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The ancient Israelites had a problem the modern church refuses to acknowledge: they thought they could worship YHWH on the Sabbath and sacrifice their children to Molech during the week.
They believed covenant membership was about correct religious identity, not righteous action. They believed grace meant God would overlook their participation in systemic evil as long as they showed up to temple, recited the right prayers, and maintained their theological orthodoxy. They believed they were secure, chosen, protected — even while the blood of their sons and daughters soaked into the ground at Tophet, the valley where Molech's bronze arms glowed red-hot with fire and infants were laid screaming into them as offerings.
God's response was not gentle. It was not patient. It was not a reminder that He loved them anyway and they just needed to try harder.
It was exile. Destruction. The temple razed. The city burned. The people scattered. And through the prophet Jeremiah, He made it clear why: "They have built the high places of Baal to burn their children in the fire as offerings to Baal — something I did not command or mention, nor did it enter my mind" (Jeremiah 19:5).
The shedding of innocent blood was not a secondary issue. It was not a political distraction from the "real" work of worship. It was the abomination that made their worship itself an abomination. Their praise meant nothing while their hands were stained with the blood of their own children.
And now, three thousand years later, the Western church stands in the exact same position. Except this time, we don't call it Molech. We call it choice. We don't sacrifice in fire. We dismember in clinics. We don't chant to foreign gods. We remain silent while legal systems baptized in Enlightenment language do the killing for us.
And we tell ourselves we're safe. We're saved. We prayed the prayer. We believe the right theology. We show up to church, we worship on Sundays, we post Scripture on social media. Surely that's enough. Surely God won't hold us accountable for what's happening around us as long as we personally didn't participate.
But that's not what Scripture says. That's not what history shows. And that's not what the narrow road looks like.
Molech's Modern Altar
The god Molech demanded child sacrifice. The rationale varied — sometimes it was to secure prosperity, sometimes to appease divine wrath, sometimes simply because it was culturally normalized and economically convenient. Unwanted children, children who would be burdens, children whose existence complicated the plans and ambitions of their parents — these were the ones laid into Molech's arms.
The priests assured the people it was necessary. The culture framed it as responsible. The legal structures protected it. And those who participated convinced themselves they had no other choice, that their circumstances justified it, that the gods — or the god — would understand.
Sound familiar?
Today, more than sixty million children have been aborted in the United States alone since 1973. Globally, the number is over one billion. These are not miscarriages. These are not tragic accidents. These are deliberate acts of termination, legally protected, medically facilitated, and culturally defended as essential healthcare and personal autonomy.
And the rationale is identical to Molech worship: economic convenience, social pressure, the burden of an unwanted child, the disruption to plans and ambitions. The priests have been replaced by doctors. The temple has been replaced by clinics. The bronze idol has been replaced by sterile medical equipment. But the function is the same.
Children are being sacrificed. And the church is asleep.
The Comfortable Orthodoxy of the Sleeping Church
Here's the core delusion the Western church operates under: we believe that right belief plus personal piety equals righteousness, regardless of whether we actually confront the evil around us.
We think that because we are doctrinally sound, because we attend services, because we tithe and volunteer and share Bible verses online, we are therefore exempt from the command to defend the innocent, plead for the oppressed, and take up the cause of those who cannot speak for themselves.
We have convinced ourselves that salvation is a personal transaction between us and God that has no implications for how we respond to systemic injustice. That being a Christian means securing our own rescue while the world burns. That the narrow road is about believing the right theology, not about walking in costly obedience that disrupts our comfort.
But that is not the faith of Scripture. That is not the faith of the early church. That is not the faith of the martyrs, the prophets, or the apostles. That is the faith of those who told themselves they were safe in the covenant while Molech's fires burned and YHWH prepared judgment.
