“Is the President a Christian?” This question has been all over the media for the past two years, and it has been gaining strength in more recent months. The president has said that he is a Christian, and his answer to the question seems to be a genuine, “Yes.” The bigger question that this whole issue raises for me is what difference knowing this information makes. Does being a Christian make the president more effective in his role as the leader of our nation? I’m not sure about that. We have had some presidents who boldly declared their Christianity, and then acted in very unchristian ways. In fact, these presidents probably hurt people’s perceptions about Christianity, because their actions and lifestyle did not match up with how we believe Christians should live their lives.
Many people claim to be Christian, but do their actions support or contradict this claim? None of us can know what is in a person’s heart, but we can certainly draw some conclusions from what we observe about a person’s behavior. To be a Christian first and foremost means loving Jesus and desiring to follow after him. There are certain behaviors that many people would agree should be a part of a Christian’s life: prayer, reading the Bible, worshipping God regularly, acts of service in Jesus’ name, and being in relationship with other Christians. These traits and behaviors are essential parts of a Christian’s life of faith. These activities feed, challenge, strengthen, and renew the Christian life, while also showing our commitment and devotion to God. Our faith is lived out in our actions.
We need to be cautious about this line of thought, however, because Jesus himself was concerned about false piety. Jesus told a parable about a very religious person who went to the temple to pray, filling that space with beautiful prayers and rituals. This religious person looked down his nose at others who came to that temple as being less righteous and worthy than himself. At the same time, in the same temple there was a truly penitent sinner. This person came in to confess his sins in very simple words and throw himself on God’s mercy. The righteous person looked down on the man who came to confess his sins as unworthy of being in the temple, because he had lived such an unrighteous life. In the end, Jesus praised the penitent sinner, and judged the self-righteous person. Jesus is suggesting that our actions must flow out of humility and a true love of God. In the end, we are made right with God by our faith, the God-inspired trust, in our loving and merciful God.
Finally, none of us can know the true state of another person’s relationship with God. Instead of asking about whether the president is a Christian, maybe we should be ask ourselves if we are living as Christians. Would there be enough evidence for a court to convict me of being a Christian? Can people see and know that I am a Christian? And if people know that I am a Christian, what kind of conclusions will they make about the values and behavior of Christians, based on what they see in my life.
As a Christian myself, my first concern needs to be my own faith life, for only I can know what is in my heart. I cannot know what is in another person’s heart, nor am I in a position to judge them. God alone will judge us, and at that time, God will do so, based on Jesus’ sacrificial death and resurrection. In the end, every Christian is saved, not because of our actions, but solely because of Jesus’ love for all of God’s children.

