This question was posed in my youth group today.
Give an answer... And it's immediately wrong. Why so?
The question in itself is wrong. What is a "better" Christian?
What defines a Christian?
The Bible is pretty straightforward with it - you are Christian, or you are not. There is only one way to achieve peace with God, and it has nothing to do with us.
Our salvation, our identity as Christians - "little Christs" - depends fully on the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ our Lord and Savior.
If there was anything that we could possibly do to strengthen this identity in God's eyes, or weaken it, for that matter, then Christ's death was insufficient payment for our debt.
That aside, we do practice certain acts - coming to church, loving one another, praying, reading the Bible. These have no value to our salvation. They do not in any way cleanse us from sin. A person can read the Bible everyday, pray 23hours a day (exaggerated much), but not be saved.
However, these acts we perform do help to point us to Christ, and more still, they help us point others to Christ, and thus are Biblically mandated. They are good things - but they must not be the "saving" thing.
As leaders, as well, we do have to be aware of the implications we pose with these questions. Could we mislead younger Christians?
Give an answer... And it's immediately wrong. Why so?
The question in itself is wrong. What is a "better" Christian?
What defines a Christian?
The Bible is pretty straightforward with it - you are Christian, or you are not. There is only one way to achieve peace with God, and it has nothing to do with us.
Our salvation, our identity as Christians - "little Christs" - depends fully on the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ our Lord and Savior.
If there was anything that we could possibly do to strengthen this identity in God's eyes, or weaken it, for that matter, then Christ's death was insufficient payment for our debt.
That aside, we do practice certain acts - coming to church, loving one another, praying, reading the Bible. These have no value to our salvation. They do not in any way cleanse us from sin. A person can read the Bible everyday, pray 23hours a day (exaggerated much), but not be saved.
However, these acts we perform do help to point us to Christ, and more still, they help us point others to Christ, and thus are Biblically mandated. They are good things - but they must not be the "saving" thing.
As leaders, as well, we do have to be aware of the implications we pose with these questions. Could we mislead younger Christians?
Comments
Post a Comment