⏱️ Estimated Reading Time: 3 min read
Influence Is Not Faithfulness: Discernment in the Age of Celebrity Christianity
Show Summary
We live in a digital age where sermons become clips, theology is packaged for algorithms, and popularity is often mistaken for faithfulness. Social media gives us instant access to countless teachers, but access does not equal accountability, and influence does not equal truth.
In this episode of Contending for the Word Q&A, Dave Jenkins offers a biblical framework for evaluating influencers, celebrity pastors, and popular teachers. This is not a question about technology or gifted communication. It is a question about authority, faithfulness, accountability, and allegiance. Christ alone is our Head, and Scripture is our authority.
Audio Player
Video Player
Episode Notes
Today’s Question
Should Christians follow influencers and celebrity teachers, or does the Word of God warn us about attaching ourselves to personalities rather than the truth?
Anchor Texts
- 1 Corinthians 1:12-13
- Hebrews 13:7
- Galatians 1:10
- Acts 17:11
Central Truth
Christians must never substitute influence for faithfulness, popularity for truth, or platforms for biblical accountability. Christ alone is our Head and Scripture is our authority.
Four Biblical Principles for Discernment
1) Following personalities can distract from following Christ
The Corinthian church struggled with celebrity culture long before social media existed. They divided around favorite teachers and treated servants of Christ like banners of identity. Paul’s question is sobering: “Is Christ divided?”
When loyalty to a teacher outweighs loyalty to the Word, discernment weakens. Faithful teachers point beyond themselves to Christ. Unhealthy followings center on the personality.
2) Influence is not the same as spiritual authority
Scripture does not define authority by reach, charisma, or popularity. Biblical authority flows from faithfulness to God’s Word, godly character, sound doctrine, and accountability within the local church.
Online teachers may be helpful and even orthodox, but they are never a replacement for biblically qualified, accountable shepherds in the local church. Ask: Who knows this person? Who corrects this person? Who can remove this person if they fall into error?
3) Popularity often pressures teachers to soften truth
Paul’s words in Galatians 1:10 cut against influencer culture. Platforms grow when messages are softened. Algorithms reward emotional resonance, not doctrinal precision. Faithfulness may cost influence, but unfaithfulness often gains it. A servant of Christ cannot be driven by the approval of man.
4) Hold teachers loosely and Scripture tightly
The Bereans were called noble because they tested teaching by the Word of God. Healthy discernment listens carefully, examines biblically, refuses blind loyalty, and holds all teachers accountable to Scripture. No teacher is above correction. No platform grants immunity. No influence outweighs biblical truth.
Pastoral Application
- Measure teaching by the Word of God, not popularity.
- Resist forming your identity around personalities.
- Remain rooted in a faithful local church.
- Remember that Christ, not any influencer, is your Shepherd.
Conclusion
Christians may benefit from teachers online only insofar as those voices faithfully point to Christ, submit to the Word of God, and remain accountable to God’s people. Influence is not faithfulness. Platforms are not authority. Christ will not share His glory.
Call to Action
If this episode helped you think more biblically, please subscribe and share it with a friend.
For more please visit Contending for the Word Q&A page at Servants of Grace or at our YouTube.
Dave Jenkins is happily married to his wife, Sarah, and lives in beautiful Southern Oregon. He is a writer, editor, and speaker who loves Christ, His people, the Church, and sound theology.
Dave serves as the Executive Director of Servants of Grace Ministries and the Executive Editor of Theology for Life Magazine. He is the Host and Producer of the Equipping You in Grace Podcast and a contributor to and producer of Contending for the Word.
He is the author of The War of Worldviews: Truth, Lies, and the Battle for the Christian Mind (Theology for Life, 2026), Contentment: The Journey of a Lifetime (Theology for Life, 2024), The Word Matters: Defending Biblical Authority Against the Spirit of the Age (G3 Press, 2022), and The Word Explored: The Problem of Biblical Illiteracy and What To Do About It (House to House, 2021).
You can connect with Dave on Facebook, X (Twitter), Instagram, YouTube, or subscribe to his newsletter.
When he is not engaged in ministry work, Dave enjoys spending time with his wife, going to movies, sharing a meal at a favorite restaurant, or playing a round of golf with friends. He is also a voracious reader, particularly of Reformed theology and the Puritans, and is often found working through a stack of new books from a wide range of Christian publishers.
Dave earned his M.A.R. and M.Div. from Liberty Baptist Theological Seminary.




