Modern Christianity has embraced a
contradiction. We insist that faith is
deeply personal — yet fiercely resist allowing it to be public. We claim Jesus is Lord of all — yet confine
Him to the private sphere. We preach
transformation — yet recoil when that transformation disrupts public life. This version of Christianity feels polite. It feels safe. It is also foreign to Scripture.Christianity was never designed to be private.
Acts 17 gives us a clear picture of how the early Church understood its mission. Paul does not retreat into personal spirituality when he arrives in Athens. He does not restrict his message to religious gatherings or wait for a more culturally comfortable moment to speak. He reasons in the synagogues (Acts 17:17), engages strangers in the marketplace (Acts 17:17), stands before philosophers at the Areopagus (Acts 17:19-22), and addresses the civic and intellectual center of one of the most influential cities in the ancient world. He brings the Gospel into the center of public life because that is where people live, think, argue, and decide.
The accusation leveled against Paul and his companions was not that they believed privately — it was that they acted publicly: “These men who have turned the world upside down have come here also” (Acts 17:6). That charge was not an insult. It was an accurate description of what happens when the Gospel is proclaimed without apology. Christianity does not turn the world upside down because it hides.
The idea that religion belongs strictly in the private sphere is not biblical — it is modern and political. For roughly two centuries, Western culture has discipled Christians into silence with a simple and relentless rule: Keep your faith to yourself. Don’t bring Scripture into public debate. Don’t connect faith to politics, ethics, or law. Don’t let your convictions show where they might make someone uncomfortable.
But this rule was never given by Christ. Jesus declared Himself Lord not merely of hearts but of heaven and earth — “All authority in Heaven and on earth has been given to Me” (Matthew 28:18). That declaration is the foundation of the Great Commission, and it is unmistakably a public claim. A private lord is no lord at all. If Christ is King, His authority cannot be confined to the inner life without being denied altogether.
Christianity makes public claims. That God created the world (Genesis 1:1). That Christ rose bodily from the dead (1 Corinthians 15:3-4). That morality is objective and grounded in the character of God (Romans 2:14-15). That judgment is real and coming (Acts 17:31). That salvation is found in no other name (Acts 4:12). These claims cannot remain private because they describe reality itself — the reality in which every human being lives — whether they acknowledge it or not.
If Jesus truly rose from the dead, that fact applies to every person in every nation in every generation. It is not a preference. It is not a perspective. It is history. And if moral law is real, it governs societies, not just souls. Truth does not retreat politely into subjectivity simply because the culture wishes it would.
Public Christianity offends because it refuses to accept one of the modern world’s most cherished assumptions: That belief is optional and truth is negotiable. Paul’s message in Athens was not offensive because he was rude or abrasive — Luke’s account shows him engaging thoughtfully and even quoting their own poets (Acts 17:28). It was offensive because it challenged authority, identity, and autonomy. He confronted their idolatry (Acts 17:29-30), named their moral ignorance (Acts 17:30), dismantled their philosophical frameworks, and announced the inevitability of judgment by a risen Christ (Acts 17:31). And he did all of it publicly, in the open air, in the cultural heart of the Greek world.
This is why the early church was persecuted — not because it believed differently from its neighbors, but because it refused to stay quiet about what it believed. Nero did not throw Christians to lions for their private devotions. He threw them to lions because their public allegiance to another King threatened him.
Many Christians avoid public faith in the name of peace and civility. But silence does not create peace — it preserves illusion. When faith withdraws from public life, other worldviews do not. Every society will be shaped by some set of beliefs about God, man, morality, and purpose. The only question is whose beliefs will shape it. As the psalmist declared, “If the foundations are destroyed, what can the righteous do?” (Psalm 11:3). The righteous do not answer that question by leaving the foundations unguarded.
Christianity cannot abdicate public space without surrendering influence to falsehood. Silence does not make the Church more loving — it makes it irrelevant. And an irrelevant Church is not a safe Church. It is a disobedient one.
Christianity is public because Christ’s lordship is total. He does not reign only over church services, personal devotions, and private morality — He reigns over truth, law, culture, nations, and history itself. The prophet Isaiah declared that “the government shall be upon His shoulder” (Isaiah 9:6), and the apostle Paul affirmed that in Him “all things hold together” (Colossians 1:17) — all things, not some things. To proclaim Christ as Lord while denying His authority over public life is not humility — it is incoherence. It is attempting to honor a King while refusing to acknowledge His Kingdom.
The Reformers understood this. The Puritans who shaped early America understood it. The abolitionists who dragged the question of slavery into the public square understood it. They did not succeed by keeping their convictions to themselves. They succeeded because they refused to.
The church must decide whether it believes what it claims. If Christianity is true, it must be spoken — not only in sanctuaries but in marketplaces, courtrooms, classrooms, and legislatures. If Christ is Lord, He must be proclaimed over every domain that belongs to Him, which is every domain that exists. If the Gospel saves, it must be shared openly with people who are perishing in plain sight.
Acts 17 leaves no room for a silent Church. The faith that turned the world upside down did so because it refused to stay in its place, refused to accept the boundaries the culture drew around it, and refused to believe that the resurrection of Jesus Christ was anyone’s private business. It was the most public announcement in human history — and the Church that carries it has no right to whisper.
Chaplain (Colonel-Ret), U.S. Army
Pastor, Ft. Snelling Memorial Chapel