You Can Be Betrothed — and Still Be Deceived: The Tragedy of Divided Devotion and Another Spirit Among Us

“I am jealous for you with a godly jealousy. I promised you to one husband, to Christ, so that I might present you as a pure virgin to him. But I am afraid that just as Eve was deceived by the serpent’s cunning, your minds may somehow be led astray from your sincere and pure devotion to Christ. For if someone comes to you and preaches a Jesus other than the Jesus we preached, or if you accept a different spirit from the Spirit you received, or a different gospel from the one you accepted, you put up with it easily enough.”

— 2 Corinthians 11:2–4 (NIV, adapted)

What if Paul was not speaking hypothetically?

What if he truly feared that believers—betrothed to Christ, having received the Holy Spirit—could still be led astray, accept another spirit, and tolerate a different Jesus while remaining outwardly religious?

Most of us read these verses quickly and move on. We assume the warning applies to obvious cults or blatant heresy. But Paul is writing to a church he himself founded, to people he calls “betrothed” to Christ. The danger he names is not overt rebellion. It is subtle diversion. A slow, almost imperceptible shift from single-hearted devotion to something mixed, divided, and ultimately alien.

🎧 Prefer listening? The audio is at the end of this article.

The Heart of the Matter: Single Devotion (ἁπλότης)

The Greek word at the center of Paul’s fear is ἁπλότης (haplótēs)—often translated “sincerity” or “simplicity,” but carrying a far richer meaning.

– From ἁπλοῦς—“single, unfolded, without duplicity.”

– It denotes an undivided heart, a loyalty that is whole, unmixed, and transparently oriented toward one object.

– Paired with ἁγνότης (purity or chastity), it evokes the imagery of a bride whose affection belongs exclusively to her husband.

Paul is not warning about intellectual error alone. He is warning about relational displacement. The phrase εἰς τὸν Χριστόν (“toward Christ”) is directional: devotion that moves toward Him, centers on Him, and has no rival.

This is the same quality Jesus praised when He said, “If your eye is single (ἁπλοῦς), your whole body will be full of light” (Matt 6:22). It is the opposite of the “double-minded” (δίψυχος) person James describes—who is unstable in all his ways and receives nothing from the Lord (James 1:8).

Single devotion is not naivety. It is spiritual monogamy.

The Pattern of Subtle Deception

Scripture repeatedly shows that deception rarely arrives as open warfare. It comes as a gentle tug, a reasonable alternative, a slow erosion.

– Eve was not rebellious; she was curious. The serpent did not deny God—he simply shifted her gaze from trusting God to evaluating God.

– Israel, redeemed by blood and delivered through the sea, still “turned back to Egypt in their hearts” (Acts 7:39). Outwardly in the wilderness, inwardly enslaved to a former security system.

– The Corinthians, betrothed to Christ and having received the true Spirit, were beginning to tolerate “another Jesus,” “a different spirit,” “a different gospel.”

The pattern is always the same: attention drifts, affection divides, and something else quietly takes the place that belongs to Christ alone.

Hosea: The Most Ignored Warning

Few passages lay bare the tragedy more vividly than Hosea 5.

“A wind has wrapped them in its wings” (4:19).

“Their deeds do not permit them to return to their God. A spirit of prostitution is in their heart” (5:4).

“They have borne alien children” (5:7).

“When they go with their flocks and herds to seek the Lord, they will not find him; he has withdrawn himself from them” (5:6).

Here is the sequence in stark relief:

1. A foreign influence (“wind,” “spirit of prostitution”) takes hold.

2. The heart produces fruit that is not of God—alien children.

3. God’s manifest presence withdraws.

The people still performed religious rituals (“flocks and herds”), but their hearts were no longer His. The Song of Solomon echoes the same ache: the beloved knocks, the lover delays, and when she finally opens, “my beloved had withdrawn himself and was gone” (Song 5:6).

God does not share the heart He has claimed.

Jesus Was Not Being Harsh—He Was Being Accurate

When Jesus called religious leaders a “brood of vipers” or their gatherings a “synagogue of Satan,” He was not losing His temper. He was inspecting fruit.

“If you were Abraham’s children,” He told them, “you would do what Abraham did” (John 8:39). True spiritual lineage is not ancestry or ritual—it is heart-alignment and obedience. Like Hosea’s “alien children,” their lives were producing fruit from another spirit: pride, resistance to truth, and devotion to a system that had displaced God.

