L
ltwin
Guest
I’m not saying to stop doing good because you don’t have all your mess together. And I’m not advocating that people have hyper-obsession over if what they do will be acceptable to God because they’re not perfect.However, when a Christian does good things, he doesn’t have to worry that he’s “not a Christian” because his motives for doing good things might not be completely pure. He remains a Christian as long as he is a baptized person who affirms the Creed and does his best to do what he thinks God would have him do.
And again, if you were doing good things, then the reason was that it was important to do good things because … (whatever) - and because Jesus expects it - and there’s nothing at all wrong with that. It’s always okay to do good things!
I don’t think anyone should ever be encouraged to stop doing good things because we think their motives might not be pure enough. Any motive that results in good is most likely to be good enough and people can build from there.
What I am saying is that if we do a lot of things that are good without maintaining a closeness and familiarity with God and a passion for what God is passionate about, then we will be running on our own energy and ability and drive. In such a case, a person may very well live an exemplary life in public, but fall into besetting and entangling sin in private. They will not be consistent in their Christian life because it is not rooted in love and passion for God. In the words of Christine Caine, they don’t have a strong spiritual core and they could end up acting like a Christian some of the time while never being a Christian all of the time, because Christianity is about a transformation and conversion of ourselves into the image of Christ. If we only get the outward part right and ignore the inward part, then we have missed the point.