Cancel Culture is Conceptual Genocide.
- Cole Metcalfe
- Mar 3, 2022
- 2 min read

To be afraid of opposing ideas/beliefs is to be unsure of your own. As a Christian, I believe there is nothing more damaging to a person and the world at large than to be out of relationship with the holy, sovereign, loving God. However, I welcome other ideas and new perspectives. Not because I believe they’re valid or that truth is relative, but simply because I’ve found that their shortcomings prove the Bible to be true.
If what you believe is true, then false narratives will only prove it so.
The best way to know if a $100 bill is fake is to know the fine details of a true one.
Study. Believe what you believe because of evidence, not because people tell you to. Then, be open to hearing new ideas and bold in sharing what you’ve found to be true.
Killing ideas only makes the remaining believers more bold and the onlookers more skeptical of those doing the killing. (*See the history of Christianity for proof*)
Don’t cancel when you can coach. Don’t erase when you can educate. But before coaching and before educating, first determine what is true and why.
Don't cancel when you can coach. Don't erase when you can educate.
Along the way, you may learn that you were the one who was misinformed. In that moment, embrace the truth and move forward on your journey.
Truth must be above all... and that is why I proclaim Jesus— I have found it true that
“He is the way, the TRUTH, and the life.”
- John 14:6
I do not seek to cancel the cancel culture, but to educate toward what I have found to be true. To prove via its own shortcomings that it is a false narrative to live by; one that will lead to more pain and hurt in the future. I pray that this will play a small role in spreading truth.



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