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“CHRISTIANITY exists only where the memory of Jesus Christ is activated in theory and practice.” (On Being a Christian) With those words, Swiss theologian Hans Küng states a self-evident truth: Genuine Christianity exists only where sincere individuals put Jesus’ teachings into practice.

What about individuals or institutions claim to be followers of Christ but do not, in fact, practice what Jesus taught? Jesus himself said that many would claim to be Christians. They would point to various activities to prove that they had served him, saying: “Did we not prophesy in your name, and expel demons in your name, and perform many powerful works in your name?” How, though, would Jesus react? His dramatic words express his judgment: “I never knew you! Get away from me, you workers of lawlessness.” (Matthew 7:22, 23)

What a stark warning for “workers of lawlessness” who claim to follow Jesus! Consider two fundamental conditions that Jesus sets if he is to recognize people as genuine Christians rather than reject them as workers of lawlessness.

One condition Jesus sets is this: “I am giving you a new commandment, that you love one another; just as I have loved you, that you also love one another. By this all will know that you are my disciples, if you have love among yourselves.” (John 13:34, 35)

Jesus requires his followers to have genuine love for one another and for the rest of mankind. Many individual Christians have fulfilled that condition during the centuries since Jesus walked the earth. But what about most of the religious organizations that have claimed to represent Christ? Has their history been marked by love? Certainly not. Instead, they have been in the forefront of countless wars and conflicts in which innocent blood has been spilled. (Revelation 18:24)

That has been true right up to modern times. Nations claiming to be Christian took the lead in the slaughter that marked the two world wars of the 20th century. More recently, members of so-called Christian churches were in the forefront of the savage atrocities and attempted genocide that took place in Rwanda in 1994. “Those who had turned against one another in this gory fashion,” writes former Anglican archbishop Desmond Tutu, “espoused the same faith. Most were Christian.”

A second fundamental requirement for genuine Christianity was spelled out by Jesus when he said: “If you remain in my word, you are really my disciples, and you will know the truth, and the truth will set you free.” (John 8:31, 32)

Jesus expects his followers to remain in his word—that is, to stick to his teachings. Instead, religious teachers claiming to follow Christ have “increasingly adopted Greek concepts,” notes theologian Küng. They have replaced Jesus’ teachings with, among others, ideas like the immortality of the soul, a belief in purgatory, worship of Mary, and a clergy class—ideas borrowed from pagan religions and philosophers. (1 Corinthians 1:19-21; 3:18-20)

Religious teachers also introduced the incomprehensible doctrine of the Trinity, elevating Jesus to a position he never claimed for himself. In the process, they distracted people from worshipping the one to whom Jesus always directed attention—his Father, Jehovah. (Matthew 5:16; 6:9; John 14:28; 20:17) “When Jesus speaks of God,” writes Hans Küng, “he means the ancient God of the patriarchs Abraham, Isaac and Jacob: Yahweh . . . For him this is the one and sole God.” How many people today immediately associate Jesus’ God and Father with Yahweh, or Jehovah, as his name is commonly written in the English language?

Religious leaders have completely departed from Jesus’ command to stay neutral in political affairs. In Jesus’ day, Galilee “was the heartland of ethnic nationalism,” states writer Trevor Morrow. Many Jewish patriots took up arms to gain political and religious freedom. Did Jesus tell his disciples to get involved in such struggles? No. On the contrary, he told them: “You are no part of the world.” (John 15:19; 17:14) Instead of remaining neutral, however, church leaders developed what Irish writer Hubert Butler describes as “militant and political ecclesiasticism.” “Political Christianity,” he writes, “is almost always also militarist Christianity and when statesmen and ecclesiastics come to terms it always happens that, in return for certain privileges, the Church gives its blessing to the military forces of the state.”

The apostle Paul warned of a falling away from genuine Christianity. He said that after his death, “oppressive wolves” from among professed Christians would “speak twisted things to draw away the disciples after themselves.” (Acts 20:29, 30) They would “publicly declare they know God,” but in reality they would “disown him by their works.” (Titus 1:16) The apostle Peter likewise warned that false teachers would “quietly bring in destructive sects and [would] disown even the owner that bought them.” Their bad conduct, he said, would cause people to speak “abusively” about “the way of the truth.” (2 Peter 2:1, 2) To disown Christ in this way, says Greek scholar W. E. Vine, means to “deny the Father and the Son, by apostatizing and by disseminating pernicious teachings.”

How would Jesus react if professed disciples deliberately failed to “remain in [his] word” and to meet other requirements that he set out? He warned: “Whoever disowns me before men, I will also disown him before my Father who is in the heavens.” (Matthew 10:33) Of course, Jesus does not disown someone who makes a mistake despite his earnest desire to be faithful. For example, although the apostle Peter denied Jesus three times, Peter repented and was forgiven. (Matthew 26:69-75) However, Jesus disowns individuals or institutions that turn out to be wolves in sheep’s clothing—pretending to follow Christ but willfully and persistently rejecting his teachings. Of such false teachers, Jesus said: “By their fruits you will recognize those men.” (Matthew 7:15-20)

When did false Christians begin to disown Christ? Very shortly after Jesus’ death. He himself warned that Satan the Devil would quickly oversow “weeds,” or false Christians, among the “fine seed,” or genuine Christians, that Jesus planted during his ministry. (Matthew 13:24, 25, 37-39) The apostle Paul warned that deceptive teachers were already at work in his day. The fundamental reason for their deviation from the teachings of Jesus Christ, he said, was that they had no real “love of the truth.” (2 Thessalonians 2:10)

The apostles of Jesus Christ acted as a restraint against this apostasy for as long as they lived. After the death of the apostles, however, religious leaders using “every powerful work and lying signs and portents and . . . every unrighteous deception” in order to mislead many turned more and more people away from the truths taught by Jesus and his apostles. (2 Thessalonians 2:3, 6-12) In time, writes English philosopher Bertrand Russell, the original Christian congregation was changed into a religious organization that “would astonish Jesus, and even Paul.”

