
Modern life feels like a spinning wheel.
Everyone’s shouting.
Everyone’s certain.
Everyone’s choosing sides.
And the faster we spin, the farther apart we fly.
Physics has words for this.
Centripetal is the force that pulls inward toward the center. It’s what keeps planets in orbit. It’s what holds motion together instead of letting it spiral into chaos.
Centrifugal describes what feels like a force pushing outward flinging things away from the center when rotation speeds up.
That’s us.
We’ve built a centrifugal culture.
The middle has collapsed. Nuance is suspect. Listening is weakness. If you don’t fully agree, you must secretly be dangerous. Every issue becomes total war. Every disagreement becomes proof of moral failure.
So we retreat to our corners – political, generational, theological, racial, cultural – and spin faster inside echo chambers that reward outrage and punish curiosity.
The tragedy?
The more convinced we are that everyone else is the enemy, the less human they become to us.
And once someone stops being human…
it becomes easy to dismiss them.
mock them.
cancel them.
ignore them.
Not because we’re cruel.
But because centrifugal systems train us to be.
What Gets Lost When the Center Disappears
When there’s no center, there’s no shared gravity.
No common story.
No agreed dignity.
No sacred worth attached simply to being a person.
Everything turns into tribes and algorithms and hot takes.
We stop asking, “Why does this person believe what they believe?” and start asking, “How do I defeat them?”
We stop being neighbors and become opponents.
We stop being curious and become suspicious.
We stop being slow to speak and quick to listen and start being fast to post and quicker to judge.
The middle – the messy, relational, human middle – is where conversations happen.
It’s where tension gets held instead of weaponized.
It’s where people stay in the room long enough to understand each other.
Remove the middle, and all that’s left are walls.
Jesus Was a Centripetal Force
Here’s where Christians have to pause.
Because Jesus didn’t operate centrifugally.
He didn’t sort people into pure and impure piles and shout from a distance. He moved toward people. People like tax collectors, zealots, prostitutes, Pharisees, skeptics, soldiers, sinners, all of them were saints-in-progress.
He pulled enemies to the same table.
Literally.
Jesus created gravitational centers around meals, conversations, healings, stories/ These were places where people who shouldn’t have even shared oxygen suddenly broke bread.
He didn’t flatten truth either.
But He wrapped truth in proximity.
He didn’t abandon conviction.
But He simply refused to abandon people.
That’s centripetal grace.
A force strong enough to hold wildly different lives in the same orbit.
Before We Blame “The World”…
Let’s be honest.
The church isn’t immune.
We can spin just as fast as the culture around us.
We curate our tribes.
We weaponize our pet Bible verses.
We speak about people far more than we speak to them or with them.
We confuse winning arguments with loving neighbors.
Sometimes we baptize outrage and call it faithfulness.
Sometimes we substitute certainty for humility.
Sometimes we forget that the gospel didn’t enter the world as a megaphone…
but as a Person.
Grace in skin.
Truth with a pulse.
What If We Slowed the Spin?
What if we refused to let every disagreement turn into exile?
What if we re-learned how to stay in conversation instead of fleeing to caricatures?
What if we practiced holy stubbornness. The kind that keeps loving, listening, and showing up when it would be easier to block, mute, or write off?
Centripetal people don’t deny differences.
They just refuse to let differences become the only thing that matters.
They believe the center can hold.
They trust that love is stronger than algorithms.
They insist that dignity comes before debate.
The Quiet Revolution of Staying
In a centrifugal age, staying is radical.
Staying in relationships.
Staying in churches.
Staying in conversations.
Staying curious.
Staying human.
Pulling inward toward shared humanity.
Toward confession instead of condemnation.
Toward tables instead of trenches.
Toward a Savior who still says, “Come and see.”
Because the future will not be shaped by whoever yells the loudest from the edges.
It will be shaped by those brave enough to live in the middle…
anchored to Christ,
open to neighbors,
and strong enough to resist the spin.
👍