Home Outreach Leaders Articles for Outreach & Missions What Would Jesus Post? 6 Ways Jesus Would Engage on Social Media

What Would Jesus Post? 6 Ways Jesus Would Engage on Social Media

“But Frank. I’m too old to keep up with all the new technology. Frank, I don’t have anything to add.”

To be honest, those excuses aren’t good enough. Social media shapes culture, ignites movements and informs millions of people.

The world is on social media. Christians should be there. With a purpose.

Send someone an encouraging message. Tweet a Bible verse. Tell someone you are praying for them. Post a resource that helps others.

This is a stewardship issue. Yes, I believe God will hold us accountable for how we use this huge platform.

Are you stewarding your time on social media well? Are you using it for selfish reasons? Are you building your platform or using your platform to point people to God? Are you a social media glutton, scrolling through feeds but never adding anything?

Jesus would engage social media with a purpose. You should too.

2.) Jesus would follow, share and retweet a lot of people who aren’t Christians.

Jesus ate dinner with prostitutes and tax collectors. He was intentional about extending his circle beyond his 12 disciples. He came to call the sinners, not the righteous.

So, if Jesus were on social media, he would like, share and retweet comments that would leave many “righteous” Christians shaking their heads in disgust.

“Can you believe Jesus shared Barack Obama’s post? I thought all Christians were Republican?”

“Did you see where Jesus liked that gay couple’s post?”

“OMG?! Jill, come here. Jesus just retweeted … Rob Bell!! How can he be the son of God?”

I love Rob Bell, just for the record.

Here’s the deal. In my conversations with Christians about social media, many of them talk about “un-friending” someone who curses or drinks. Unfortunately, the perspective of many Christians on social media is strikingly similar to the one they have toward the world. If it’s evil or nasty, get it away.

Jesus came to affirm all people, not stroke the egos of the religious elite. He came to engage darkness, not run from it. How will Christians impact those who don’t know about Jesus if we “unfriend” someone every time they don’t act like a “churchy” Christian?

Maybe it’s time to reconsider who we engage on social media and why. I think Jesus would.

3.) Jesus would intentionally disengage from social media to engage with his Father. 

Jesus spent nights alone. He woke up early in the morning to engage with his Father. Let’s not assume Jesus would be any different with social media. He wouldn’t feel obligated to respond to every post or comment “promptly.” He wouldn’t allow his presence online to distract him from the presence of God.

You see, where you spend your time shapes how you respond to the world. Why did Jesus allow the Pharisees to spit in his face when he could have turned them into salt? He didn’t have anything to prove to them. His goal was to draw the world to himself, not show the Pharisees who their daddy was (literally). What you allow into your heart determines who you become.

If you’re more eager to check a social media status than spend time alone with God, there is a problem. If your first instinct is to reach for your phone after the alarm clock sounds, a red flag should go up. I will admit. This is an issue for me. And I plan to be more intentional about disengaging from social media.

Jesus wouldn’t allow social media to control him. He wouldn’t compare his life to others. You shouldn’t either.

4.) Jesus would use social media to complement personal relationships, not replace them.

Jesus would not allow social media to replace the messiness of face-to-face relationships. Jesus knew his mission depended on other people. The mission was huge. It required courage and faith. To prepare these men, he needed to be with them. He needed to build their trust. He had to develop intimacy with them. These are difficult to nurture online.

Social media presents a dangerous temptation, especially to a younger generation. The temptation is to believe a bunch of shallow relationships are more important than a few deep, meaningful ones.

Remember. Jesus didn’t rely on large crowds to spread his message. He relied on 12 men.

Are intimate relationships hard work? Is it easier to build friends online? Yes and yes. But God didn’t create you for shallow relationships. He created you to go deep with people. He designed you to share the burdens of other people.