I'm reminded of a story I was told about a man sitting on a stool at the bar, with a cigarette in one hand and a drink in the other, talking to a woman next to him and telling her about being a Christian. I can't help but wonder if she believed that to be true. It seems that non-Christians have a lot higher standard by which they expect Christians to live than we do ourselves.
That reminds me, explicitly, of a situation like that in the pool hall I used to go into. A guy sees me smoking a cigarette, and I'm talking about Christ to the owner of the establishment.
He says something like
"You're a Christian? I though Christians don't smoke?"
I asked him what he thought it meant to be a Christian, and he said,
"Live a good, wholesome life"
What an AWESOME opportunity for me to clear up the common misconception that Christianity is nothing more than a bunch of behavioral mandates. Unfortunately, even some who Name Christ as their
Savior believe that their spiritual health is measured by behavior.
So I undertook to show him, in my bible, How Romans 1-4 progresses from people not acknowledging God, to how there is no excuse, and that God is not a respecter of persons, that all of have fallen short of the glory of God, and we all need to be saved. And that Abraham was our example, and that believing in Christ for eternal life is the only hope of salvation.
Did he believe me? He seemed to. Did he believe in Christ? I have no idea. But I can guarantee one thing - cigarette or not, I spoke to him about Christ. He had a huge misconception that Christianity boils down to works, and I was blessed to be able to clear that up for him
I had a young man tell me one time, "I'm a Christian, too." Then in the next sentence he used the "gd" phrase and the "f" word. Yeah, I really believed he was a Christian.
Unfortunate occurrence, but doesn't prove anything. What you or I or anyone else thinks, besides God, makes no difference. Jesus said that many of the Pharisees looked clean and shiny on the outside, but inside were empty tombs full of dead men's bones, a brood of vipers, sons of the devil, blind men leading the blind, and all sorts of other things.
He made it real clear that what someone looks like on the outside is not a clear indicator of what's inside.
What kind of message are we giving to the world by our words and our lives? Do they hear a message of God's love and grace? Do they see and hear the love of God in our words and lives? Or are they thinking, "This person is a Christian? If he is, then so am I, because I live a better Christian life than he does."
We shouldn't go out of our way to look like heathens, but when I'm simply living life, and someone thinks I'm not "acting" Christian, that is the BEST opportunity to share Christ. The most damaging thing you can do to the cause of Christianity, is to leave an unbeliever thinking that we are all "working" our way to heaven
And that's all this "fruit inspecting" does.
Too many self appointed fruit inspectors, in the wrong orchard, looking at the wrong fruit