I Want To Be Like Jesus But Without Denying Myself
We are what is called a “Christian” nation—but in such a sense that not a single one of us is in the character of the Christianity of the New Testament, any more than I am, who again and again have repeated, and do now repeat that I am only a poet…I have not the least doubt that every single individual in the nation will be honest enough with God and with himself to say in solitary conversation, “If I must be candid, I do not deny that I am not a Christian in the New Testament sense; if I must be honest, I do not deny that my life cannot be called an effort in the direction of what the New Testament calls Christianity, in the direction of denying myself, renouncing the world, dying from it, etc.; rather the earthly and the temporal become more and more important to me with every year I live.
-Søren Kierkegaard, Attack Upon ‘Christendom’
I used to fear that I was not truly living as a Christian, or worse, that what we have come to call Christianity was not Christianity. Yet, although it would be horrible to find out that I have failed at embodying Christ, it would be much more horrible, in my opinion, to find out that I have succeeded at embodying Christ.
No, it is a much better truth to the world (and to me) that I—and all other Christians—have failed to be like Jesus than to find out that today’s Christianity is fully Christianity.
Unfortunately, this false Christianity is still being presented to the world as the Christianity of the New Testament. We, myself included and highlighted, tend to make excuses for ourselves, never wanting to face the overwhelming truth that we have failed at being like Jesus. We refuse to dwell amidst the grace of God that acknowledges our shortcomings, because we rather live in the comfortable lie that we are not failures.
Thus, we are trapped in our own lies. The only way to free ourselves from this lie is to confess our shortcomings to God, ourselves, and each other. One cannot fix a lie while still holding it up as truth.
As Kierkegaard states in Attack Upon ‘Christendom’,
So long as we either make as if nothing were the matter, as if everything were all right, and what we call “Christianity” is the Christianity of the New Testament, or we perform artful tricks to support the appearance that it is the Christianity of the New Testament—so long as this Christian criminal offense continues, there can be no question of reforming, but only throwing light upon this Christian criminal offense.
We will continue this way unless we acknowledge the fact that we have lied. A man can say all his life that he can fly, but the minute we put his word to the test by pushing him off a cliff, then we will all see him plummet down to his demise.
Lies kill the lier and hurt everyone around.
I can’t fly.
I am not truly living as a Christian.
In Kierkegaard’s words, I confess:
If I must be candid, I do not deny that I am not a Christian in the New Testament sense; if I must be honest, I do not deny that my life cannot be called an effort in the direction of what the New Testament calls Christianity, in the direction of denying myself, renouncing the world, dying from it, etc.; rather the earthly and the temporal become more and more important to me with every year I live.