Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Everyday Christianity: A Faith Free From The Accidental Pharisaism of Missional, Radical, Crazy and Other Superlatives
Everyday Christianity: A Faith Free From The Accidental Pharisaism of Missional, Radical, Crazy and Other Superlatives
Feb 1, 2026 3:38 AM

Every day matters. This is the very simple message of what it means to be made in the image and likeness of God and to live one’s life to the glory of God. You don’t need to be “missional.” You don’t even need to be “radical” (especially since monly means “very different from the norm”).

In fact, the Bible does not encourage superlative adjectives to describe following Christ at all. Adjectival superlatives tend to create new forms of legalism whereby the work and person of Christ is no longer sufficient to be in right relationship with God. The norm is not enough. Although those promoting various adjectives have no intention of doing harm, hearers often embrace the adjective as the basis of genuine faith instead of the language of Scripture.

Young Christian adults are torn in a sea of modern adjectives that tend to e shame-filled and often debilitating burdens. Larry Osborne warns about five munities that may be accidentally doing harm: (1) “Radical” Christians, (2) “Crazy” Christians, (3) “Missional” Christians, (4) “Gospel-Centered” Christians and (5) Revolutionary and Organic Christians. According to Osborne, each of these tribes has inadvertently created accidental pharisaism because if one does not live out one’s Christian life according to the norms and codes of their respective tribe one will be looked down upon. Moreover, for those within each tribe, it leaves them vulnerable to the arrogant narcissism that believes “our” tribe gets Christianity “right” while the others are substandard.

To be fair, the impulse that formed these es from a good place. They are all seeking to be faithful to what the Scriptures teach and are reacting to real problems that exist in the life of God’s people. The problem is that tribalism can cultivate a debilitating sense of shame and feelings of unworthiness that discourages God’s people from enjoying simple norms expressed in the dynamism of the ordinary.

As we look at the Bible and the Christian tradition there are at least seven good norms that give Christians freedom to embrace the Bible’s teaching of what it means to be bear God’s image and to walk away from the vulnerabilities of superlative Christianity.

(1) Christians are a people of love who live to glorify God. David Jones rightly summarizes that glorifying God is the controlling purpose of the Christian life (1 Cor. 10:31) that is motivated by loving God and loving neighbor (Matt 22:26-40) as Jesus teaches. The Christian life is consumed by love and, in love, his people glorify Him.

(2) Christians are a people of the Gospel. Theodore G. Stylianopoulos reminds us that the gospel is “the good news of God’s saving work in Christ and the Spirit by which the powers of sin and death are e and the life of the new creation is inaugurated, moving towards the eschatological glorification of the whole cosmos.” Because the entire creation has been drawn into the mutiny of the human race, (Rom 8:19-24) redemption must involve the entire creation, as Michael Williams righty argues. As such, everything matters in God’s redemptive plan. For example, every person matters to God because they bear his image, and the Holy Spirit uses the evangelicalism of God’s people to unite men and women to Christ. The rest of creation and culture also matter to God because, in the mystery of God’s redemptive plan, we play a role in seeing that the cosmos brings glory to God (1 Cor 10:31, Col 3:23).

(3) munity matters. One of the beautiful pictures that we get from reading the entire Biblical narrative is that God seeks out his people wherever they are, whether it be rural areas, small towns, big cities, urban, suburban, exurban neighborhoods, and everything in between. munity, then, matters to God. Every race and class matter to God. God cares about whatever neighborhood has been affected by the Fall and he wants his people there as agents of grace.

(4) Every relationship matters. Herman Bavinck observes that we were created munity. God did not want Adam to be alone so he created Eve but God also did not want Adam and Eve to be alone so missioned them to “be fruitful and multiply” (Gen 1:26-28) and establish family munity. So all of our relationships matter in everyday Christianity. Our families matter. Our parents and children matter. Our friends and coworkers matter. Every person e in contact with everyday matters because with every human encounter is an opportunity to glorify God by loving everyone properly as He intends since they bear his image.

(5) Every vocation matters. Gene Edward Veith reminds us that “vocation” is another word for “calling.” The doctrine of vocation means that God assigns us to a certain life—with its particular talents, tasks, responsibilities, and relationships—and then calls us to that assignment (1 Corinthians 7:17). Veith argues that “God himself works through human vocations in providential care as he governs the world. The purpose of every vocation, in all of the different spheres in which our multiple vocations occur—the family, the workplace, the culture, and the church—is to love and serve our neighbors.” This means that there are no little people in the Kingdom and no one has an insignificant career, job, or life. Being a bus driver is no less important than being a lawyer or a church planter in God’s economy. What matters is that God’s people are a love-driven people glorifying God wherever he places them.

(6) Virtues and values matter. David Jones reminds us that Christian love is embodied in certain virtues and values that glorify God. Therefore, our characters matter. We are to be a people of justice, mercy, and faithfulness (Matt 23:32). These are the weightier matters of the law and, taken prise the essence of all that God is calling us to do. Justice requires that we treat every human being according to what it means to be made in the image of God. The full revelation of God’s mercy brings with it the full responsibility to glorify God by living lives that reflect his mercy (Matt 5:7). Because God’s people are loved by a faithful God and depend entirely on his faithfulness they are disposed to practice the same in their own relationships and responsibilities. We see faithfulness worked out in exercising the virtues of prudence (James 1:5), courage (1 Cor 16:13-14), self-discipline (2 Tim 1:7), and humility (1 Peter 5:5).

