Many who have never
entered the Lord's service explain their hesitancy with the words, "I'm
afraid I just can't live it." We usually try to quell their fears, but
the truth is they can't live it, for their concept of what it is they
are trying to live is a completely false concept.
Consider the man whose
wife became a Christian. He was sure she couldn't "live it." He watched
her carefully, and sure enough, one day under considerable stress, she
lost control, yelled at the children, and said some things a Christian
ought not to say. "If she were a Christian," the man thought, "she
wouldn't talk like that; I knew she couldn't live it." On another day
the preacher came around, and in reaction to something someone said, he
turned a bit red, although he otherwise controlled his temper. But the
man saw that tinge of redness, and immediately concluded, "That preacher
can't live it either." He eventually observed faults in other
Christians, and finally concluded that none of them could "live it,"
that the whole church was a bunch of hypocrites. Of course he never even
tried, for he knew his weaknesses all too well. He knew he couldn't
"live it."
Poor man! He thinks
that the Christian life is a life of perfection; that all "Christians"
fall into one of two categories: either they are perfect or they are
hypocrites. He knows he can't live up to perfection, to the standards he
has set for others, and is thinking with an almost self-righteous
attitude, "One thing about it, Preacher, I'm not going to be a
hypocrite."
But there is pardon
for the sincere Christian's imperfections. "If anyone sins, we have an
Advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous"
(1
John 2:1). And
that Christian who sincerely strives to live for the Lord, and daily
seeks His forgiveness, though he should have a thousand weaknesses, is
no hypocrite. There are hypocrites in the church, and we offer no
defense in their behalf. But weaknesses do not necessarily imply
hypocrisy.
Let the faithful
Christian, then, not be intimidated by the constant charge of
"hypocrites in the church." And let the sinner forget about living "it,"
if by "it" he means perfection, and let him come to Christ, through whom
he can go to heaven.
Other Articles by Bill Hall
No Fleshly Incentives
Children's Influence Upon Parents
Hope
is to be Found in Christ