I stepped up to the counter and handed the cashier my
twenty-dollar bill. She glanced at me,
lifted the bill up to the light, squinted and examined it, then laid it on the
counter. She whipped out what looked like a felt tip marker and marked it.
After a long second, she placed it in the cash register and gave me my
change. It seemed simple enough. But it
made me wonder.
What made her think my twenty might be fake? Did I look dishonest? I reminded myself that it was standard
procedure. She had been taught to check
every twenty because you never know who might pass a counterfeit. You can’t recognize honesty or dishonesty by
a person’s looks, with or without a mask.
Wouldn’t it be nice if it was just as easy to discern fake
people as it is to recognize a fake twenty?
What if we could hold people up to a light, squint and examine them for
watermarks, or just swipe them with a pen and watch for discoloration?
Unfortunately, it isn’t that simple.
Sometimes the people we trust the most disappoint us. That
was the case with Richard Nixon. After winning the presidency by a landslide
vote, the Watergate investigations revealed a man far different than the public
image. One of our great difficulties today is the widespread doubt that no politician
can be trusted. They seem more intent on vilifying their opponents and
promoting their own agenda than engaging in sincere dialogue.
We all know that no one is perfect. We are all human. We are all sinners and we all make mistakes.
We are not looking for perfection. But
we are desperate for authenticity and honesty. We are desperate for authentic
parents, teachers, employers, employees, preachers and politicians.
Jesus ranked authenticity among the highest of virtues. His
harshest words were leveled at those who pretended to be what they were not.
Speaking to people of his day, Jesus said, “You're like manicured grave plots,
grass clipped and the flowers bright, but six feet down it's all rotting bones
and worm-eaten flesh. People look at you and think you're saints, but beneath
the skin you're total frauds.” (Mt. 23:27-28, The Message). He warned his disciples, “Beware of the
leaven of the Pharisees, which is hypocrisy.” (Luke 12:1).
What really gets scary and complicated is to examine ourselves.
Am I authentic? Is there any hypocrisy
in me? Are we being open, honest and
authentic with one another? Someday, of course, there will be a test. God will
hold each of us up to the light. He will examine us for authenticity. Are we
people of authentic faith living honest and authentic lives?
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