What the Bible says about Blaspheming God's Name
(From Forerunner Commentary)
Many claim the title of "Christian" but do not follow Christ's example and instruction. They want its benefits but not its responsibilities. They do not see God calling them into account for their sins, so they believe they are free to continue in them. John Ritenbaugh called this "practical atheism": professing God exists but living as if He does not. So, by failing to practice biblical Christianity, such nominal Christians blaspheme God's name among unbelievers, to use a Pauline phrase (see Romans 2:24). It is no wonder that atheists, seeing the hypocrisy and wreckage of the lives of these Christians-in-name-only, want nothing to do with it.
This reality is a significant problem for Christianity overall. So many of its adherents are such hypocrites that it is almost impossible for religious seekers to find any correlation between the eternal principles found in Scripture and the lives of professing believers. There are hundreds of different "brands" of Christians, and they exist in every spot along the moral and political spectrums. The answer to the question, "What does a Christian believe?" could be anything!
Richard T. Ritenbaugh
God Has Not Called the AtheistRelated Topics: Assuming Responsibility | Atheist | Avoiding Hypocrisy | Blaspheming God's Name | Called to Responsibility | Christian Responsibility | Hypocrisy | Practical Atheism
Here, the third commandment comes into play. The third commandment involves the quality of our personal witness; we are commanded not to blaspheme, profane, trample upon the name of our God by means of our words, actions, and attitudes. We represent Him, bearing His name as His children. We have a sacred responsibility to uphold the quality of His name—the highest name of any name in all of the Creation.
The church is not a great nation or a military power. It is not a cultural institution organized to change this world. We exist solely to glorify God through our witness for Him. The primary witness is the way we live our lives. Each believer is a witness before the world of the worth of his relationship with the great God of heaven. In making this witness through personal conduct and preaching, we carry out God's purpose.
John W. Ritenbaugh
The Fourth Commandment (Part 1)