Just as all Islamic sects are lumped together as being "Islam", Christians of all tastes and varieties are also lumped together by the world as being Christian, when in fact there is nothing Christian  about them or their activities.
So to this end was this interesting essay I read on the "Christian Church" and its goings on:
*****
How can a church whose officialdom is 
worldly and corrupt present Jesus to the world? Pope Francis thinks it 
cannot. He once told people at the morning Mass in his small chapel, “To
 be believable, the Church has to be poor.” He has spoken of personal 
revulsion at seeing a priest drive an expensive car. When he spoke of 
money as “the devil’s dung” (he was quoting a church father, Saint 
Basil), some took this as an attack on Western capitalism. But it was a 
more general message, part of his apology in Bolivia for the church’s 
role in colonialism. And when Francis looks around the Vatican, he finds
 the same devil-stench. In one of his earlier interviews as pope, he 
said, “The Curia is Vatican-centric. It sees and looks after the 
interests of the Vatican, which are still, for the most part, temporal 
interests.” He said to assembled Cardinals that some approach the 
Vatican as if it were a royal court, with all the marks of such courts —
 “intrigue, gossip, cliques, favoritism, and partiality.’’
That 
list of sins could be taken as a table of contents for the scandalous 
activities recorded in Gianluigi Nuzzi’s new book, “Merchants in the 
Temple,’’ a title taken from the Bible account of Jesus driving money 
lenders from the Temple court. Nuzzi is the journalist who received the 
“Vatileaks” from the papal butler, revealing the scheming and 
profiteering that occurred during Benedict XVI’s papacy. He demonstrates
 an equal access to secret documents and conversations in the papacy of 
Francis, which show a concerted resistance to papal efforts to make the 
Vatican bear at least some resemblance to Jesus, however remote. 
The official church is wealthy and poor because it always overspends 
itself. It lives on display, favoritism, and unaccountability. Its 14 
personnel agencies create honorary posts for clients who will be 
subservient to their patrons. This is as true of the Vatican State 
Department as of the Vatican banks. We know of the scandalous and 
money-laundering Institute for the Works of Religions — commonly called 
the Vatican Bank. But another money manager is equally unaccountable — 
the Administration of the Patrimony of the Holy See. 
In what is 
called Peter’s Pence, Catholics from around the world send money to be 
spent on the poor. But four-fifths of that money is spent on maintenance
 of the bloated Vatican itself. The official church owns large amounts 
of real estate inside and outside Italy, but these holdings drain as 
much wealth as they collect, because so many of them are given at low or
 no rent to prelates and their flunkies, who redecorate them to their 
refined tastes, using Vatican money to do it. 
Francis,
 who handled financial scandal in the diocese he took over in Buenos 
Aires, knew that he could not get control of the Vatican unless he had a
 true audit of where all the money was going. So he set up a special 
body to find this out – COSEA (Commission on Organization of the 
Economic Administration of the Holy See). This commission hired outside 
auditors, internationally recognized experts, to go over the money in 
all the papal departments (dicasteries). But faced with this demand for 
records from lay experts, the skilled ecclesiastical maneuverers in the 
departments reported sluggishly, incompletely, or not at all. COSEA’s 
frustrations over this may be why their members leaked tapes of their 
meetings to Nuzzi and others. Indeed two of them (a monsignor and a lay 
woman) were arrested in early November by Vatican gendarmes for leaking —
 though these leaks are on the pope’s side, unlike the earlier leaks. 
Controversy about the official church has normally centered on 
doctrinal disputes, over things like contraception and abortion. These 
are seen as struggles for the mind of the church. Francis is more 
interested in the soul of the church. Does the church really speak from 
prelates’ posh apartments in Rome and from bishops’ palaces around the 
world? In our trips to Rome, my wife has given up entering Saint 
Peter’s, since she cannot find anything like Jesus in that riot of 
celebration of the great papal families, with monstrous large statues of
 past pontiffs in all their ecclesiastical regalia. Jesus did not wear 
expensive chasubles and jeweled mitres (or any ecclesiastical garments).
What Francis is engaged in is less a matter of theological dispute than
 a re-Jesusing of the church. If he fails, we have failed Jesus.
 *****
And this is a thought we must take seriously:  how do we collectively, as well as, individually - fail Jesus commission of us?  How are we individually failing God's expectations of us in our daily lives?  Failure is not acceptable in either situation ... and yet this is actually what we do.
And so what you are going to change your failure in life to God?  What are you going to do to address your failures with other your Christian family?  What are you going to do to address your church's direction?  The list goes on because we are surrounded by and overcome by the failure of ourselves, others and organizations.
Yet, we are told to go ... have you, are you, will you?  Faiurel is not okay I fear.
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