Jesus did not say the road was narrow because the theology is hard to understand. He said it was narrow because few are willing to walk it. Few are willing to take up the cross. Few are willing to lose their lives to save them. Few are willing to prioritize obedience over comfort, righteousness over reputation, and costly action over passive belief.
The narrow road is the road that leads you into conflict with Babylon. It's the road where you cannot stay silent while children are being killed. It's the road where your faith costs you something — your comfort, your safety, your social standing, maybe your freedom, maybe your life.
And the wide road? The wide road is the one where you can claim Jesus as Savior, post about His love, sing about His grace, and never once disrupt your comfortable life to confront the evil around you. The wide road lets you be a Christian in name while living indistinguishably from the culture. The wide road assures you that you're saved, you're secure, you're fine — even while you do nothing as Molech devours a generation.
Jesus said many will come to Him on that day and say, "Lord, Lord, did we not prophesy in your name and in your name drive out demons and in your name perform many miracles?" And He will reply, "I never knew you. Away from me, you evildoers" (Matthew 7:22-23).
They were religiously active. They were supernaturally empowered. They called Him Lord. And He turned them away. Why? Because they practiced lawlessness. They did not do the will of the Father. They had the appearance of faith without the obedience that proves it.
Why God Honors Righteous Action
Scripture is unambiguous: God does not honor passive belief. He honors obedient faith that produces righteous action, even at great cost.
Abraham was called righteous not because he believed God existed, but because he obeyed when God called him to leave everything and go to an unknown land. His faith was demonstrated through action (Genesis 12, Hebrews 11:8).
Rahab the prostitute was declared righteous not because she had correct theology, but because she hid the Israelite spies at risk to her own life. James explicitly says, "Was not Rahab the prostitute considered righteous for what she did?" (James 2:25). Action, not belief alone.
The midwives Shiphrah and Puah were honored by God not because they prayed about Pharaoh's genocide, but because they defied his order to kill Hebrew boys. They feared God more than the king, and God gave them families of their own as a reward (Exodus 1:15-21). Righteous disobedience to evil authority, at personal risk.
Daniel refused to stop praying even when it meant being thrown into the lions' den. Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego refused to bow to the idol even when it meant being thrown into the furnace. They did not know if God would rescue them, but they obeyed anyway. And God honored their costly obedience (Daniel 3, 6).
Esther risked her life to approach the king uninvited to plead for her people. "If I perish, I perish," she said (Esther 4:16). She could have stayed silent, stayed safe, and let the genocide happen. But she acted, and God used her obedience to save an entire nation.
In every case, righteousness is demonstrated through costly action. Not through belief alone. Not through religious activity alone. But through obedience that risks something — comfort, safety, reputation, life itself.
The Maccabees: The Honor of Righteous Resistance
This is why the books of Maccabees matter, and why their removal from the Protestant canon is a tragedy that has crippled the Western church's understanding of righteous resistance.
The Maccabean revolt was a Jewish uprising against the Seleucid Empire, which sought to forcibly Hellenize the Jewish people and desecrate the temple. King Antiochus IV Epiphanes outlawed Torah observance, Sabbath keeping, and circumcision. He erected an altar to Zeus in the temple and sacrificed pigs on it. He commanded the Jews to bow to idols and eat unclean food. Those who refused were tortured and executed.
Most complied. They reasoned that survival was more important than obedience, that God would understand, that they could compromise externally while remaining faithful internally. They stayed quiet, stayed safe, and accommodated evil.
But a remnant refused.
Mattathias, a priest, killed a Jew who was about to offer a pagan sacrifice and then killed the Greek official enforcing the order. He and his sons fled to the hills and began an armed resistance. "Let everyone who is zealous for the law and supports the covenant come out with me!" he cried (1 Maccabees 2:27).
This was not passive prayer. This was not silent submission. This was costly, dangerous, active resistance to evil authority in defense of covenant faithfulness.
