The Church's Most Rejected Truth
- 2 days ago
- 6 min read
Have you ever noticed how most people think they're safe because they believe.
But belief without obedience won't save anyone.
When you know what’s coming, silence isn’t love. It’s betrayal. The world is on fire, and most people are too distracted or spiritually dead to feel the heat. They chase pleasure, comfort, and relevance while eternal judgment looms just ahead. People waste their lives on trends, entertainment, and empty philosophies, as if their soul isn’t at stake. And those who do know the truth? Many stay silent. Not because they don’t care, but because they’re afraid. They’re afraid of being called legalistic, afraid of being labeled divisive, afraid of standing alone.
So they water it down, soften the warnings, and turn the volume down just enough to blend in. But souls are being damned—not one day, not eventually, but right now. People are dying in their sins while believing they’re saved. And that’s not an accident; it’s the result of lies being preached from pulpits, from platforms, and from the lips of people who have traded truth for comfort.
Jesus didn’t hide the reality. He said: “Enter through the narrow gate. Because the gate to destruction is wide, and the road is easy, and many go through it. But, oh man, the gate that leads to life is narrow, and the road is hard. And only a few ever find it.”
Matthew 7:13–14
That verse isn’t poetic. It’s prophetic. It means the majority are not on the path to life. Most people—even church people—are walking a broad, easy road that ends in fire. Not because they hate God outright, but because they’ve been taught a version of God that doesn’t require obedience, doesn’t uphold His Law, and doesn’t convict sin.
They’ve been taught a different gospel. A powerless gospel. A lawless gospel.
But God’s Word defines truth:
“Your righteousness is an everlasting righteousness. Your law is truth.”
Psalm 119:142
Truth is not your feelings. Truth is not church tradition. Truth is the Law of God. That is the standard.
Yet Christianity as a system has rejected that standard. From its earliest centuries, it made a clean break from Torah. It separated itself from Israel. It adopted pagan practices, renamed them, and called them holy. It exalted church fathers who were hostile to the commandments. It replaced Yahweh’s appointed times with Roman ones. It declared itself the bride while rejecting the covenant.
What started in the days of Paul as creeping lawlessness became the foundation of the religion itself. So when people say, “Christianity needs to return to the Law,” that’s not even accurate. Christianity never walked in it to begin with.
It needs to repent. It needs to turn. It needs to fall on its face before the God it claims to serve and acknowledge that it has built a religion of lawlessness in His name.
Jesus said: “Don’t think that I came to destroy the Law or the Prophets. I didn’t come to destroy but to fulfill. For most certainly, I tell you, until heaven and earth pass away, not even one smallest letter or one tiny pen stroke shall in any way pass away from the Law, until all things are accomplished.”
Matthew 5:17–18
Heaven and earth are still here. That means His Law still stands. And yet most of the church treats it like a curse.
They preach grace as permission to sin. They teach people that obedience is optional. They celebrate rebellion and call it freedom.
But 1 John 2:4 says this:
“Whoever says, ‘I know him,’ and doesn’t keep his commandments, is a liar, and the truth is not in him.”
You cannot claim to love Jesus while living in open rebellion to His commandments. You cannot separate Him from His Word, from His Law, from His holiness. But Christianity has tried.
They preach sermons that stir emotions but don’t change lives. They sing songs about surrender but reject the very commands He gave. They give people just enough religion to feel safe, but not enough truth to be saved.
And the result? A church full of people who think they’re secure, while headed straight for eternal judgment.
So no, I will not be silent. Not while false shepherds twist the gospel into a license for sin. Not while the church continues to trample the Law underfoot. Not while people are being deceived into hell by a system that never upheld truth in the first place.
This isn’t about being mean. This is about being faithful. Because hell is not a metaphor. Hell is real.
Jesus said it is a place of weeping and gnashing of teeth. He called it outer darkness. He said it is where the worm never dies, and the fire is never quenched.
Mark 9:43–48
This isn’t temporary torment. This is eternal punishment. It’s separation from the presence of God. It’s a place of regret, anguish, isolation, and wrath. It is the full weight of judgment with no hope of escape. No second chances. No mercy.
Not just the wicked and violent are going there either. Not just atheists or Satanists. But Christians are too. People who sit in pews every Sunday. Who preach from the pulpit. Who believe they are saved, because they were told all they had to do was believe.
But Jesus warned us about this kind of deception in Matthew 7:21-23, “Not everyone who says to me, ‘Lord, Lord,’ will enter into the Kingdom of Heaven, but he who does the will of my Father who is in heaven. Many will tell me in that day, ‘Lord, Lord, didn’t we prophesy in your name, in your name cast out demons, and in your name do many mighty works?’ Then I'll tell them, ‘I never knew you. Get away from me, you who work lawlessness.’"
Belief without obedience is dead.
Titus 1:16 says: “They profess that they know God, but by their works they deny him, being abominable, disobedient, and reprobate unto every good work.”
And on that day, Judgment Day, no one will be able to hide behind their denomination. No one will be able to point to their church attendance, their worship playlists, or their Christian merch. They will be judged by the Word they rejected.
“I saw the dead, great and small, standing before the throne, and books were opened… The dead were judged according to their works.”
Revelation 20:12
They won’t be judged by their opinions, feelings, or intentions, but will be by their actions, works, and whether they obeyed, or not.
And if their name is not found written in the Book of Life, they will be thrown into the lake of fire. The second death.
So what kind of person knows this, sees the danger, and stays silent?
Ezekiel 33 gives the answer:
If the watchman sees the sword coming and doesn’t sound the alarm, the blood of the people is on his hands.
Staying silent makes you complicit. And that’s what too many believers have chosen. Silence to avoid conflict, to stay comfortable, and to keep the peace with people who are racing toward the cliff.
But we were never called to blend in and stay quiet. We are called to cry out, warn, teach, and rebuke. To stand between the living and the dead.
Jesus said in Matthew 28:19–20, “Go and teach all nations, baptizing them… teaching them to observe all things that I commanded you. Behold, I am with you always, even to the end of the age.” Amen.
So no, I will not be silent. Not while Christianity twists grace into lawlessness. Not while pastors entertain crowds instead of equipping disciples. Not while souls are led to hell by men who speak peace when there is no peace. Not while the gospel is emptied of its power and filled with compromise.
Lawlessness kills love. And the only answer is repentance and turning to what was true from the beginning. Turning to the Word. Turning to obedience. Turning to the fear of God.
Ezekiel 14:6 says: “Repent, and turn from your idols. Turn your faces away from all your abominations.”
Acts 3:19 says: “Change the way you think and act, and turn to God, so that your sins may be wiped away.”
So if you know the truth, don’t just sit with it. Don’t just type ‘amen’ and scroll on. Speak. Warn. Stand. Because silence in the face of deception is agreement. And silence while souls are being damned is betrayal.
Souls are damned.
I will not be silent.
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