
Why This Series Exists
We live in a time when Christianity is louder than it has been in decades—
but also more confused.
Faith is everywhere:
in politics
in slogans
in social media
in movements and campaigns
Yet something feels off.
Jesus is mentioned often,
but His Gospel is strangely absent.
This series—The Gospel vs. Culture—exists because we’ve reached a moment where Christians must slow down and ask an uncomfortable but necessary question:
Are we following Jesus Christ—
or are we using Him to defend a culture we’re afraid of losing?
Culture is powerful.
It shapes how we think, what we fear, who we blame, and what we protect.
The Gospel is more powerful.
It exposes fear, dismantles pride, heals enemies, and transforms hearts.
But the two do not operate the same way.
Culture seeks control
The Gospel seeks repentance
Culture wins through power
The Gospel wins through the cross
Culture demands allegiance
The Gospel invites surrender
When culture becomes primary—even under Christian language—the Gospel is quietly pushed aside.
This series is not written to attack people, ministries, or organizations.
It is not written to shame Christians who care deeply about their country.
It is not written to score points or stir outrage.
It is written to call the Church back to clarity.
Because loving Jesus means being willing to ask:
Have we placed anything above Him?
Have we confused political victory with spiritual fruit?
Have we aimed our anger at people instead of the true enemy?
Have we traded free obedience for fear-based compliance?
These are discipleship questions—not political ones.
Super Bowl week revealed something important.
When given one of the largest platforms imaginable, many Christian-adjacent movements chose to emphasize:
national identity
cultural resistance
political alignment
while the clear, unmistakable Gospel took a back seat.
That moment became a mirror.
Not just for organizations—but for the Church as a whole.
Throughout The Gospel vs. Culture, we will wrestle with Scripture honestly:
“You cannot serve two masters.”
“My Kingdom is not of this world.”
“You will know them by their fruits.”
“Do not be afraid.”
We will ask whether fear, anger, and dominance look anything like Jesus—and whether winning cultural battles can ever replace winning souls.
Let me be clear:
This series does not say Christians shouldn’t vote or care about laws
It does not say America is evil
It does not deny that culture matters
What it does say is this:
Jesus Christ must never be secondary—
not to politics,
not to nationalism,
not to culture,
not to fear.
When Christ is first, everything else finds its proper place.
When He is not, even good intentions become dangerous.
Scripture does not identify our enemy as:
immigrants
liberals
conservatives
minorities
“the other side”
It names the enemy as:
the deceiver
the destroyer
the father of lies
When Christians forget this, we end up fighting people Christ died for—while the real enemy works undisturbed.
The goal is not agreement.
The goal is faithfulness.
To help Christians:
put Christ back at the center
distinguish Gospel truth from cultural fear
love without compromise
speak truth without cruelty
resist being discipled by outrage
And ultimately, to ask:
If someone watched my faith in action,
would they be drawn to Jesus—
or to a side?
Part 1 — The Moment and the Missed Opportunity
Examining Super Bowl week and what was lost when culture overshadowed the Gospel.
Part 2 — Christ First vs. Culture First
A biblical examination of divided allegiance, fear-based faith, and spiritual fruit.
Part 3 — What It Could Have Been
A Christ-centered vision for what true Gospel witness looks like in a divided world.
If you’re tired of:
Christianity being reduced to slogans
Jesus being used instead of followed
fear replacing faith
power replacing the cross
Then this series is for you.
Not to condemn.
Not to divide.
But to remember who we belong to.
“Seek first the Kingdom of God.”
Everything else must follow—or fall away.
Super Bowl week is more than a game now—it’s a cultural event. It becomes a stage where music, identity, messaging, and values are broadcast to the nation at once. This year, Super Bowl LX (February 8, 2026) at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara was no different. Alongside the official halftime performance headlined by Bad Bunny,…
You Cannot Serve Two Masters In Part 1, I talked about the missed opportunity during Super Bowl week—how a massive platform that could have lifted up Jesus Christ instead leaned heavily into cultural and national identity. Now I want to go deeper—not to argue politics, but to ask a discipleship question: Are we being shaped…
If Christ Had Truly Been the Halftime Headliner In Part 1, I talked about the missed opportunity.In Part 2, I laid out the heart conflict—Christ First vs. Culture First. Now I want to do something different. Instead of only pointing out what went wrong, I want to ask a holy, hope-filled question: What if Jesus…
Authentic conversations about real issues.
© 2026 Real Talk with Vince