His son Judah Maccabeus led the revolt to victory. Against overwhelming military odds, outnumbered and outmatched, the Maccabees defeated the Seleucid forces, reclaimed Jerusalem, cleansed and rededicated the temple, and restored Torah observance. The Feast of Hanukkah celebrates this victory — the triumph of righteous resistance over tyrannical evil.
And God honored it.
Not because they prayed harder. Not because they believed more correctly. But because they acted, at great cost, to defend the covenant and the innocent when everyone else was compromising.
The author of 1 Maccabees writes, "But many in Israel stood firm and were resolved in their hearts not to eat unclean food. They chose to die rather than to be defiled by food or to profane the holy covenant; and they did die" (1 Maccabees 1:62-63).
This is the faith that God honors. The faith that says, "Even if He does not rescue me, I will not bow." The faith that risks everything to obey when obedience is costly.
And this is the faith the Western church has lost.
The Deadly Comfort of Cheap Grace
The reason the modern church is silent while Molech devours children is because we have been taught a version of Christianity that requires nothing.
We have been told that grace means God accepts us as we are and never demands that we change. That salvation is a one-time transaction that requires no follow-through. That being a Christian means believing the right doctrines and feeling warm feelings about Jesus, not disrupting our lives to confront evil.
We have been taught that the narrow road is about correct theology, not costly obedience. That righteousness is a legal status granted at conversion, not a lived reality demonstrated through action. That God judges the heart, so external behavior — including whether we defend the innocent or stay silent — doesn't really matter as long as we personally believe the right things.
This is heresy. And it's killing the church's prophetic witness.
Dietrich Bonhoeffer, writing from Nazi Germany, called this "cheap grace" — grace without cost, grace without discipleship, grace that comforts but never confronts, grace that assures without transforming.
"Cheap grace is the grace we bestow on ourselves," he wrote. "Cheap grace is the preaching of forgiveness without requiring repentance, baptism without church discipline, Communion without confession. Cheap grace is grace without discipleship, grace without the cross, grace without Jesus Christ, living and incarnate."
This is the grace the Western church preaches. And it has produced a generation of believers who are absolutely certain of their salvation while doing nothing to stop the slaughter of innocents, because their theology has no category for costly obedience.
They believe they are safe. They believe they are rescued. They believe their personal piety and doctrinal correctness exempts them from the command to act.
But Scripture says otherwise.
James says, "Suppose a brother or a sister is without clothes and daily food. If one of you says to them, 'Go in peace; keep warm and well fed,' but does nothing about their physical needs, what good is it? In the same way, faith by itself, if it is not accompanied by action, is dead" (James 2:15-17).
John says, "If anyone has material possessions and sees a brother or sister in need but has no pity on them, how can the love of God be in that person?" (1 John 3:17).
Jesus says, "Not everyone who says to me, 'Lord, Lord,' will enter the kingdom of heaven, but only the one who does the will of my Father who is in heaven" (Matthew 7:21).
The will of the Father is not ambiguous. Defend the weak. Plead for the fatherless. Rescue those being led away to death. Speak up for those who cannot speak for themselves. Do not stand idly by while innocent blood is shed.
This is not optional. This is not a spiritual gift for some. This is the basic requirement of covenant faithfulness.
And the Western church is failing it catastrophically.
The Contrast That Condemns
Twenty-eight percent of Gen Z babies have been aborted. Millions of children, created in the image of God, dismembered and discarded. And the church's response has been to post about personal blessings, share worship songs, and talk about how good God has been to us.
We organize conferences about revival. We pray for awakening. We debate eschatology and argue about which political candidate Christians should support. We build bigger buildings, launch new programs, and celebrate numerical growth.
And while we do all of this, Molech's altar burns. Children die. And we do nothing.
We tell ourselves we're pro-life because we vote a certain way. We tell ourselves we care because we donate to crisis pregnancy centers. We tell ourselves we're faithful because we show up to church and believe the right theology.