Jesus judges the heart, not merely the label.

Symptoms in the Modern Church

The same pattern is visible today, often unnoticed.

– Divisions, quarrels, and factions that Paul called marks of carnality and spiritual infancy (1 Cor 3:1–3).

– Wisdom that is “earthly, sensual, devilish,” producing jealousy and selfish ambition (James 3:15).

– Religious activity without intimacy—crowded services, polished programs, yet hearts overgrown with thorns of comfort, pride of life, distraction, and false assurance.

A garden left untended does not remain neutral. It becomes occupied.

Many still call Him “Lord, Lord,” yet the inner life bears alien fruit. The manifest presence of Christ feels distant, not because He is capricious, but because the heart has quietly accepted another spirit—one that affirms, comforts, and religiousizes without demanding exclusive devotion.

Where Are the Watchmen?

Nehemiah wept when he heard that Jerusalem’s walls were broken and its gates burned. The city was exposed, vulnerable to any enemy who cared to enter. He did not shrug and say, “At least the temple is still standing.” He lamented, prayed, and acted.

Ezekiel’s watchman was held accountable for the blood of the people if he saw danger and did not sound the alarm (Ezek 33:1–9).

Today the breaches are in hearts, not stones. The enemy moves freely through neglected teaching on vigilance, wholehearted devotion, and the real possibility of deception among professing believers.

Where are the watchmen who will grieve over the slumber, name the danger, and call the church back to her first love?

The Way Back

There is always a way back.

“Remember the height from which you have fallen! Repent and do the things you did at first” (Rev 2:5).

“Abide in me, and I in you… apart from me you can do nothing” (John 15:4–5).

The remedy is not frantic activity. It is return. Daily tending of the heart-garden. Uprooting weeds of divided affection. Sowing to the Spirit instead of the flesh. Guarding the single-eyed devotion that keeps counterfeit spirits from finding soil.

Christ still knocks. The question is whether we will open quickly, wholeheartedly, and exclusively—or delay until His presence feels withdrawn.

You can be betrothed—and still be deceived.

But by God’s grace, you need not remain so.

Wake up, sleeper.

Cultivate the garden.

Return to your first love.

And let no other spirit share the place that belongs to Christ alone.

🎧 Thank you for reading! You can also listen to this reflection as a podcast:

youtube placeholder image

Related Reading:
Wake Up, O Sleeper: The Urgent Call to Undivided Devotion in a Deceptive Agehttps://bvthomas.com/bible-exposition/wake-up-o-sleeper-the-urgent-call-to-undivided-devotion-in-a-deceptive-age/

Praying for the Peace of Israel: A Call Beyond the Psalms

Introduction: A Longing for Peace

When we open the Bible to the time of King David in the 10th century BC, we encounter a vision of peace that stirs the soul. In Psalms, we’re instructed to “pray for the peace of Jerusalem” (Psalm 122:6), a call rooted in David’s longing for a kingdom where God’s shalom—wholeness, rest, and righteousness—would reign. David dreamed of a land where “everyone would live in peace and God’s rest would dwell upon the kingdom.” Yet, as we journey through Scripture, from the heights of David’s reign to the depths of Israel’s apostasy by the 7th century BC—when God forbids prayer for His people (Jeremiah 7:16; 11:14; 14:11)—a more complex story unfolds. Righteousness falters, idolatry spreads, and peace slips away. By the time Jesus arrives, He declares, “Do not think that I have come to bring peace to the earth. I have not come to bring peace, but a sword” (Matthew 10:34). Today, many Christians still echo Psalm 122:6, praying for Israel’s peace with sincerity—but often without grasping the full arc of God’s redemptive plan. What does it mean to pray for peace when the Bible reveals a history of rebellion, a spiritual temple, and a world teetering on the edge of judgment?

