
A few taps on a screen allow us to challenge, correct, criticise, or condemn people we have never met. Social media has given everyone a voice, which theoretically is a wonderful thing. Yet it has also created a culture where outrage often travels faster than understanding.
Many online conversations follow a familiar pattern. Someone says something provocative. Others respond instantly. Positions harden. Nuance disappears. People become labels rather than neighbours. The goal subtly shifts from understanding to winning. Believe me, I’ve been there.
The tragedy is that we can become accustomed to speaking to people online in ways we would never speak to them face to face.
Imagine sitting across a table from someone over coffee. You can see their expressions. You hear the tone in their voice. You recognise that they are a real person with fears, hopes, struggles, and a story. Face-to-face conversations naturally encourage patience and empathy. Online interactions often remove those restraints.
The New Testament paints a very different picture of Christian character.
Paul urges believers to live “with all humility and gentleness, with patience, bearing with one another in love” (Ephesians 4:2). Gentleness is not weakness. It is strength under control. It is the ability to speak truth without hostility. It is conviction without contempt.
Jesus himself described his nature as “gentle and humble” (Matthew 11:29). Consider how remarkable that is. The One who possessed all authority in heaven and on earth did not bully, belittle, or humiliate people. He spoke firmly when necessary, but always with a purpose greater than winning an argument. He sought to woo and win people, not merely defeat them.
Perhaps one of the greatest tests of Christian maturity today is not only how we behave in church, but how we conduct ourselves online. Before posting, commenting, or responding, it may be worth asking a few simple questions:
- Would I say this if the person were sitting across from me?
- Does this response reflect the gentleness of Christ?
- Am I trying to understand, or merely to win?
The world does not need more outrage. There is already plenty of that. What it desperately needs is Christians whose words are marked by grace, truth, patience, and gentleness.
In an age of outrage, gentleness may be one of the most powerful forms of Christian witness. Not because it is weak, but because it reflects the heart of Jesus.
Join us this Sunday to discover a more Christ-centred way of living.
Julian Holdsworth
BSBC Pastor
