Daniela Augustine's The Spirit and the Common Good continues her project of imagining the Christian life as a life given to iconizing the creator and thus sanctifying the creation. Drawing on the deep sources of Orthodox theology and post-modern philosophy, she casts a vision of the common good drawn by the church's participation in the Spirit's 'world-mending artistry'. This review asks what her work means for American Pentecostals in the context of the current social upheaval and political reckoning. Daniela Augustine's The Spirit and the Common Good continues her project of imagining the Christian life as a life given to iconizing the creator and thus sanctifying the creation. Drawing on the deep sources of Orthodox theology and post-modern philosophy, she casts a vision of the common good drawn by the church's participation in the Spirit's 'world-mending artistry'. This review asks what her work means for American Pentecostals in the context of the current social upheaval and political reckoning.