Baseball pitcher Orel Hershiser in his book OUT OF THE BLUE tells about an encounter he had with Dodger's manager Tommy Lasorda. Lasorda called Hershiser into his office one day and shouted at him, "You don't believe in yourself! You're scared to pitch in the big leagues! Who do you think these hitters are, Babe Ruth? Ruth's dead! You've got good stuff. If you didn't, I wouldn't have hired you. I've seen guys come and go, son, and you've got it! Be aggressive. Be a bulldog out there. That's gonna be your new name: Bulldog. With that name, you'll scare the batters to death!
"Starting today, I want you to believe you are the best pitcher in baseball. Look at that hitter and say, 'There's no way you can ever hit me.'"
Two days later Orel pitched relief and in 3 innings, he gave up only 1 run. Lasorda's talk (he calls it his "Sermon on the mound") had worked.
How do we view ourselves? Can we believe that God created us to be saints, but because of our humanness occasionally sin? Paul knew the people in the early church were not perfect, but he still referred to them as saints. Paul says, "Greet every saint in Christ Jesus." What you do doesn't determine who you are; who you are determines what you do.