Sometimes I think about what I would say if Christians were on trial in North America.
I think about it as I watch her impact statement on Youtube, how she speaks confidently about the impact of abuse and – out of nowhere – the impact of grace.
I think about what I’d say if Christians were put on trial.
I hope, above all, that I would be honest.
I hope I wouldn’t say we never do unspeakable things.
We are David, the adulterer. Gideon, the doubter. Peter, the denier.
We’re weak. We struggle to see past skin. We struggle to love.
We get stuck nit-picking theology. We get stuck in political ideologies. We neglect to listen.
We wander back to the wilderness and whine about the manna.
We sin and sin and sin.
But in the midst of all, we hope.
Hope to be like Jesus, asking questions, speaking slow. Speaking sure. And still, still speaking truth.
We’re not Christians because we’re good.
But because we’re redeemed.
Because Christ.
The Higher Standard.
I hope I’d say this too.
Like the girl said C.S. Lewis said: “A man does not call a line crooked unless he has some idea of a straight line.”
And that’s the beauty of being a Christian. That even my uneven lines point upward.
And forward to glory.