The Decline of a Kingdom

David’s vision of peace in the 10th century BC rested on covenant obedience (Deuteronomy 28:1-14), but under Solomon, this foundation crumbled as idolatry crept in (1 Kings 11:4-6). God warned, “If you turn aside from following me… I will cut off Israel from the land” (1 Kings 9:6-7). After Solomon’s death, the kingdom divided—Israel in the north, Judah in the south (1 Kings 12:16-20)—and apostasy deepened. By the 8th century BC, Hosea exposed the northern kingdom’s spiritual unfaithfulness: “The spirit of harlotry is within them… they have borne alien children” (Hosea 5:4-7), offspring of idolatry rather than God. They worshipped Baal and Molech (2 Kings 17:16-17) and the “star of Remphan” (Acts 7:43), rejecting their Maker. The prophets cried out, but the people “forgot the stone from His very hand,” as God had warned: “Look to the rock from which you were hewn, and to the hole of the pit from which you were dug” (Isaiah 51:1). God lamented, “The ox knows its owner… but my people do not know me” (Isaiah 1:3). By the 7th century BC, Judah’s rebellion peaked, prompting God to command Jeremiah, “Do not pray for this people, or lift up a cry or prayer for them” (Jeremiah 7:16; cf. 11:14, 14:11). Exile followed (2 Kings 17:23, 2 Chronicles 36:20), and Israel’s land lay desolate, its covenant blessings lost (Deuteronomy 28:15-68).

Then came Jesus, born in Bethlehem as the prophets foretold (Micah 5:2). Far from ushering in earthly peace, He brought division—truth cutting through falsehood (Matthew 10:35-36). He condemned them as a “wicked generation” seeking signs (Matthew 12:39), their leaders a “synagogue of Satan” (Revelation 2:9; 3:9) for their harlotry’s legacy (Hosea 5:4-7). He warned of Jerusalem’s desolation (Matthew 23:38), prophesying its fall: “The kingdom of God will be taken away from you and given to a people producing its fruits” (Matthew 21:43). In AD 70, the Roman sword fell, fulfilling His words (Matthew 24:2). God’s wrath was “poured upon the desolate” (Daniel 9:27), wiping out the idols and the sinners of His people, as promised: “The sinners of my people shall die by the sword” (Amos 9:10).

The Temple Transformed

The story of the temple mirrors this decline and redemption. Solomon’s temple, filled with God’s glory (1 Kings 8:10-11), was destroyed by Babylon. The second temple, rebuilt after the exile, stood without that glory (Haggai 2:3). Yet Haggai prophesied, “The latter glory of THIS house shall be greater than the former” (Haggai 2:9). Was this the second temple? No—its holy place became a seat for the “abomination of desolation” (Daniel 11:31), desecrated by foreign powers and hollow religion. The true “latter glory” arrived with Jesus, who, through His death and resurrection, built a spiritual temple—the Church (Ephesians 2:19-22). On the third day, He rose, and the Holy Spirit descended (Acts 2), surpassing the first temple’s splendor. A third physical temple? Perhaps for the Antichrist (2 Thessalonians 2:4), but the true temple is already here, alive in believers.

Apostasy Then and Now

Israel’s ancient idolatry finds an echo today. Just as the people turned to “alien children from another spirit” (Hosea 5:4-7), their leaders branded a “synagogue of Satan” (Revelation 2:9; 3:9), modern churches face a “great falling away” (2 Thessalonians 2:3). The spirit of Antichrist infiltrates sanctuaries—drag queens lead worship, false prophets masquerade as “ministers of righteousness” (2 Corinthians 11:14-15), and hundreds of Western churches resemble “mosques or temples” to worldly ideologies. The “abomination of desolation” sits again in holy places, not with pagan altars but with apostasy’s subtle corruption. Jesus asked, “When the Son of Man comes, will He find faith on the earth?” (Luke 18:8). As in the “days of Noah” (Matthew 24:37), rampant deception signals the end.

Yet amid this darkness, the true Body of Christ endures, hidden from the world’s system. It restrains evil, a “pillar of truth and grace” (2 Thessalonians 2:6-7), empowered by the Holy Spirit and Christ’s blood. Some see this restraint in recent events—Donald Trump’s election, for instance, as a temporary thwarting of darkness. But it’s fleeting. The Church will soon be “plucked away” (1 Thessalonians 4:17), the restrainer removed, and the “man of lawlessness” revealed—a pawn of darkness long prepared.

Israel, the Gentiles, and the Fullness of Time

Scripture promises a turning point. Israel’s “partial blindness” (Romans 11:25) lifts as the “fullness of the Gentiles” nears (Romans 11:25-26). Scores of Jewish people now embrace their Messiah, with Messianic churches thriving in Israel—a sign of awakening. The gospel has reached every tongue and nation (Matthew 24:14), fulfilling God’s plan to include all races in His Body. This is the “last pot,” a final phase before the rapture and the “great judgment of the earth.” The true Israel isn’t merely of the flesh but of the promise (Romans 9:6-8)—a vibrant, spiritual nation God is forming anew. In the tribulation, 12,000 from each tribe will be preserved (Revelation 7:4-8), ensuring “all Israel will be saved” (Romans 11:26).

