Sometimes I meet a family who has never been exposed to the OALC but there is something about them that reminds me so much of the culture there that I find it amazing that there is no connection. I think there is a spirit of legalism--it is something I can sense but not quite get my finger on it.
I am trying to figure it out. Is it putting too much emphasis on pleasing God by how we live? Do we think we can please God by our lifestyle?
One of the odd things I noticed after leaving the OALC is that I no longer worried about what to wear to church. The focus on clothing for women seemed to give me some sort of complex. I didn't worry about propriety of my dress, it seemed important to dress well. To look attractive.That others approve. I could wear the same ugly outfit for six Sundays straight at my current church and I don't think anyone would even notice. That is rather liberating.
It was as if the emphasis on outer appearance had the unintended side effect of making me "vain" about what I wore.
Another thing I have observed is that families that tend to shelter their children through legalism have children who grow up and seem to have more trouble with sin than those with less rigid upbringing.
It is as if by imposing a righteousness from the outside they think can control the sin nature. It is an old lie, one the pharisees of Jesus' day were deceived by and one a great many since that time have been misled by as well.
The Righteousness of CHRIST. It is the only righteousness we can have.
We respond by trying to please God by "looking Christian" or perhaps by some sort of action, or lifestyle choice like home schooling, or communal living, that we imagine that God will like. But in fact, He may not like it at all when we behave as if we think we could please him by our actions, clothing or lifestyle.
BECAUSE THESE THINGS HAVE NOTHING TO DO WITH RIGHTEOUSNESS!
It is a counterfeit.
