How does this make any sense? If a Christian is a sinner he is still a sinner, and not perfect. It means little that Christ's perfection is given.
I started this thread because a Christian claimed that some Christians are not authentic, and these were specifically Christians who were Nazis and slave owners. So how does a Christian Nazi live with the gift of Christ's perfection and it mean anything? To my thinking what you are saying is little more than a label, and a Christian has the label whether a good person or a serial murderer. A person's acts have to bear some weight in their righteousness, right?
This comes from the Adam and Eve myth in the Bible, so a person needs to assume that story is true, which it isn't. Do you think all Christians go to heaven even if they were Nazis who committed genocide? Explain.
I find the answer in this link quite shallow and incomplete. For example it starts out saying:
We need the righteousness of Christ imputed to us because we have no righteousness of our own. We are sinners by nature, and we cannot make ourselves righteous—we cannot place ourselves in right standing with God. We need Christ’s righteousness imputed to us—meaning, we need His holiness before God credited to our account.
OK, so they claim we humans don't have our own righteousness. But we see many atheists act righteously. We see many Christians act with cruelty and contrary to what Jesus taught. So obviously there is no blanket righteousness that Christians get automatically, it takes work. And this link says nothing about what righteousness is, nor what a believer needs to do to have it. It is all quite abstract and dogmatic. It implies that if you believe these concepts, you are automatically righteous. Do you think you are righteous? Do you have to work to be righteous? If not, could this be why we see so many Christians act in unrighteous ways?