The Prayer Problem

Here lies the rub: Christians read Psalm 122:6 and pray for Israel’s peace, often unaware of this grand narrative—from the 10th century BC call to the 7th century BC halt (Jeremiah 7:16). They envision a geopolitical calm, perhaps swayed by sentiment or politics, without seeing the shift from David’s kingdom to Christ’s spiritual reign. They miss how peace fled when Israel rejected God, bearing “alien children” (Hosea 5:4-7), how Jesus redefined it and stripped them of the kingdom (Matthew 21:43), and how apostasy now clouds both church and world. Praying for peace without discernment risks misapplying God’s promises—ignoring the conditions of obedience (Deuteronomy 28), the reality of judgment (Jeremiah 14:11), and the call to seek Christ’s ultimate shalom.

A Call to Pray Anew

So how should we pray? Not with blind nostalgia for a bygone Jerusalem, but with eyes open to God’s plan:

– Discernment: Pray for Israel’s spiritual awakening—Jewish people finding Messiah (Romans 11:23)—and the Church’s steadfastness.

– God’s Will: Seek His intent, whether peace, repentance, or judgment, trusting His timing.

– Scriptural Depth: Study the whole story, from David to the prophets to Jesus, avoiding shallow readings.

– True Peace: Align with Christ’s kingdom, where “Peace I give to you” (John 14:27) transcends earthly borders.

Conclusion: A Pivotal Moment

We stand at a crossroads—apostasy rises, yet hope blossoms. The Body of Christ restrains darkness, Israel stirs awake, and the fullness of time draws near. Praying for peace isn’t wrong, but it’s incomplete without understanding the sword, the temple, and the coming King. As the world darkens, the true Church shines, awaiting the day when shalom reigns—not by human hands, but by Christ’s return. Until then, let our prayers rise with wisdom, for “there has never been a time like this.

The Absolute Truth of BAPTISM: Unveiling the Apostolic Witness Against the DIDACHE’S Shadow

An Incontrovertible Call to Return to the Name of Jesus Christ

Confusion cripples millions—Christians and leaders pluck Gospel snippets, blind to the covenants, Israel’s role, and the Spirit’s light, deceived by traditions and texts that strain at gnats while swallowing camels. The Didache stumbles with its Trinitarian formula, a relic or revision misaligned with Scripture’s arc. This article buries error, silences critics, and lifts high the absolute truth: baptism “in the name of Jesus Christ for the remission of sins” is God’s unassailable standard, proven by the apostles, rooted in His plan from Israel to the Gentiles. Let’s strip away the layers and see the light as clear as water.

The Didache: A Misstep in Time?

The Didache, or “The Teaching of the Twelve Apostles,” is a late first- or early second-century text (ca. 50–120 AD), rediscovered in 1873 via a 1056 AD manuscript (Codex Hierosolymitanus). Scholars peg it to a Jewish-Christian community in Syria or Palestine, not the twelve “Apostles of the Lamb” (Matthew 10:2–4, Revelation 21:14). Its anonymity, composite nature—borrowing Jewish “Two Ways”—and post-apostolic structure (bishops, deacons) betray a later hand. Its four sections—moral teachings (1–6), liturgical rules (7–10), church order (11–15), eschatology (16)—offer a historical glimpse. Credible—baptism in running water, Eucharistic prayers echo norms (Acts 2:38, 1 Corinthians 11:23–25)—but not Scripture (Eusebius, Ecclesiastical History 3.25.4; Athanasius, Festal Letter 39). It lacks Christological depth—a shadow, not the light.

Didache 7: Trapped in the Old?

