Funny, there's a lot of that going around.
Ann Rice recently announced that she was disclaiming any connection with Christianity, but maintaining her connection to Christ.
I find it a tenuous position. After all, it is easy to see the flaws in other believers, and the more of such others we group together the more flaws we can see. It is harder to see our own flaws. Yet I know I have them, and I'm sure that there are some people who find Christianity less believable because of me. That is ultimately the problem: people reject Christ because of Christians.
But then, there is the second problem, what is really the semantic problem. I cannot claim a connection to Christ and not in a fundamental sense be a Christian. That also means that I cannot truly separate myself from everyone else who is connected to Christ. They, too, are Christians. I can distinguish myself from specific religious organizations and from certain types of Christians. But if by "Christianity" I mean those organizations, I am misusing the word.
I've been to gaming conventions. The majority of those there actually do bathe or shower fairly regularly, wear perfectly acceptable clothing, and are well-socialized and well-adjusted individuals. People notice the ones who have not showered since last month, are atrociously attired, and act rudely or inappropriately. That is true of every generalized group of people--scientists, college professors, boy scouts, high school students, college students, fraternities (well, most fraternities), politicians, whatever group you can identify. All of them have "stereotypical" examples who are not at all like the majority but create the image of the group in the minds of outsiders--the arrogant scientist, the absent-minded professor, the goody-goody boy scout, the irresponsible high school student, the wild college student, the partying fraternity, the egocentric politician. Christians, too, have a small number who are the identified stereotype, whom people connect to what it is to be Christian. Most of us are not like that. But you don't overcome the stereotype by saying "I'm not one of them." You overcome the stereotype by saying, "I am one of them, but they're not really the best examples of who we are."
So I am a Christian, and although in some ways I am unique, I'm really not that different from "most" other Christians. I'm only different from most of those who are in the spotlight. I can only fix that by taking the spotlight away from them and pointing it at someone who better represents what Christianity is and does--and while I might wind up saying that's me, let me also say it's James Aubuchon who founded the Christian Gamers Guild, and Star Wars author Timothy Zahn, and Dungeons & Dragons co-creator Dave Arneson--all of us imperfect people whose imperfections are different from those presently in the spotlight. So I am a Christian, and I'm proud to stand with some of these others whom I've met who are equally willing to let you know that they are Christians, and that there are Christians who don't fit your stereotypes of us.
--M. J. Young