This is especially true when it comes to our faith. We can
expend thousands of words explaining what it means to be a Christian. I have a
few hundred books on my shelves that do just that. Yet none of those books do
anything but explain what it means to follow Jesus even if they are loaded with
examples of Christianity in practice. While those books give a real explanation
of faith in practice, nothing is being practiced.
For our faith to be real, it has to be real. We can talk a
good faith. We can preach a good faith. We can give examples, multitudes of
them, about how Christians the world over have put their faith into practice.
All that is well and good. We all need to understand and even visualize what it
means to live a faith-filled life, a life that Jesus commands us to live and
one he showed us how to live by his own life.
But no example and no amount of words replaces a real lived
faith. Nothing. A real live faith has to be truly alive, a living, breathing
life. Our faith demands that we feed the hungry and clothe the naked and visit
the sick. We know that. Our faith comes alive, however, only when we actually
fed hungry people and clothe those who are without and personally visit those
who are alone.
It is wonderful and good and even necessary to have a
working knowledge and understanding of what it means to follow Jesus. We need
to have a clear picture in our mind, if you will, what all that means and
entails. Those words and pictures, while necessary and essential, go only so
far; but, in the end, they are inadequate because they do not go far enough. They
need to become real, really lived out in our daily lives.
We know all that, certainly. Yet, it seems, we are often
convinced that we are good Christian’s, devoted followers of Jesus, simply
because we can paint a good picture of what it means to be such. We can explain
what it really means to be a Christian without really being one, without
actually living as one.
That is not to say that we do not live such a life. It is
to say that all too often it is all too easy to talk a good Christianity without
actually having to live out a good Christian way of life. Our faith to be real,
has to be real and not simply a picture of the real.
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