But none of that requires sacrifice. None of that disrupts our comfort. None of that risks anything.
The early Christians risked everything. They rescued abandoned infants and raised them as their own. They sheltered the persecuted. They refused to offer incense to Caesar even when it meant execution. They lived as if the gospel was true — that every human being is made in the image of God and worth dying for.
The Maccabees risked everything. They took up arms against an empire to defend covenant faithfulness and protect the innocent. They chose death over compromise. And God honored their costly obedience.
But the modern Western church? We've chosen comfort. We've chosen safety. We've chosen the wide road that lets us call ourselves Christians while living like everyone else.
And we're absolutely certain we're saved.
The Narrow Road Ahead
The narrow road is not about having perfect theology. It's about costly obedience. It's about being willing to lose your life to save it. It's about taking up the cross daily and following Jesus wherever He leads, even when it leads into conflict with Babylon.
The narrow road is the road where you cannot stay silent while children are being killed. Where your faith costs you something. Where you are willing to risk comfort, reputation, safety, and even life itself to obey.
This is the road the Maccabees walked. This is the road the early Christians walked. This is the road the martyrs walked.
And this is the road the Western church has abandoned in exchange for the comfortable delusion that we can worship YHWH on Sunday and ignore Molech's fires during the week.
But God has not changed. His standards have not lowered. And the judgment that fell on Israel for sacrificing their children to Molech will fall on any nation, any church, any individual who does the same.
The Remnant is waking up. The alarm is sounding. And the choice is before us: will we continue to sleep in our comfortable certainty, or will we rise and walk the narrow road, whatever it costs?
Because Molech is still hungry. The children are still dying. And the church that refuses to act is complicit in their deaths.
The blood is on our hands. And one day, we will stand before the King and answer for what we did — or didn't do — while Babylon burned His image-bearers alive.
The time for comfortable Christianity is over. The narrow road is calling. And only those willing to walk it will hear Him say, "Well done, good and faithful servant."
The rest will hear something far worse.
The ancient Israelites had a problem the modern church refuses to acknowledge: they thought they could worship YHWH on the Sabbath and sacrifice their children to Molech during the week.
They believed covenant membership was about correct religious identity, not righteous action. They believed grace meant God would overlook their participation in systemic evil as long as they showed up to temple, recited the right prayers, and maintained their theological orthodoxy. They believed they were secure, chosen, protected — even while the blood of their sons and daughters soaked into the ground at Tophet, the valley where Molech's bronze arms glowed red-hot with fire and infants were laid screaming into them as offerings.
God's response was not gentle. It was not patient. It was not a reminder that He loved them anyway and they just needed to try harder.
It was exile. Destruction. The temple razed. The city burned. The people scattered. And through the prophet Jeremiah, He made it clear why: "They have built the high places of Baal to burn their children in the fire as offerings to Baal — something I did not command or mention, nor did it enter my mind" (Jeremiah 19:5).
The shedding of innocent blood was not a secondary issue. It was not a political distraction from the "real" work of worship. It was the abomination that made their worship itself an abomination. Their praise meant nothing while their hands were stained with the blood of their own children.
And now, three thousand years later, the Western church stands in the exact same position. Except this time, we don't call it Molech. We call it choice. We don't sacrifice in fire. We dismember in clinics. We don't chant to foreign gods. We remain silent while legal systems baptized in Enlightenment language do the killing for us.
And we tell ourselves we're safe. We're saved. We prayed the prayer. We believe the right theology. We show up to church, we worship on Sundays, we post Scripture on social media. Surely that's enough. Surely God won't hold us accountable for what's happening around us as long as we personally didn't participate.
But that's not what Scripture says. That's not what history shows. And that's not what the narrow road looks like.
Molech's Modern Altar
The god Molech demanded child sacrifice. The rationale varied — sometimes it was to secure prosperity, sometimes to appease divine wrath, sometimes simply because it was culturally normalized and economically convenient. Unwanted children, children who would be burdens, children whose existence complicated the plans and ambitions of their parents — these were the ones laid into Molech's arms.
