--Kathleen Norris
I cringe when I see these jerks with simplistically "Christian" messages on their t-shirts and bumper stickers or when I see them praying over their food in restaurants. I don’t label as jerks everyone who follows these practices; many are not. Many are sincere and unthinking Christians.
I have yet to see a t-shirt sporting the Jesus’ words according to Matthew 6:1, "Beware of practicing your righteousness before men to be noticed by them; otherwise you have no reward with your Father who is in heaven."
One reason ostensible Christian testimony bothers me is that often I know these people. I know that much of their daily practice--speech, attitude, action--is contrary to clear biblical guidelines. If I were not a Christian, if I were not already "born again", neither they nor their message would attract the least of my interest. Like everyone else I would find myself paying more to the person than to what they were advertizing.
The same holds for so many of the cute "Christian" messages that show up on the marquis in front of churches. They make some of the insiders feel good, but to the outside passerby they may look either innocuous or offensive. Nearly always they see them as childish.
I've lost my source, but somewhere Doris Betts wrote, "Christian spoils into a rancid adjective."

1 comment:
Flannery O'Connor said, "I despise pious language because I believe in the realities that it hides." Pious, churchy language is a powerful thing. Even when it is used unthinkingly, it can still have a powerful manipulative effect. I agree with what you say. Sloganizing shirts are the modern phylacteries. (Now, would it be inconsistent if I got O'Connor's comment printed up on a magnet for my file cabinet?)
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