E
Edward_H
Guest
Well, not to de-rail things…but there is an older, more substantial, classical definition of hypocrisy, which I think is actually more useful.
Today we think a hypocrite is someone who says one thing and does another.
The older, more obscure definition is that a hypocrite is someone who says one thing and BELIEVES another.
This latter type person is more insidious and dangerous because it clouds and confuses conversation and truth among people.
Saying we’re going to do one thing sincerely…and then not doing it…is merely the human struggle.
We say we’re going to stop spending on restaurants, we fall short
We say we’re going to lose weight, but we don’t
We say we’re going to read the Bible every day…
We say we’re going to buy our wife gifts and be more generous, we fall short.
These aren’t acts of hypocrisy. Our intent is sincere…our ability to follow through is what is defective, insufficient.
That’s human struggle. That’s good.
The devil would love for us to call human struggle, hypocrisy. But it’s not true.
Beginning and beginning again is part of our nature.
Today we think a hypocrite is someone who says one thing and does another.
The older, more obscure definition is that a hypocrite is someone who says one thing and BELIEVES another.
This latter type person is more insidious and dangerous because it clouds and confuses conversation and truth among people.
Saying we’re going to do one thing sincerely…and then not doing it…is merely the human struggle.
We say we’re going to stop spending on restaurants, we fall short
We say we’re going to lose weight, but we don’t
We say we’re going to read the Bible every day…
We say we’re going to buy our wife gifts and be more generous, we fall short.
These aren’t acts of hypocrisy. Our intent is sincere…our ability to follow through is what is defective, insufficient.
That’s human struggle. That’s good.
The devil would love for us to call human struggle, hypocrisy. But it’s not true.
Beginning and beginning again is part of our nature.