What do the christian fraternity think of these words?

” I like your Christ I don’t like your Christians, your Christians are so unlike your Christ ”
They come from one of the most influential men of modern time……. Gandhi.
Do you think them to be correct?

✅ Answers

? Best Answer

  • I agree with Gandhi’s statement to a point. My understanding is that Gandhi was a Hindu. I practice Christianity. I do believe in the Lord Jesus Christ. We’re taught as a Christian believer that we are made in God’s image. We as Christians are supposed to be Christ like. No one can be as perfect as Jesus Christ. We are supposed to live as close to God as we can. A lot of Christians are hypocrites. They do violent acts to other human beings. Yet they claim that they are Christians. We as Christains aren’t supposed to hate people. We are supposed to despise the wickiness of the world. A lot of so called Christian live a very sinful life. They sit on a church pew thinking that everything is okay. This is what is turns a lot of people against religion and church. They live an awful life. Yet they have the nerve to tell someone else how to live. Most of the time that person is living better than the one that is sitting on a church pew every sunday.

    http://www.bibletools.org/index.cfm/fuse…

    http://kingjbible.com/1_john/2.htm
    – Chosen by Asker

  • Not about every Christian. The same can be said about any and every group of people. I respect Gandhi, and I understand where he is coming from, but it was wrong of him to call out the whole of Christianity. Instead, he should have called out the hypocrites or the self-righteous because I believe those are the ones these words were directed towards.

    Source(s):
    Orthodox Christian, but I am not a saint. Most people aren’t, including Christians.

  • I think he has given us Christians a lot to think about. I’m sure he wasn’t referring to all of us but the ones of us who are very bad examples of Christianity. Unfortunately far too many of us fall into that bracket.

    Source(s):
    Christian the last 13 years

  • I think they are idiotic.

    Gandhi is vastly overrated, and he was guilty of what so many people today are ~ thinking they can define what Jesus was all about and how his followers should behave. This is nothing more than outside opinions being given more authority than The Bible.

  • Not really considering the Religion Gandhi came from (Hinduism) slaughtered thousands of innocent Indian civilians not that long before he made that speech.

    Gandhi was only popular because of politics not because he was holy

    Source(s):
    RC

  • Gandhi was right. He knew what the Bible is about and Christ is one single unit of the whole Christian Nation, and that Nation described in the Bible has absolutely nothing to do or any similarity to humans that call themselves Christians. Jews and the people of Israel are exactly the same, named differently, same as Muslims in the Qu’ran, and this has no relation to any country, Nation, not even with living human beings.

    I love the Christ too, it is the most fantastic item of perfection we can find, but I avoid the humans that call themselves Jews, Christians, Muslims, just because those words are found in the sacred text. It is the same as if a whole population would call themselves now Gagas, just because a donkey called Lady Gaga is popular on the music stage. If we had to create all Nations and populations that we find in Fantasy books and Mythologies, we would never end creating countries, and every sh.i.t.house on earth would then end to be a single Nation.

    Do not put to much glory on Gandhi. He was a very difficult man to handle, and, he preached peace and used others blood shed to gain his victory against Britain. It is easy to tell others, do not move, do nothing, and get killed, while you stand far away from the action. No one never saw Gandhi in the first row when it turned to violence. He was a thinker, a bisexual, and a horrible character, eternally preaching nice words, but always far away form the shooting line.

  • Not much

    Not true either

  • Christ taught us Christians not to judge because with what judgement we mete, we shall be judged. It occurs to me that Mr Gandhi was judging all Christians from his experience of perhaps a few and the chance is he knew no truly born again Christians when he said those words.

  • It is a joke. People should study Luna.

    Source(s):
    A Wiccian.