The record is clear. Since the death of the apostles, Christ has not been in much of what has taken place in the name of Christianity. However, that does not mean that Jesus has failed to keep his promise to be with his followers “all the days until the conclusion of the system of things.” (Matthew 28:20) We can be sure that ever since he said those words, there have been faithful individuals among whom “the memory of Jesus Christ [has been] activated in theory and practice.” Jesus Christ has kept his promise to support such ones as they have endeavored to show the love that marks true Christians and to remain loyal to the truths that he taught.

Even better, Jesus promised that in the last days of this system of things, he would gather his faithful disciples into a clearly identifiable Christian congregation that he would use to accomplish his will. (Matthew 24:14, 45-47) He is right now using that congregation to gather together “a great crowd” of men, women, and children “out of all nations and tribes and peoples and tongues,” and he is uniting them under his headship into “one flock” under “one shepherd.” (Revelation 7:9, 14-17; John 10:16; Ephesians 4:11-16)

Turn away, then, from any institutions or organizations that have besmirched the name of Christ and defamed Christianity over the past two thousand years. Otherwise, as Jesus Christ told the apostle John, you could “receive part of [their] plagues” when God executes his judgment on them in the near future. (Revelation 1:1; 18:4, 5) Make it your resolve to be among those spoken about by the prophet Micah when he said that “in the final part of the days,” true worshippers—adherents of true Christianity—would listen to God’s instructions and “walk in his paths” of restored pure worship. (Micah 4:1-4) The publishers of this magazine will be happy to help you identify those true worshippers.


Source(s):

New World Translation of the Holy Scriptures

March 1, 2006 Watchtower Magazine
Published by Jehovah’s Witnesses
Article: “Who Are Genuine Christians?”
Pages 4-7

2007-10-29 17:37:31 · answer #1 · answered by the_answer 5 · 1 0

My opinion re: what ruins the appeal of Christianity is any Christian who claims to be Christian, but doesn't walk the walk. It's supposed to be based on the law of attraction, but alot of Christians live in such a way that their lifestyle doesn't attract anyone, sadly...

It's not always easy to live with integrity, but it's oh, so rewarding in the long run.

2007-10-29 22:55:53 · answer #2 · answered by Geri42 7 · 0 0

Although it teaches the same fundamental individual relationship with the creator that other religions teach, it offers no practical solutions to planetary problems facing humanity. It's social teachings are suited to an age that existed 2000 yrs ago when national identity, let alone planetary identity was impossible. To think that the institutions that are erected to transform society with the teachings of the founder can ever be separated from the founder and his teachings is naive. New social teachings for a new age of human relationships are needed as well as further explanations and updating of the spiritual laws governing existence are desperately needed for a more advanced civilization and knowledge than existed in the days of Christ.

2007-10-29 22:36:59 · answer #3 · answered by jaicee 6 · 1 1

-Hypocrisy from so-called Christian leaders. So many figureheads of Evangelical Christianity do not follow Christ's example on so many essential teahings, yet call out others for their shortcomings and believe they know better than God does on who will receive salvation.

-The teaching of Paul in Ephesians 4:5 "One Lord, one faith, one baptism" somehow turning into over 39,000 denominations of Christianity.

-The disintegration of the family unit as we've known it by political and cultural means. No single parent can make up for what 2 can do together, and the Spirit is more likely to dwell with those who live a life of temperance and harmony.

-The work of most major Western governments to whitewash all religious belief (not just Christian) in the name of a secular government.

There are many others, but these are the major ones.

2007-10-29 22:39:52 · answer #4 · answered by Sir Network 6 · 1 1

Right-wing egotistical wind-bags like Pat Robertson and Jerry Falwell who allowed the left-wing media to anoint them as the Official Spokespersons for Christianity in order to discredit our faith.

2007-10-29 22:31:16 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 4 1

Faith in Christ has never lost its appeal. As far as the monstrosity called Christianity is concerned, God never intended it anyway. Read Pauline letters for guidance in that respect.

Blessings,

Jack

2007-10-29 22:32:10 · answer #6 · answered by Mutations Killed Darwin Fish 7 · 0 2

Catholicism with their belief in the infallibility of the Pope, the worship of Mary, the praying to saints, their habit of excommunication, forcing members to confess to a priest, not allowing priests to marry, the child molestations that have gone on my entire life-not just in Boston in the early 2000's, etc...

2007-10-29 22:35:31 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 2 2

Anyone who talks the talk and fails to walk the walk makes Christians look bad-from the most famous to the least.

2007-10-29 22:39:29 · answer #8 · answered by PrivacyNowPlease! 7 · 2 2

Christians b/c they tell you all the things that you do will send you to hell, but they themselves are guilty of some of the same "sins" but because they believe in Jesus and God it's all good and they will go to heaven.

2007-10-29 22:36:11 · answer #9 · answered by Ed 2 · 3 1

Christians have ruined it the most because they don't know how to read what the book says for themselves and they try to beat people into submission with their "vast knowledge" because they read a scripture or two and took it out of context. I can remember being a young homeless woman in the 70's, asking churches to help me and being told that I needed to clean myself up first and then come back. That is the kind of crap that has made people hate Christians. The problem is they blame God for that garbage.

2007-10-29 22:30:52 · answer #10 · answered by Que bella 3 · 4 5

Religious fanatics have ruined christianity. Christianity is really very simple. Following Jesus' example. Religion has made it way to complicated.

2007-10-29 22:43:26 · answer #11 · answered by Kaliko 6 · 1 3

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