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
Dec 15, 2025 1:29 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
The Fat Tax and Government’s Morality Substitute
Public health officials estimate that Americans consume an average of 40 gallons of sugary soda per person per year. But now thanks to the tireless efforts of Michael Bloomberg, NYC’s Mayor and Nanny-in-Chief, the average New Yorker will now only consume 39.2 gallons of sugary soda per person per year.* On Thursday, New York City passed the first U.S. ban of oversized sugary drinks as a way of curbing the obesity epidemic. Violators of the ban face a $200 fine...
ResearchLinks – 09.14.12
Working Paper: “Top Ten Myths of Medicare” Richard L. Kaplan (University of Illinois College of Law),Illinois Program in Law, Behavior and Social Science Paper No. LBSS13-02; Illinois Public Law Research Paper No. 11-28; SSRN, Working Paper Series (PDF) In the context of changing demographics, the increasing cost of health care services, and continuing federal budgetary pressures, Medicare has e one of the most controversial federal programs. To facilitate an informed debate about the future of this important public initiative, this...
Playing at Poverty
Yesterday at , a leading social media site, an article entitled ‘5 Fun Games With a Higher Purpose‘ was featured. The article noted that these types of games attempted bine fun with some sort of societal impact. One game, Darfur is Dying, allows the player to simulate life in a Darfuri refugee camp for a family. If one family member leaves to get water and is killed or captured, the player must choose the next family member to send out....
Leaves and Fruit: The Spiritual Value of Manual Labor
In his Acton Commentary today, Jordan Ballor writes, All work has a spiritual dimension because the human person who works in whatever capacity does so as an image-bearer of God. “While the classic Greek mind tended to scorn work with the hands,” write Berghoef and DeKoster, “the Bible suggests that something about it structures the soul.” If we derogate work with the hands, manual and skilled labor, in this way, we separate what God has put together and create a...
Acton Institute’s New Building Has Room To Grow
The Acton Institute is anticipating a move to our new building in the heart of Grand Rapids, MI. With the generous funding of donors, the 24,000 square feet of space will allow us to serve an even munity. Acton’s Executive Director, Kris Mauren, says the $6 million renovation allows the Institute to remain in its Grand Rapids home, while raising its international profile. “This is a great place to be and it doesn’t stop us from being the international organization...
Speed Cameras and Moral Culture
In an odd story from Maryland, Ari Ashe of WTOP reports, Many people find speed cameras frustrating, and some in the region are taking their rage out on the cameras themselves. But now there’s a new solution: cameras to watch the cameras. Yes, you read that correctly. Prince George’s County, Maryland, has a problem with people vandalizing their speed cameras and their solution is to install additional cameras to watch them. In response, Michael Rosenwald says what many others surely...
Retailer Hobby Lobby Sues Over HHS Mandate
Yesterday, privately-owned Hobby Lobby, a popular craft store chain, filed suit opposing the HHS mandate which forces employers to provide “preventive care” measures such as birth-control and “morning after” pills. “By being required to make a choice between sacrificing our faith or paying millions of dollars in fines, we essentially must choose which poison pill to swallow,” said David Green, Hobby Lobby CEO and founder. “We simply cannot abandon our religious beliefs ply with this mandate.” Hobby Lobby is the...
Interrupt Me, Please?
Today’s blog post is from one of our faithful On Call in munity members, Sheila Seiler Lagrand, Ph.D. who earned her doctorate in anthropology at the University of California, Los Angeles. As an undergraduate at the University of California, San Diego, she studied anthropology and literature with an emphasis in writing. Currently she blogs at Godspotting with Sheila and contributes regularly at BibleDude.net. Sheila is a member of the The High Calling. Her work has appeared in Chicken Soup for...
Of Ministers and Muck Farmers
In today’s Acton Commentary, “Mike Rowe and Manual Labor,” I examine the real contribution from a star of the small screen to today’s political conversation. Mike Rowe, featured on shows like The Deadliest Catch and Dirty Jobs, has written letters to both President Obama and Mitt Romney focusing attention on the skills gap and our nation’s dysfunctional attitudes towards work, particularly hard labor, like skilled trades and services. In his letter to Romney, Rowe writes that “Pig farmers, electricians, plumbers,...
Nuns vs. Managers in the Proxy Wars
For many nuns in the U.S. April is a busy month. Not only do they have the liturgical season of Easter but they have the proxy season of corporate governance. The proxy season is the time when panies hold their annual shareholder meetings. During these meeting any shareholders who own more than $2,000 in stock or 1% of pany can mend pany take a specific course of action or institute a policy change for the betterment of pany. As the...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved