4 Reasons Jesus was Millennial

Jesus As A Millennial

1) Jesus avoided labels.

In fact, a large part of his ministry was breaking down preconceived titles, trying to bring about a world where there would be no differentiation between Jew or Gentile. He promoted the idea that loving God trumped racial, ethnic, social, religious and political identities.

This doesn’t mean we’re simply “all the same underneath.”  Jesus recognized that people had distinct differences, on both a personal and communal level. He embraced unique cultures and traditions and utilized them to reveal His glory, recognizing and valuing diverse identities while simultaneously building a Christ-centered community, where customs and traditions were integrated into an all-inclusive relationship.

2) Jesus Avoided Theological Certainty.

Within the New Testament, the people Jesus seemingly condemns the strongest—and most frequently—are the ones who have the greatest amount of theological certainty—the Pharisees.

The spiritual leaders, the most prestigious religious institutions of the their day, the ones who were the most confident, the most sure and vocal about theology, were flat out wrong—and Jesus called them out on it. This should be a warning to us all.

Related: The Future of Evangelicalism in the Millennial Generation – by Brandan Robertson

Much of Jesus’ teaching was confusing, complex, and often created more questions than answers, and that’s OK. Even His own disciples were constantly misinterpreting His words, and they were continually asking Jesus for clarification and understanding. Knowledge and wisdom were not the disciple’s strong suit, but they followed Jesus despite their fears, doubts, defeats and failures—and so should we.

3) Jesus Was Groundbreaking. 

Jesus broke all of the rules and thought WAY outside the box. He associated with tax collectors, zealots, prostitutes, Samaritans, and people who were considered “unclean” and social outcasts. He challenged social norms and turned the church of His day upside down.

Jesus was considered outrageous, sacrilegious, absurd, weird, shocking and even sinful. This begs the question: How would Jesus shock us today?

Brave New Films

It’s hard to break out of our comfort zones, and every generation has their own spiritual convictions that they assume are right, holy and true. But questioning our beliefs isn’t wrong, and as the Bible shows us, following God’s will is often countercultural, even to the most devout followers who think they have everything figured out. Do we have everything figured out?

Maybe it’s time to rethink everything—just like the disciples eventually learned to do.

4) Jesus Believed Love Trumped Theology.

Over and over again, Jesus repeatedly reveals the redeeming power of love. Within a culture and world that was steeply embedded with a strong concept of what was considered right and wrong, Jesus throws everything off by promoting love over rules, forgiveness over revenge, humility over power, and redemption over bondage.

Love saved murderers, thieves, the sick, the hurting, the hateful, the violent, the lost, and everyone Jesus came across. Jesus’ love overcame religious traditions, societal expectations, national laws, cultural fears, and everything else that stood in the way.

Also by Stephen: Christianity’s 5 Most Popular Scapegoats

What is keeping us from showing Christ-like love to others? Are our political leanings, denominational ties, theological beliefs, social networks, job expectations, apathy, pride, ignorance, or hate preventing us from loving?

Christians, especially around the blogosphere, are infatuated with ‘Millennial Christianity,’ but in many ways ‘Millennial Christianity’ is simply a modern-day attempt at reconstructing the example of Christ. This radical, new, and “modern” version of faith is actually, well, old.

This is why people from all walks of life, of all ages, from various cultures and demographics, are identifying with ‘Millennial Christianity.’ Because when they see it, they see Christ.




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About the Author

Stephen Mattson

Stephen MattsonStephen Mattson has written for Relevant, Sojourners, and The Burnside Writer's Collective. He graduated from the Moody Bible Institute and is currently on staff at University of Northwestern – St. Paul. Follow him on Twitter @mikta and on his personal blog stephenjmattson.comView all posts by Stephen Mattson →

  • wjgreen314

    Don’t disagree with anything you said. However, Harvard Professor Dr. Helmut Koester correctly stated that the ONLY unique thing Jesus TAUGHT in 1st-century Palestine was,

    “Love your enemies.”

    Virtually everything else He taught had been taught before but of course, no one else was crucified for our sins, died and was buried; and then on the third day rose again, and shortly thereafter ascended to the Father. That was earth-shattering.

    • Tom P

      I was thinking about “love your enemies” recently. I was looking at Proverbs and noticed than in Proverbs 24:17 we’re told “Do not gloat when your enemy falls;
      when they stumble, do not let your heart rejoice” and in Proverbs 25:21-22 “If your enemy is hungry, give him food to eat;
      if he is thirsty, give him water to drink.
      22 In doing this, you will heap burning coals on his head,
      and the Lord will reward you.”

      Now if love is something you do rather than something you feel then feeding your enemy might be seen as loving him? Or at the very least not hating him. So Jesus command to love our enemies seems to have at least a beginning in the Old Testament.
      Also, I find it interesting that the verses from Proverb 25 are quoted by Paul in Romans 12 when describing how to live as a follower of Christ despite heavy persecution:

      “Bless those who persecute you; bless and do not curse. Rejoice with those who rejoice; mourn with those who mourn. Live in harmony with one another. Do not be proud, but be willing to associate with people of low position.Do not be conceited.

      Do not repay anyone evil for evil. Be careful to do what is right in the eyes of everyone. If it is possible, as far as it depends on you, live at peace with everyone. Do not take revenge, my dear friends, but leave room for God’s wrath, for it is written: “It is mine to avenge; I will repay,” says the Lord. On the contrary:
      “If your enemy is hungry, feed him; if he is thirsty, give him something to drink.
      In doing this, you will heap burning coals on his head.”
      Do not be overcome by evil, but overcome evil with good.”

      The more I read the Bible the more interconnected and consistent the message appears to be. Wonderful.

    • peter

      Yeah love your enemies” saying that weas bound to get him killed in the end.!

  • Frank

    Jesus defined things clearly. He defined sin clearly. He defined love clearly.

    Everything Jesus did was rooted in theology. He was clear and unyielding about doctrine.

    Jesus broke no rules. Every letter of the law he upheld.

    Jesus defined love as obedience. All love that’s not grounded in theology is not love at all.

    Jesus most certainly was not a millennial. He didn’t value social justice over righteousness and spiritual justice. He never felt entitled to anything.

  • jonathan starkey

    I’m tired of making these distinctions. Millenial’s aren’t “more” or “new” or “better.” If that is the distinctions to be made in order for people to feel good about themselves. Then they are rooted in the wrong vine. Jesus must be made famous not our NEW snappy beliefs.

    They are not more like Jesus than the previous generation, and they are not accomplishing anything more than has already been accomplished in Christ. He is the one who loved the world and we are in Him. He is the one who brought the Church together and we are in Him. He is the One who radically loved and we are in Him.

    • jonathan starkey

      Do not elevate a people. Elevate Jesus. If anything good is happening he must get all the Glory.

      • jonathan starkey

        Emphasis is not on distinct differences, the emphasis is about One Spirit in Christ.

        Many differences, but One Spirit. Bear with One another In Christ. He is the Head and we are the body.

    • Frank

      The arrogance of youth. Real maturity solves that problem. Let’s make sure we are contributing to the maturation not contributing to preventing it.

      • jonathan starkey

        I can’t even be mature. I only have One Hope in this world. My maturity is like @!!!@.

    • SamHamilton

      Well said Jonathan.

    • Geoff Ramsay

      So I read this differently. I read it as: “What’s the best way to talk to Millenials (who relate to these four concepts) about Jesus?”

      You guys are too quick to condemn.

  • SamHamilton

    Hmmm… Is there even such a thing as “Millennial Christianity” to begin with? I mean, are all Millennial Christians really the same? And are their beliefs really that much different than older Christians? If you asked “Does love trump theology?” to Christians as a whole, would the answer be different based on the generation? This post sounds very self-congradulatory…”Look at us! We’re like Jesus!”

    Also, did Jesus really condemn the Pharisees for their “theological certainty” or did He condemn them for their actions and how they treated “sinners?”

    • Digger

      Absolutely correct. Jesus never condemned them for their certainty. The author is making a false, “because of A, then B” logic argument. Because of the Pharisees certainty, Jesus held them to a higher standard. In fact, Jesus usually affirmed their beliefs, and then, as you said, critiqued how they put them in to practice. Jesus DID rebuke the Saducees, who did not believe in resurrection. “He is not the God of the dead, but of the Living. You are badly mistaken.”

