7 Commandments for Christians Online

I have had an online ministry for over 15 years. God has humbled me with the way He has chosen to use this influence He has given me. I try not to take it for granted.

One thing that has changed since I began ministering online … and it’s changed for all of us … is the rise of social media. Whether you believe it’s a good addition or not, we cannot deny its impact on culture or even on the church. Personally, I have chosen to use it for good as much as possible.

Still, some of the ways I see Christians respond on social media disturb me. I can post one thing … whether serious or not … and I do use humor intentionally as a part of my online presence … and it never amazes me how someone might respond.

I have referred to the practice as a slam and run. I just have to thank God at times for the delete option.

But, it’s an example of a bigger problem. Christians aren’t always behaving well online. What we’d never say offline, we have no problem saying online.

Seriously, this isn’t a personal plea. This is a Kingdom plea. Just as the world is watching how Christians respond in public, they are watching how we respond online. We must be careful then with what we post.

All of us will be misunderstood. But, we shouldn’t be blatantly offensive.

Here are 7 ways Christians should behave online:

1. No soapbox.

We are told to “do everything without arguing or complaining.” (Philippians 2:14) That doesn’t mean we can’t support causes we believe in, but they should be moral and biblical issues, not personal agendas.

2. No public bashing.

Unless you’ve practiced Matthew 18 principles, and even then it would be rare, don’t address your problems with others online. It’s not helpful and never promotes peace. (Romans 12:18, Hebrews 12:14)

3. No little jabs.

We shouldn’t say things about others that may be misinterpreted as a stab against them. Guard your online tongue. (James 3) I see this especially as a passive aggressive tactic. We feel “safe” evoking insults or cuts to another person online that we would never say to their face.