The story...
We invited a new couple from our church to our home for dinner. After dinner, we were sitting out on the deck discussing essentials of the Christian faith and contrasting that knowledge with the actual reality of a faith worked out - a real and working relationship with God and other people too. Uncomfortably, we opened up the subject of "faking it to make it." Clearly they were not attending this "new" church to be with people who were faking their Christian faith; yet, we acknowledged that trying on the Christian faith might be part of a process by which selves do work out a sort of death in preparation for beginning life as a new sort of creature in Christ. They did move on to another church not long after our dinner discussion - that's okay.
Faking a belief that you hope is true, so that it might become real, seems wrong. Wanting to believe what another person believes and therefore believing that they believe as a first step also seems wrong. Yet, both of these paths might lead to that illusive outcome that's promised to be the very best.
Will the only church in town instruct children to act in a manner that's in accordance with the will of God before they're saved - yes. Will non-believers be accepted just as they are and be allowed to act out the role outwardly before they are changed internally - yes. Ideally it'd be different but it often ain't.
Just for today...
"Gradually and together we built roots and a pair of wings so I could soar and feel connected at the same time. I borrowed her faith until I acquired my own." Hope for Today (p. 254)
"Whoever fights monsters should see to it that in the process he does not become a monster." Friedrich Nietzsche