The priests assured the people it was necessary. The culture framed it as responsible. The legal structures protected it. And those who participated convinced themselves they had no other choice, that their circumstances justified it, that the gods — or the god — would understand.
Sound familiar?
Today, more than sixty million children have been aborted in the United States alone since 1973. Globally, the number is over one billion. These are not miscarriages. These are not tragic accidents. These are deliberate acts of termination, legally protected, medically facilitated, and culturally defended as essential healthcare and personal autonomy.
And the rationale is identical to Molech worship: economic convenience, social pressure, the burden of an unwanted child, the disruption to plans and ambitions. The priests have been replaced by doctors. The temple has been replaced by clinics. The bronze idol has been replaced by sterile medical equipment. But the function is the same.
Children are being sacrificed. And the church is asleep.
The Comfortable Orthodoxy of the Sleeping Church
Here's the core delusion the Western church operates under: we believe that right belief plus personal piety equals righteousness, regardless of whether we actually confront the evil around us.
We think that because we are doctrinally sound, because we attend services, because we tithe and volunteer and share Bible verses online, we are therefore exempt from the command to defend the innocent, plead for the oppressed, and take up the cause of those who cannot speak for themselves.
We have convinced ourselves that salvation is a personal transaction between us and God that has no implications for how we respond to systemic injustice. That being a Christian means securing our own rescue while the world burns. That the narrow road is about believing the right theology, not about walking in costly obedience that disrupts our comfort.
But that is not the faith of Scripture. That is not the faith of the early church. That is not the faith of the martyrs, the prophets, or the apostles. That is the faith of those who told themselves they were safe in the covenant while Molech's fires burned and YHWH prepared judgment.
Jesus did not say the road was narrow because the theology is hard to understand. He said it was narrow because few are willing to walk it. Few are willing to take up the cross. Few are willing to lose their lives to save them. Few are willing to prioritize obedience over comfort, righteousness over reputation, and costly action over passive belief.
The narrow road is the road that leads you into conflict with Babylon. It's the road where you cannot stay silent while children are being killed. It's the road where your faith costs you something — your comfort, your safety, your social standing, maybe your freedom, maybe your life.
And the wide road? The wide road is the one where you can claim Jesus as Savior, post about His love, sing about His grace, and never once disrupt your comfortable life to confront the evil around you. The wide road lets you be a Christian in name while living indistinguishably from the culture. The wide road assures you that you're saved, you're secure, you're fine — even while you do nothing as Molech devours a generation.
Jesus said many will come to Him on that day and say, "Lord, Lord, did we not prophesy in your name and in your name drive out demons and in your name perform many miracles?" And He will reply, "I never knew you. Away from me, you evildoers" (Matthew 7:22-23).
They were religiously active. They were supernaturally empowered. They called Him Lord. And He turned them away. Why? Because they practiced lawlessness. They did not do the will of the Father. They had the appearance of faith without the obedience that proves it.
Why God Honors Righteous Action
Scripture is unambiguous: God does not honor passive belief. He honors obedient faith that produces righteous action, even at great cost.
Abraham was called righteous not because he believed God existed, but because he obeyed when God called him to leave everything and go to an unknown land. His faith was demonstrated through action (Genesis 12, Hebrews 11:8).
Rahab the prostitute was declared righteous not because she had correct theology, but because she hid the Israelite spies at risk to her own life. James explicitly says, "Was not Rahab the prostitute considered righteous for what she did?" (James 2:25). Action, not belief alone.
The midwives Shiphrah and Puah were honored by God not because they prayed about Pharaoh's genocide, but because they defied his order to kill Hebrew boys. They feared God more than the king, and God gave them families of their own as a reward (Exodus 1:15-21). Righteous disobedience to evil authority, at personal risk.
