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The modern church has been rebranded into a content platform. It produces devotionals, conferences, and curated worship experiences like a corporation selling spiritual dopamine. Believers are conditioned to consume inspiration instead of cultivate discipline, to feel moved rather than move mountains. The result is a faith that comforts Babylon instead of confronting it.
We were never called to be an audience. We were commissioned to be an army. But the devotional-industrial complex has done its job well. It has trained us to confuse consistency with impact and emotion with obedience. As Babylon dismantles the image of God in the womb and wages open war on the saints, the Western church fine-tunes lighting systems, adjusts worship setlists, and debates branding strategy.
The Christian social media circus has only amplified the problem. Faith is packaged into shareable quotes, viral testimonies, and aesthetic posts, all designed to make the audience feel good without ever confronting Babylon. Likes and retweets have become the currency of righteousness, while real action, praying for the persecuted, defending the unborn, proclaiming truth in hostile spaces, gets ignored. The digital applause substitutes for obedience, and comfort becomes performance. Soldiers are trending instead of fighting.
It is a tragic inversion: soldiers attending concerts while the frontlines burn. We have traded the Great Commission for great productions. The early believers risked everything to carry the gospel into hostile territory. We risk nothing and call it faithfulness.
The Kingdom was never meant to be a spectator sport. It is a government in exile preparing for return. The question now is not how much Scripture we can quote, but how much ground we can reclaim. Devotion without deployment is disobedience.
Matthew 25:40
"Truly, I say to you, as you did it to one of the least of these My brothers, you did it to Me."
The modern church has been rebranded into a content platform. It produces devotionals, conferences, and curated worship experiences like a corporation selling spiritual dopamine. Believers are conditioned to consume inspiration instead of cultivate discipline, to feel moved rather than move mountains. The result is a faith that comforts Babylon instead of confronting it.
We were never called to be an audience. We were commissioned to be an army. But the devotional-industrial complex has done its job well. It has trained us to confuse consistency with impact and emotion with obedience. As Babylon dismantles the image of God in the womb and wages open war on the saints, the Western church fine-tunes lighting systems, adjusts worship setlists, and debates branding strategy.
The Christian social media circus has only amplified the problem. Faith is packaged into shareable quotes, viral testimonies, and aesthetic posts, all designed to make the audience feel good without ever confronting Babylon. Likes and retweets have become the currency of righteousness, while real action, praying for the persecuted, defending the unborn, proclaiming truth in hostile spaces, gets ignored. The digital applause substitutes for obedience, and comfort becomes performance. Soldiers are trending instead of fighting.
It is a tragic inversion: soldiers attending concerts while the frontlines burn. We have traded the Great Commission for great productions. The early believers risked everything to carry the gospel into hostile territory. We risk nothing and call it faithfulness.
The Kingdom was never meant to be a spectator sport. It is a government in exile preparing for return. The question now is not how much Scripture we can quote, but how much ground we can reclaim. Devotion without deployment is disobedience.
Matthew 25:40
"Truly, I say to you, as you did it to one of the least of these My brothers, you did it to Me."
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