Viral Video ‘I Am A Christian, But I Am Not …’ Contains a Glaring Sin of Omission

By LaToya Rosario Published on September 10, 2015

The recent Buzzfeed video, “I Am A Christian, But I Am Not …” has been viewed three-quarters of a million times on YouTube, and has received ample response from the likers, sharers, cheerers and jeerers of social media. Its viral popularity spawned a Twitter hashtag #ImAChristianBut.

The video features young Millennials apparently seeking to present Christianity as  loving, accepting, and inclusive, and to distinguish it from negative stereotypes. Judging from its fans, however, its popularity depends almost entirely on perpetuating just those stereotypes. One might even say it commits the sin of slander.

The video also contains a glaring sin of omission: it failed to mention the foundation of Christianity — the good news of Jesus Christ. As the Apostle Paul says in his letter to the Romans, “If you confess with your lips that Jesus is Lord and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved” (Romans 10:9).

In the second half of the video, the question is asked, “What do you want people to know about the Christian faith?” and there is not one mention of Jesus Christ, the Son of God, who came and saved the world from sin and its penalty of death. No exclamation of His forgiveness and rich mercy toward sinners who have been saved by His grace. A reference to the name of Jesus is surely the bare minimum of anything claiming to be “Christian.”

Some viewers noticed the omission:

Happily, as an alternative to the Buzzfeed video, a different hashtag emerged, #ImAChristianSo.

Others took the opportunity to rebut the video’s shameless use of stereotypes, such as: “but I’m not homophobic,” “but I am not judgmental,” and “but I am definitely a feminist”:

Others used the hashtag to proclaim Jesus Christ:

So, what about you? How would you complete the hashtag? #ImAChristianSo …

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