Daniel refused to stop praying even when it meant being thrown into the lions' den. Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego refused to bow to the idol even when it meant being thrown into the furnace. They did not know if God would rescue them, but they obeyed anyway. And God honored their costly obedience (Daniel 3, 6).
Esther risked her life to approach the king uninvited to plead for her people. "If I perish, I perish," she said (Esther 4:16). She could have stayed silent, stayed safe, and let the genocide happen. But she acted, and God used her obedience to save an entire nation.
In every case, righteousness is demonstrated through costly action. Not through belief alone. Not through religious activity alone. But through obedience that risks something — comfort, safety, reputation, life itself.
The Maccabees: The Honor of Righteous Resistance
This is why the books of Maccabees matter, and why their removal from the Protestant canon is a tragedy that has crippled the Western church's understanding of righteous resistance.
The Maccabean revolt was a Jewish uprising against the Seleucid Empire, which sought to forcibly Hellenize the Jewish people and desecrate the temple. King Antiochus IV Epiphanes outlawed Torah observance, Sabbath keeping, and circumcision. He erected an altar to Zeus in the temple and sacrificed pigs on it. He commanded the Jews to bow to idols and eat unclean food. Those who refused were tortured and executed.
Most complied. They reasoned that survival was more important than obedience, that God would understand, that they could compromise externally while remaining faithful internally. They stayed quiet, stayed safe, and accommodated evil.
But a remnant refused.
Mattathias, a priest, killed a Jew who was about to offer a pagan sacrifice and then killed the Greek official enforcing the order. He and his sons fled to the hills and began an armed resistance. "Let everyone who is zealous for the law and supports the covenant come out with me!" he cried (1 Maccabees 2:27).
This was not passive prayer. This was not silent submission. This was costly, dangerous, active resistance to evil authority in defense of covenant faithfulness.
His son Judah Maccabeus led the revolt to victory. Against overwhelming military odds, outnumbered and outmatched, the Maccabees defeated the Seleucid forces, reclaimed Jerusalem, cleansed and rededicated the temple, and restored Torah observance. The Feast of Hanukkah celebrates this victory — the triumph of righteous resistance over tyrannical evil.
And God honored it.
Not because they prayed harder. Not because they believed more correctly. But because they acted, at great cost, to defend the covenant and the innocent when everyone else was compromising.
The author of 1 Maccabees writes, "But many in Israel stood firm and were resolved in their hearts not to eat unclean food. They chose to die rather than to be defiled by food or to profane the holy covenant; and they did die" (1 Maccabees 1:62-63).
This is the faith that God honors. The faith that says, "Even if He does not rescue me, I will not bow." The faith that risks everything to obey when obedience is costly.
And this is the faith the Western church has lost.
The Deadly Comfort of Cheap Grace
The reason the modern church is silent while Molech devours children is because we have been taught a version of Christianity that requires nothing.
We have been told that grace means God accepts us as we are and never demands that we change. That salvation is a one-time transaction that requires no follow-through. That being a Christian means believing the right doctrines and feeling warm feelings about Jesus, not disrupting our lives to confront evil.
We have been taught that the narrow road is about correct theology, not costly obedience. That righteousness is a legal status granted at conversion, not a lived reality demonstrated through action. That God judges the heart, so external behavior — including whether we defend the innocent or stay silent — doesn't really matter as long as we personally believe the right things.
This is heresy. And it's killing the church's prophetic witness.
Dietrich Bonhoeffer, writing from Nazi Germany, called this "cheap grace" — grace without cost, grace without discipleship, grace that comforts but never confronts, grace that assures without transforming.
"Cheap grace is the grace we bestow on ourselves," he wrote. "Cheap grace is the preaching of forgiveness without requiring repentance, baptism without church discipline, Communion without confession. Cheap grace is grace without discipleship, grace without the cross, grace without Jesus Christ, living and incarnate."