  • jonathan starkey

    On theological Certainty Jesus made many statements. I am the true vine. I am the resurrection and the life. No one may come to the father except through me.

    If you don’t have theological certainty in Christ then you are probably a Universalist.

    I have a theological certainty. That in 30AD Jesus died for the world. That God loved everyone.

    If you have doubt in Jesus, then you’re in crisis. Do you believe He did it? Do you believe he died was buried and baptized in your place?

    I don’t doubt, I have certainty in Christ. But I don’t believe in my own ability to be certain. I believe He did and I’m in Him.

    Where is the doubt?

    • Geoff Ramsay

      I think certainty in Christ is perfect.
      We just need a healthy skepticism of all the systems of theology we build on top of that:
      Calvinism, Armenian, Ritual approach to baptism, creationism, significance of communion, legalism about homosexuality…

  • otroteirra

    Thank you Red Letter Christians and Stephen Mattson for standing up to the modern-day Sanhedrin no matter how politically incorrect it is to do so. The poweful and self righteous will always complain when you stand for those who know love.

    • Frank

      It really quite shocking how in the dark you are. Wow!

      • 22044

        Yeah, sharing or explaining the historic, orthodox Christian faith is not “the modern-day Sanhedrin.”

        • Frank

          It really has becomes words used by people who don’t understand what they mean. If anything “progressive Christians” are more like the Sanhedrin than “conservative Christians.” Lets pray they realize it before its too late.

          • John

            I think we can all be overly sure that God is on our side as we line up to tell other Christians that they’re wrong. I think this is tricky ground, and it’s not necessarily helpful to say which group is more right. I suspect both sides are wrong quite a lot, and both sides are right quite a lot.

            I don’t mean that to sound wishy washy, but I think we can all learn from each other, and we shouldn’t be closed to that.

          • otrotierra

            John, I replied to Frank above and explained that the original post on this thread is fraudulent. This is a sad, deceptive attempt to silence and derail dialogue. I have already reported this fraudulent account to DISQUS.

          • Frank

            I agree but misrepresentations must always be called out. Not necessarily to admonish the poster but to provide clarity for all those reading.

      • otrotierra

        The post above is from a fraudulent “copy account,” and he’s already been reported to DISQUS. Click on the icon to confirm that it’s a recent account with only a single post—-this is an obvious trolling attempt to silence. His fraudulence and deception is furthermore evidenced by the altered spelling of my username (otrotEIrra).

        My, what a curious web we weave when attempting to deceive.

        • John

          You know, I’ve been thinking, otrotierra sure is saying the same thing over and over again. Thanks for the clarification. :)

        • Frank

          Wow! They lengths that people will go to.

          My apologies to you!

          • otrotierra

            No worries, Frank. That slight spelling change is difficult to spot and intended to deceive. Let’s hope DISQUS implements a solution to this problem soon.

          • Lets shoot for being OFF DISQUS soon. Probably tied to a real FB Account. :)

          • otrotierra

            Thanks Jimmy. Yes, RedLetterChristians has outgrown DISQUS and is ready for a new way to promote dialogue and exchange. Great to have you back!

          • 22044

            Looking at the post a bit more carefully, I agree, it’s a fake. Hopefully it won’t happen again.

    • jonathan starkey

      If you’re standing against the modern day Sanhedrin, you’re probably doing it in the flesh. Stand in Christ, the only One who could perfectly address the religious spirit.

      Do we think we can somehow even stand against something with the right motivation? I can do nothing a part from Christ.

      There were 2 men a Pharisee and a Tax collector. The Pharisee said thank you God for not making me like those in the modern day Sanhedrin and that I’m full of right belief, and there was a right wing fundamentalist pounding on his chest with tears in his eyes saying Son of God have mercy on me a sinner. Which one did God forgive?

      Bear, with one another in love, and just a Jesus forgave you forgive.

  • Drew

    This is the most dangerous, heretical, and God-dishonoring belief out there today that is representative of everything that is wrong with liberal Christianity – that theology simply doesn’t matter.