(7) God’s plan matters. The Bible’s grand narrative can be summed up as this: creation, fall, redemption, and consummation. In this story, the Creator God has a plan, focused on the work and person of Christ, to redeem a world corrupted by the fall that will be finally consummated when Christ returns. In the mystery of God’s mission the saints of God are a privileged part of this redemptive story. So, as Gerard Van Groningen writes, our creational and renewed worldview (Rom 12:2) and all of the kingdom activities of God’s people–from raising families to evangelism to worship to recreation–are mutually interrelated and correlated in God’s redemptive plan focused on the Son. The wonder of life is not in the spectacular, but in the ordinary and the everyday (Matt 6:25-34). Therefore, the social, political, moral, spiritual, and economic contexts that contribute to human flourishing matter both to God and his people.

In the end, Christians don’t need adjectives, trending tribes, or superlatives that make them vulnerable to narcissism and shame to know what it “truly” means to follow Christ. The Bible’s language is sufficient. Instead, God’s people are invited to live lives free (Gal 5) from any from of direct or accidental legalism everyday. The good life, then, the one that God has always used in his redemptive mission, is the one that brings glory to God by loving him and loving neighbor.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Lewis on the Free Society
Last week Acton research fellow Jonathan Witt treated the topic of Tolkien and the free society at the June “Acton on Tap.” I was reminded of this theme when I finished reading C. S. Lewis’ novel, The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe (Ed. note: The lack of a serial, or so-called ma in that title bothers me.) to my son last night. There’s a beautiful passage towards the end that illustrates what Lewis thought good government looks like: These...
Acton Commentary: Unity or Unanimity at Reformed Council?
This week’s Acton Commentary from Jordan Ballor: Unity or Unanimity at Reformed Council? By Jordan Ballor Global es to Grand Rapids, Mich., this weekend in the form of the Uniting General Council of the World Communion of Reformed Churches (WCRC). Thousands of delegates, exhibitors, and volunteers will gather on the campus of Calvin College to mark the union of two Reformed ecumenical groups, the World Alliance of Reformed Churches (WARC) and the Reformed Ecumenical Council (REC). This new global ecumenical...
Acton University: Day One
Acton University 2010 is underway. This year, 450 students and faculty from 55 countries are gathered in Grand Rapids for a deep dive into the “free and virtuous society.” Attendees this year include seminarians and college students — groups that have studied at Acton conferences for two decades now — but also presidents of colleges, corporate executives, Christian missionaries, entrepreneurs, physicians, lawyers, business leaders, retired people and a few high school students. Acton also es 44 Protestant seminary professors who...
Review: William F. Buckley Jr.
Lee Edwards calls William F. Buckley Jr. “The St. Paul of the conservative movement.” No other 20th century figure made such a vast contribution to the intellectual force of political conservatism. He paved the way for the likes of Ronald Reagan and all of those political children of Reagan who credit the former president for bringing them into politics. He achieved what no other had done and that was his ability to bring traditional conservatives, libertarians, and munists together under...
Public Schools: Adult Employment Programs
I’ve long argued that school choice is the quintessential bipartisan cause, with boundless potential to transform American primary and secondary education. Yet, for various reasons (all of them bad), it has failed to live up to that potential—its significant successes in various places notwithstanding. One more anecdote to file away on this es from Rich Lowry at NRO: the travails of Eva Moskowitz in New York City. Favorite quote: It’s amazing what you can plish, she says, when you design...
Acton on Tap: Tolkien and the Free Society
A reminder that tonight’s Acton on Tap promises to be another good one. Jonathan Witt, writer and Research Fellow at the Acton Institute, will lead a discussion about J.R.R. Tolkien’s views on freedom, capitalism, socialism, and distributism, and he will look at some of the ways those views have been misrepresented. The event takes place from 6-8 p.m. at the Derby Station in East Grand Rapids, Mich. (Map it here.) No advance registration is required. The only cost is your...
Acton Lecture Series: Does Capitalism Destroy Culture?
Michael Miller at Acton Lecture Series In this new Acton Lecture Series audio, Acton’s Michael Miller discusses why many blame capitalism as the primary source of cultural disintegration. Miller, director of programs and Acton Media, asks: Does capitalism destroy culture or are other forces at work? Listen to the lecture online here: [audio: From Miller’s Jan. 21 Acton Commentary, “The End of Capitalism?” At least on equal par with a juridical framework as a factor in sustaining market systems is...
BP and the Big Spill
Ryan T. Anderson, editor of Public Discourse, weighs in on BP’s blowout in the Gulf of Mexico: What we’re seeing is an animus directed toward modern technology and industry, an unmodulated suspicion of the private sector’s motives, an unexamined belief that markets have failed, all coupled with an uncritical (and nearly unthinking) faith that, in the final analysis, only government and extensive regulation will save us from ourselves and protect Mother Nature. But the history of environmental progress tells a...
Acton Lecture Series: Alinsky for Dummies
Joseph Morris at Acton Lecture Series We’re posting the audio from Mr. Joseph Morris’ excellent May 6 Acton Lecture Series presentation, Alinsky for Dummies: His Persistent Influence and Its Meaning for American Society and Politics. As Lord Acton warned that power corrupts, Saul Alinsky — the father of modern munity organizing” — rejoiced that corruption empowers. Saul Alinsky As Morris pointed out, decades after Alinsky’s death his ideas and teaching continue to shape the American political and social landscape. Barack...
Acton Commentary — Europe: The Unjust Continent
This week’s Acton Commentary from Research Director Samuel Gregg. +++++++++ Europe: The Unjust Continent By Samuel Gregg In recent months, the European social model has been under the spotlight following Greece’s economic meltdown and the fumbling efforts of European politicians to prop up other tottering European economies. To an unprecedented extent, the post-war European model’s sustainability is being questioned. Even the New York Times has conceded something is fundamentally wrong with the model they and the American Left have been...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved