The world cancels. The kingdom restores. One ends stories. The other rewrites them.
One bad tweet. One old video. One out-of-context quote. In cancel culture, that’s all it takes. No trial. No path back. Just exile.
The Kingdom runs a different playbook. Jesus specialised in people the world had cancelled. If your company cancels people faster than it disciples them, you’re more Babylon than Bethlehem.
Justice and Mercy, Not Just Justice
We love justice when it’s someone else. We beg for mercy when it’s us. The gospel holds both.
“He has shown you, O mortal, what is good. And what does the Lord require of you? To act justly and to love mercy and to walk humbly with your God.” Micah 6:8
Cancel culture acts justly but hates mercy. It’s humble toward no one.
Kingdom culture tells the truth about sin and opens a door for repentance. You can confront without crushing.
Restore Gently
Paul gave the church a cancellation policy:
“Brothers and sisters, if someone is caught in a sin, you who live by the Spirit should restore that person gently. But watch yourselves, or you also may be tempted.” Galatians 6:1
Restore. Not ignore. Not destroy. Restore gently.
Your company needs that same policy. People will fail. Employees will post dumb things. Founders will make bad calls. Do you have a restoration track or just a termination letter?
Jesus Didn’t Cancel the Cancelled
The religious leaders dragged a woman caught in adultery to Jesus. Law said stone her. Jesus said:
“Let any one of you who is without sin be the first to throw a stone at her.” John 8:7
They all dropped their rocks. Then Jesus said, “Neither do I condemn you. Go now and leave your life of sin.”
Grace first. Truth second. Both, always. Cancel culture has no second sentence. The Kingdom does.
Field Notes for This Week
Write a restoration policy. One page: “If someone on our team messes up publicly, here’s our process.” Grace + truth + steps.
Drop one rock. Who are you still holding a past mistake against? Release them. You’re not the judge.
Create a safe confession culture. Can your team admit failure without fear of exile? If not, you don’t have a team. You have actors.
Closing Line
The world is watching how we treat our worst-day employees. Cancel them, and you preach a gospel with no grace. Restore them, and you preach the cross.
Your company’s cancellation policy is your theology in real time.
CTA
Does your company have a path for restoration after public failure?















