Win At Life said:
I get what you're saying, but I think the driver is that people in church are always acting the way they are "supposed" to act, which for many is phony. Away from the church people let their guard down and act more the way they really are, so it's easier to see who is really walking out their faith. If you sort out those who aren't, what's left probably has a higher percentage of being genuine.
I think that was the case, at least, maybe 20 years ago or more when there was more social and family pressure to attend church for those who were not genuine. A lot of that pressure has evaporated about 20+ years ago, which is reflected in falling attendance. But those there these days are likely more genuine, so maybe the game has changed.
What a person believes about first principles is more fundamental than how they behave outside of a church building. One informs the other. When you're married, you're responsible to each other for their sanctification. And you're creating new souls who you'll be responsible to for preparing for particular judgement through good formation and catechesis. You should want to do that with someone you don't have to convert. It helps when you're living according to an external standard. I can hold my wife accountable and she can hold me accountable without having to appeal to personal preferences. Otherwise we end up chasing our tails.
People think about Christians as hypocrites when they make ought statements about certain behavior, and those claims wound them, and they feel condemned. It happens to me a lot where, when I write something or I'm talking with someone on the subject of morality, at the same time I recognize that I fail horribly at that thing. So discussing it can be a kind of examination of conscience. So in that sense it's healthy if it comes from a place of good will. There are mean and nasty people everywhere you go, but that's not the rule and, to the extent there are those people inside of Church it's not a comment on the faith. It's a comment on our humanity.
Think about this also. If someone truly believed that the consequence of sin is eternal separation from God, which is the worst thing they can imagine. Would not the most loving thing they could do be to try and persuade you to change your behavior?
When my wife corrects me because I've been sloughing off with regard to my prayer life for example, it stings a little to hear that she thinks so. But ultimately I know she's right and she is telling me because she loves me.