|
If
you dislike hypocrisy in the church, you have a lot in common
with Jesus! Christ soundly denounced hypocrisy (Matthew 23).
Yes, there is sometimes hypocrisy in the church,
for two reasons. First, some people professing to be Christians
are not! There are some people sitting in pews on Sunday, wearing
crosses around their necks, or preaching loudly on TV that are
counterfeits. They are participating outwardly for reasons other
than a saving relationship with Christ as their Lord and Savior.
Many have allowed the culture to mold them, rather than the reverse,
as Christ commanded.
But secondly, the imperfections of Christians
reinforce the important truth of the biblical message about man's
sinful nature. Being a sinner is, you might say, a requirement
for being a Christian!
Yet there is a distinction between a hypocrite
and a sinner. The word hypocrite applies to a person who pretends
to be something he is not. A Christian recognizes his sinful nature,
acknowledges it, and repents of it (daily, even hourly). All hypocrites
are sinners, but not all sinners are hypocrites.
Christian morality is the purest, most sublime
in all of history. Indeed, it is the perfect morality. While history
records abusers of Christianity, one should not judge Christianity
by such charlatans. Repentant followers of Christ constantly seek
to "do the right thing" and thus hopefully become less
of a stumbling block to those looking from the outside at what
a Christian says and does. The quality of an authentic Christian's
life will fluctuate, but over time it should mature and progress
towards (but never reaching) Christlikeness.
As stated by authors Boa and Moody, it is unwise
to compare the life of one believer with the lives of others.
It is more valid to compare what he is now with what he was before
coming to Christ.
But being a Christian really does not mean being
related to a set of rules whereby we can measure self-improvement.
Ultimately, Christianity really stands or falls on the person
of Jesus, not the performance of Christians. We worship the
perfect Christ, not imperfect Christians.
|