This is the grace the Western church preaches. And it has produced a generation of believers who are absolutely certain of their salvation while doing nothing to stop the slaughter of innocents, because their theology has no category for costly obedience.
They believe they are safe. They believe they are rescued. They believe their personal piety and doctrinal correctness exempts them from the command to act.
But Scripture says otherwise.
James says, "Suppose a brother or a sister is without clothes and daily food. If one of you says to them, 'Go in peace; keep warm and well fed,' but does nothing about their physical needs, what good is it? In the same way, faith by itself, if it is not accompanied by action, is dead" (James 2:15-17).
John says, "If anyone has material possessions and sees a brother or sister in need but has no pity on them, how can the love of God be in that person?" (1 John 3:17).
Jesus says, "Not everyone who says to me, 'Lord, Lord,' will enter the kingdom of heaven, but only the one who does the will of my Father who is in heaven" (Matthew 7:21).
The will of the Father is not ambiguous. Defend the weak. Plead for the fatherless. Rescue those being led away to death. Speak up for those who cannot speak for themselves. Do not stand idly by while innocent blood is shed.
This is not optional. This is not a spiritual gift for some. This is the basic requirement of covenant faithfulness.
And the Western church is failing it catastrophically.
The Contrast That Condemns
Twenty-eight percent of Gen Z babies have been aborted. Millions of children, created in the image of God, dismembered and discarded. And the church's response has been to post about personal blessings, share worship songs, and talk about how good God has been to us.
We organize conferences about revival. We pray for awakening. We debate eschatology and argue about which political candidate Christians should support. We build bigger buildings, launch new programs, and celebrate numerical growth.
And while we do all of this, Molech's altar burns. Children die. And we do nothing.
We tell ourselves we're pro-life because we vote a certain way. We tell ourselves we care because we donate to crisis pregnancy centers. We tell ourselves we're faithful because we show up to church and believe the right theology.
But none of that requires sacrifice. None of that disrupts our comfort. None of that risks anything.
The early Christians risked everything. They rescued abandoned infants and raised them as their own. They sheltered the persecuted. They refused to offer incense to Caesar even when it meant execution. They lived as if the gospel was true — that every human being is made in the image of God and worth dying for.
The Maccabees risked everything. They took up arms against an empire to defend covenant faithfulness and protect the innocent. They chose death over compromise. And God honored their costly obedience.
But the modern Western church? We've chosen comfort. We've chosen safety. We've chosen the wide road that lets us call ourselves Christians while living like everyone else.
And we're absolutely certain we're saved.
The Narrow Road Ahead
The narrow road is not about having perfect theology. It's about costly obedience. It's about being willing to lose your life to save it. It's about taking up the cross daily and following Jesus wherever He leads, even when it leads into conflict with Babylon.
The narrow road is the road where you cannot stay silent while children are being killed. Where your faith costs you something. Where you are willing to risk comfort, reputation, safety, and even life itself to obey.
This is the road the Maccabees walked. This is the road the early Christians walked. This is the road the martyrs walked.
And this is the road the Western church has abandoned in exchange for the comfortable delusion that we can worship YHWH on Sunday and ignore Molech's fires during the week.
But God has not changed. His standards have not lowered. And the judgment that fell on Israel for sacrificing their children to Molech will fall on any nation, any church, any individual who does the same.
The Remnant is waking up. The alarm is sounding. And the choice is before us: will we continue to sleep in our comfortable certainty, or will we rise and walk the narrow road, whatever it costs?
Because Molech is still hungry. The children are still dying. And the church that refuses to act is complicit in their deaths.
The blood is on our hands. And one day, we will stand before the King and answer for what we did — or didn't do — while Babylon burned His image-bearers alive.
The time for comfortable Christianity is over. The narrow road is calling. And only those willing to walk it will hear Him say, "Well done, good and faithful servant."
The rest will hear something far worse.


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