  • I believe his words to be inaccurate & generalized, He obviously did not study Christianity from a, unbiased perspective but did so with a bias presupposition concerning Christianity, he only looked at Christianity from a very surface level viewpoint, He did not examine Christianity through deep theological study, Had he? he would not have made such a generalized statement, He is basically saying that all Christians are hypocrites

    Perhaps no accusation is more provocative than that of “hypocrite.” Unfortunately, some feel justified in their view that all Christians are hypocrites. The term “hypocrite” enjoys a rich heritage in the English language. The term comes to us via the Latin hypocrisies meaning “play-acting, pretense.” Further back, the word occurs in both classical and New Testament Greek and has the very same idea—to play a part, pretend.

    This is the way the Lord Jesus employed the term. For example, when Christ taught the significance of prayer, fasting, and alms-giving for kingdom people, He discouraged us from following the examples of those who are hypocrites (Matthew 6:2, 5, 16). By making long public prayers, employing extreme measures to ensure others noticed their fasts, and parading their gifts to the Temple and the poor, they revealed only an outward attachment to the Lord. While the Pharisees performed well their dramatic role as public examples of religious virtue, they failed miserably in the inner world of the heart where true virtue resides (Matthew 23:13-33; Mark 7:20-23).

    Jesus never called His disciples hypocrites. That name was given only to misguided religious zealots. Rather, He called His own “followers,” “babes,” “sheep,” and His “church.” In addition, there is a warning in the New Testament about the sin of hypocrisy (1 Peter 2:1), which Peter calls “insincerity.” Also, two blatant examples of hypocrisy are recorded in the church. In Acts 5:1-10, two disciples are exposed for pretending to be more generous than they were. The consequence was severe. And, of all people, Peter is charged with leading a group of hypocrites in their treatment of Gentile believers (Galatians 2:13).

    From the New Testament teaching, then, we may draw at least two conclusions. First, hypocrites do exist among professing Christians. They were present in the beginning, and, according to Jesus’ parable of the tares and wheat, they will certainly exist until the end of the age (Matthew 13:18-30). In addition, if even an apostle may be guilty of hypocrisy, there is no reason to believe “ordinary” Christians will be free from it. We must always be on our guard that we do not fall into the very same temptations (1 Corinthians 10:12).

    Of course, not everyone who claims to be a Christian is truly a Christian. Perhaps all or most of the famous hypocrites among Christians were in fact pretenders and deceivers. To this day, prominent Christian leaders have fallen into terrible sins. Financial and sexual scandals sometimes seem to plague the Christian community. However, instead of taking the actions of a few and using them to denigrate the whole community of Christians, we need to ask whether all those who claim to be Christians really are. Numerous biblical passages confirm that those who truly belong to Christ will exhibit the fruit of the Spirit (Galatians 5:22-23). Jesus’ parable of the seed and the soils in Matthew 13 makes it clear that not all professions of faith in Him are genuine. Sadly, many who profess to belong to Him will be stunned one day to hear Him say to them, “I never knew you. Away from me, you evildoers!” (Matthew 7:23).

    Second, while it should not surprise us that people who pretend to be more holy than they are claim to be Christians, we cannot conclude that the church is made up almost entirely of hypocrites. One surely may concede that all of us who name the name of Jesus Christ remain sinners even after our sin is forgiven. That is, even though we are saved from sins’ eternal penalty (Romans 5:1; 6:23), we are yet to be saved and delivered from the presence of sin in our lives (1 John 1:8-9), including the sin of hypocrisy. Through our living faith in the Lord Jesus, we continually overcome sin’s power until we are finally delivered (1 John 5:4-5).

    All Christians fail to perfectly live up to the standard the Bible teaches. No Christian has ever been perfectly Christ-like. However, there are many Christians who are genuinely seeking to live the Christian life and are relying more and more on the Holy Spirit to convict, change, and empower them. There have been multitudes of Christians who have lived their lives free from scandal. No Christian is perfect, but making a mistake and failing to reach perfection in this life is not the same thing as being a hypocrite.

    Source(s):
    TR

  • Leave a Comment