Continue on with vs 19:
“For just as through the disobedience of one person the many were made sinners, so through the obedience of one the many will be made righteous.”
This happens through the “gift of righteousness”, also translated as the “gift of justification” in vs 17 as the verse above specifically conveys the concept of being made just or righteous in the Greek.
Indeed!
We now work out (put into practice) what God has worked in us both to will and to do (Philippians 2:13).
And why wouldn't the born again do so, when God works it in them to do so?
And this whole notion that one is regenerated all at once and they absolutely know it, never able to lose their salvation, halleluiah, and that they now do God's will but, um, they still sometimes sin but, um, that's ok now because sin doesn't matter anymore for believers.
Or that, um, if they
do sin then they never really were born again after all. All nonsense, inconsistent with the gospel as it's been understood from the beginning.
We really do work out our salvation because justice comes to the extent that we
choose to accept and act upon it, and continue to do so throughout whatever time we have in this life. God draws us, by His grace, into willing rightly, but He'll ultimately never simply
cause us to will rightly. He wants
us to own it, and increasingly so; He wants us to love to put it another way, reflecting His own image. That kind of image, that righteousness, occurs
only as a being chooses it. The offered choice comes from Him, the choosing is ours even as He necessarily helps us make it.