One of the Average Pearl posts that gets the most traffic to this day is a summary I made of Rhett and Link (Good Mythical Morning) a couple years ago. I’d listened to their podcast about why they’d “left the faith” or “deconstructed”—the more edgy way of saying the same thing—and I retold their history and what most likely led them down that particular path.
As a quick review, Rhett and Link are well-known worldwide as a comedy duo on Youtube. They do ridiculous but usually PG-rated music videos, short series, silly challenges, etc. My twelve year old begs to watch them eat things while blindfolded or debate the merits of Nerds versus Snickers.
We were introduced to these guys via Buck Denver, a Christian children’s DVD series created by the same guy who created Veggietales, Phil Vischer. Since then, they have abandoned Christianity and detailed it publicly on their podcast, Ear Biscuits.
When I check my website stats, it is a constant reminder that folks are searching the internet for Truth. They look at friendly guys like Rhett and Link and are curious over the details of their breakup with Jesus. I have a hunch most are genuinely seeking meaning in their own life but coming up dry.
It seems like along with a thirst to know more about “deconstruction” seekers tend to be on the hunt for real spiritual meat. If this original Christianity wasn’t the real thing, or at least not real enough for PG super YouTube stars like Rhett and Link—what, exactly, is real enough?
I’m a thirty-eight year old woman with half-grown kids. I’m younger than Rhett and Link, but definitely in the same cohort that grew up in the nineties with a serious Baptist influence. I know about burning bad CDs and purity culture and WWJD everything. I remember camps where teenagers were “called to the ministry” and promised, as a fourteen year old, to become preachers and missionaries. I know concerts and long van rides, confessions and crying and altar calls and everyone close your eyes and raise your hand if right now in this very moment if you were to die tonight, you don’t know where you would go.
The thing is, however sincere it felt at the time, it wasn’t the real deal. Emotionally-charged ultimatums have never been what Christianity was about. Following Jesus is a daily act of joy-inspired self-denial— for the joy before Him he endured the cross (Hebrews 12:2).
I recognized smoke and mirrors when I saw them as a teenager.
Many, many people did not.
It is all thanks in large part to uncool people, the ones who get the least credit—now this truly is the way of Christ, having no beauty or majesty to attract us to him, nothing in his appearance that we should desire him (Isaiah 53).
The unattractive, true Jesus-following examples in my case were my folks. Unattractive, because they were older, wiser, anti-idiocy advocates with an ultra practical lifestyle. Nothing in their appearance that I might want to emulate them because what teenager wants their peers to think of them as a forty year old?
My own parents (brilliant and loving and supremely attractive in hindsight) never bought into a youth group culture where we had to go along with twenty-something Brads who made us all draw straws to eat packets of mayonnaise and relish in an attempt to bond with other teenagers on Wednesday nights. They knew the battle was more real than that, and they made sure we were aware of it. There were no late night, soul-baring conversations at my house. We didn’t stay up until midnight and watch X-Files with cool parents. They were too tired for all of that and firmly believed it wasn’t in their job description to makes us happy or keep us entertained. Our family didn’t go to church to make friends; we went to worship and study the Bible, and if the church didn’t do those things, we went somewhere else.
My parents paid their bills on minimal funds. Mom wrote checks in the name of Jesus just like the Macedonian churches (2 Cor. 8), “giving out of their poverty” and “beyond their ability.”
Coincidentally, we didn’t have the money or influence to show up looking like groupies at youth group. It wasn’t intentional, it was just an unvoiced understanding that some of our values didn’t align with the church, or at least their methods of attracting youth. As a teenager and after years of not fitting in, you sort of start to give up.
My mom and dad fostered joy and an absolute reliance on God’s provision. Our close-knit family dynamics weren’t cultivated by vacations, sports teams, hobbies, or “making memories”—rather, the opposite. We were on the same team because we were all facing the same giants. We each took on the world and returned at night to the safety of a home where Jesus was alive and present.
Under these circumstances I think the inability to fake it helped me spot the real fakers and ultimately avoid becoming one.