    Love is all that matters.
    Love is whatever I say it is, since theology does not matter.
    Therefore, I do whatever I want, because it is love, because I say it is.

    This is how Romans 1 societies form – exchanging truth, such as the truth that theology matters, for lies.

    Let’s stop changing Christianity so it is palatable to everyone. The message of the cross is foolishness to those that are perishing. Truth is important; theology is important. Love does not mean we diminish theology.

    • Geoff Ramsay

      The church in North America is dying. If we refuse to understand the fruits of stagnation, then these institutions have just become valleys of dry bones.

  • bluecenterlight

    The traditions of men gradually creep their way into the church, so gradually, so deceitfully that they become righteousness to most. Then God comes along inspires prophets, shakes everything to the foundation, bringing everything back to basics, moves some to repentance, causes some to cling to the past. Then the new move creates it’s own traditions, becomes self righteous, and God has to shake things all over again. And the world keeps on spinning.

    • Frank

      Yes. Its “progressives” time to be shaken. The good news is that we are learning and less and less time its taking each time to reorient things.

      • bluecenterlight

        My point is that everyone thinks they are on God’s side. The Puritans thought they were doing the Lords work, the Catholics opposing the Protestant reformation thought they were doing the Lords work, everyone thinks they speak for God. I think we will probably find out that those who truly understand God were those who transcended all the silly controversies of their day and quietly went about being the hands and feet of Jesus. The world is full of people who will tell you what it looks like to follow Jesus, just few people actually do it.

        • Frank

          Yes I get the point. And now its “progressives” that mistakenly think they got it right when its so obvious they do not.

          • Geoff Ramsay

            Words like “obvious” are problematic.
            Situations where the answers are “Obvious” are ones in which we forget to do the work of thoughtful consideration.

        • DrewTwoFish

          Another Disqus email notification brought me back here…unfortunately. I must remember to unsubscribe to your discussions. You seem to be a thoughtful, humble chap with more than a little heart but it seems I always find you engaged in discussions with loveless, self important, myopic bores.

          • Frank

            You appeared right on cue! Well done!

          • DrewTwoFish

            I can’t seem to fine tune the Disqus settings to my liking. Please don’t talk to me. I promise to stay out of this discussion. Seriously.

          • Frank

            Oh please. You take the time to try and insult me and whine when I respond. Grow up.

          • DrewTwoFish

            You’re right. I was insulting. I apologize. I do need to say out of these discussions. And what are either of us accomplishing, really? We’re both firmly entrenched in our positions. Chances are we both just like hearing ourselves talk and getting stroked by those who think the same way we do.

            I will say that it does push my buttons when I see those who think differently labeled as “progressives” (emphasis on the quotation marks). You may not mean to be dismissive or condescending (online text does a lousy job of conveying tone) but it comes across that way. And you seem to absolutely certain of everything, Frank.

            Here’s what it feels like from where I sit: the paradigm that I based my life on, that I looked for answers from seems to have come up seriously wanting in the face of honest questions, soul searching and life experiences. I started at a place probably not all that far from where you are at, believe it or not.

            Adherence to a conservative Christian theology has impacted my life significantly. There has been some good but there has also been tremendous loss and pain. So these discussions are not merely academic where I’m concerned. I’m hurt and angry. That doesn’t give me license to be a jerk of course.

            I don’t think I’ll ever change your mind. But I do hope that “liberals” and “progressives” aren’t too easily written off as rebellious and heretical. That’s too easy. And I’ll try to do you the same courtesy.

            Or just shut up, stay out of forums like this and take up knitting.

          • DrewTwoFish

            Actually, I don’t think I have the patience to take up knitting.

          • bluecenterlight

            Welcome to the internet 😉

  • Snapdragon

    I am new to RLC, and I have seen more of these relativistic, post-modern articles here than I was expecting. I fail to see how a post claiming “Jesus avoided theological certainty” passes muster with a site with such a good reputation. Not only is this assertion absurd, it is deceitful and self-congratulatory. Any ideas on other sites with higher content standards?

    • 22044

      The Gospel Coalition
      Challies dot com

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