That statement isn’t biblically accurate. It confuses justification (being saved) with sanctification (living out the results of salvation).
Salvation is the gift of God, received through faith alone apart from works (Eph. 2:8–9). Once saved, believers live out that salvation through Spirit-empowered obedience and good works (Phil. 2:12–13; Eph. 2:10), which are the evidence — not the basis — of genuine faith.
Grace and Peace
Standard faith-alone systematic theology, which I disagree with:
- Justification -> sanctification is a teaching phrase, but sanctification is also used in the perfect tense not the ongoing present tense (Acts20:32; Acts26:18; Rom15:16; 1Cor1:2; Heb10:10), aorist tense (1Cor6:11; Heb10:21), again in the perfect and pertaining to a person cleansing himself (2Tim2:21), etc. The confusion in this matter is being caused by theological teaching phrases artificially narrowing sanctification to being a specific part of the salvation process.
- "alone" is being added to the language of Eph2:8-9 as usual.
- obedience and good works are intrinsic to genuine faith, so they are more than just evidence - they part of our relationship with God through genuine faith. Internal faith/obedience (with intrinsic work) at salvation by grace through faith is then lived out in active faith/obedience and good works as we were newly created to do.