It’s really no wonder Rhett, Link, and their like-minded friends have abandoned faith. It wasn’t real to begin with, and jerry-rigging Christianity to be more Saturday-night-live-ish is a headache. It’s far easier to abandon ship than keep up the carnival games under the pretense that this is how we win people to Jesus, guys.
But there are people out there still doing it, micro-celebrities and YouTubers and influencers who water down Jesus until he’s hardly Living Water. People who have become so tolerant of and comfortable in the world that they enjoy life in a gray zone, full of incongruities and misnomers—the very trap Paul warned believers not to fall into: you were called to freedom, only do not use your freedom as an opportunity for the flesh! (Gal.5:13)
Until very recently I listened regularly to Knox and Jamie, two southern-Baptist pop culture experts, on their podcasts, The Popcast and The Bible Binge. They get some things right. But they sow a lot of confusion by wading into today’s culture and cherry-picking what supports their liberal worldview. They want to be the type of Christian who can watch and recommend violent, explicit movies and also teach 1 Samuel while doubting the historical validity of the Bible.
(If everything is so up for debate, I’d wager they are on Rhett and Link’s path of “deconstruction.”)
I’ve seen other grown-ups my age who are trying to right the ship by steering modern Christianity in another direction—the direction of reformation. It is well-intentioned, and I applaud the energy that is directed. Lots of books are written and purchased, plenty of social media and podcasts. It’s the kind of Christianity you can get on board with, where parents want to be parents and the family is the focus. There’s quite a bit of banter over schooling and raising up the right people into the proper political positions. Unfortunately, it seems to be a faux-Puritanism that avoids any and all reality. Martin Luther also did some reforming and came to the realization that sitting on the bench wasn’t spreading his light very far. The facts are this—a dumpster-fire world exists: “in this world you will have trouble,” Jesus promised (John 16:33), and we’ve been put smack into the mess of it.
With purpose—we are put into this world with purpose. Just probably not the kind that sees believers changing the world through politics and Charlotte Mason.
Where do you lean? This is my question. Are you playing carnival games, having abandoned Christianity completely? Are you toying with grace as a ticket to do whatever you like, the Knox and Jamie-type teetering on the brink? Are you a Christian soldier, marching solidly in the opposite direction, hell-bent on keeping your nose clean but conveniently ignoring the mess we’re in? Are you a Puritan who won’t touch sinners with a ten-foot pole but preach your how-to-save-the-world convictions regularly on Twitter?
It would be nice to identify your type, at least so the younger generation can have a better shot figuring out how to construct a faith that won’t implode someday.
There are people still looking for real meat. They see hints of it in those nice guy types, pretty pictures of happy families on Instagram, news headlines that mention kindness, generosity or any hint of self-denial. These are all poor substitutes, but seekers like the flavor. They’re looking for more. Some are even hungry for a full meal.
Jesus told his disciples that He was the real meat.
“Whoever eats my flesh and drinks my blood remains in me, and I in them…the one who feeds on me will live because of me.” (John 6:56,57)
When He said this, many people left.
Many of his disciples said, “This is very hard to understand. Who can accept it?” (John 6:60)
Friends, people leave Christianity because either they never tasted the real meat or they did but the “worries of this life, the deceitful news of wealth and the desires for other things come in and choke the word” (Mark 4:19).
Following Jesus isn’t for the faint of heart. It’s not for people who are full, but people who are hungering and thirsting (Matt.5:6), hanging onto Jesus’s words. It’s a life of dying to self—putting off the old, putting on the new—but the death feels right because the former life was all gross little packets of mayo and relish. There’s no room in this life for worthless endeavors or even worthwhile self-focused endeavors. It is for those who want to be sober, want to straighten up, want to be delivered—but admit they can’t do it on their own. It isn’t for the righteous, but for the forgiven.
This is a faith that cannot be deconstructed because it’s firmly built on the Rock.
And they overcame him by the blood of the Lamb and by the word of their testimony, and they did not love their lives to the death.
Revelation 12:11