Didache 7 instructs: “Baptize into the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit, in living water… if you have neither, pour water three times on the head… let the baptizer fast, and the baptized…” mirroring Matthew 28:19. Yet Acts reveals the apostles baptizing “in the name of Jesus Christ” (Acts 2:38, 8:16, 10:48, 19:5). Why this divergence? Jesus’ earthly words came under the Old Covenant—“when the fulness of the time was come, God sent forth his Son, made of a woman, made under the law, To redeem them that were under the law” (Galatians 4:4–5)—born to fulfill the Law’s demands, yet His blood remained unspilled, without which there is no remission (Hebrews 9:22), and the New Covenant stood unratified until His death sealed it (Hebrews 9:15–18). Parables veiled truth from the masses (Matthew 13:10–13), awaiting the Spirit’s full revelation to the disciples (John 16:13). The Spirit was *with* them, not yet *in* them (John 14:17), and His name lingered unglorified in its redemptive power (John 17:1). Didache 7 lingers in this pre-redemption shadow, tethered to an era before the cross unleashed salvation, or perhaps bears the mark of a later hand—F.C. Conybeare posits Matthew 28:19’s Trinitarian phrasing as a second-century edit, a claim the 1056 AD manuscript cannot disprove. It fixates on procedure—running water, fasting, pouring thrice—tithing mint while the weightier matter of remission lies neglected (Matthew 23:23), silent on the sin-cleansing power Acts boldly proclaims in Jesus’ name.

Jesus’ Mission: Israel First

Jesus declared, “I am not sent but unto the lost sheep of the house of Israel” (Matthew 15:24). His earthly ministry targeted the Jews, to whom “pertained the adoption, and the glory, and the covenants… and the promises” (Romans 9:4). Matthew 28:19, though post-resurrection, reflects His pre-glorification humility—blood shed (Hebrews 9:22), New Covenant opened (Hebrews 10:19–20), yet not enacted until Pentecost (Acts 2). Jesus, in His self-effacing humility, sought not His own glory but the Father’s (John 17:4), deflecting exaltation during His earthly ministry; only after His sacrifice does the Father exalt Him (Philippians 2:9), and the Spirit, in turn, glorifies both Father and Son (John 16:14), unveiling His name’s supremacy post-Pentecost. Without saving Israel, the rest couldn’t be saved—their acceptance or rejection was pivotal.

Israel’s Fall, Gentiles’ Gain

Romans 11 unveils a divine pivot: “Have they stumbled that they should fall? God forbid: but rather through their fall salvation is come unto the Gentiles, for to provoke them to jealousy” (Romans 11:11). Israel’s temporary stumble—not a permanent fall—opened the door, grafting Gentiles into the beloved (Romans 11:17–24, Ephesians 1:5–6). Without their fall, the nations would have no adoption. “When the fulness of the time was come, God sent forth his Son, made of a woman, made under the law, To redeem them that were under the law, that we might receive the adoption of sons” (Galatians 4:4–5). Pentecost ignited this era—grace and truth came by Jesus, but the Spirit of Christ became the inaugurator of grace, so to speak (Acts 2), glorifying Jesus’ name—“He that descended is the same also that ascended up far above all heavens, that he might fill all things” (Ephesians 4:10). Yet, until Acts 10, the church remained predominantly Jewish, still shadowed by the Law’s influence, as seen in their temple gatherings (Acts 2:46) and Peter’s initial recoil from Gentile uncleanliness (Acts 10:14). Only when Cornelius’ household receives the Holy Spirit (Acts 10:44–48) does the Gentile church truly emerge, Peter’s vision shattering the legal barrier: “God hath shewed me that I should not call any man common or unclean” (Acts 10:28). Before this, Jesus was bound in the body of His flesh, but now, ascended, He’s omnipresent through His Spirit—“The Lord is that Spirit” (2 Corinthians 3:17). As Jesus foretold, “Verily, verily, I say unto you, The hour is coming, and now is, when the dead shall hear the voice of the Son of God, and they that hear shall live” (John 5:25)—this spiritual resurrection, the quickening of the Spirit, has dawned. “In Christ Jesus dwells all the fullness of the Godhead bodily” (Colossians 2:9), and “God exalted Him… that at the name of Jesus every knee should bow” (Philippians 2:9–11), for “There is no other name under heaven… by which we must be saved” (Acts 4:12). In this dispensation, God recognizes no other name but Jesus Christ, the name that saves and subdues devils. Demons tremble (James 2:19); He defeated the strong man (Mark 3:27). The Old Testament itself foreshadows this glorious truth, pointing beyond its shadows to the One who fulfills them all: “They were all baptized unto Moses in the cloud and in the sea” (1 Corinthians 10:2)—but unto whom are we baptized now? It was Christ’s Spirit working in them even then, “the Spirit of Christ which was in them” (1 Peter 1:11), guiding Israel through Moses as a type of the greater Deliverer to come. Stephen proclaimed, “This is that Moses, which said unto the children of Israel, A prophet shall the Lord your God raise up unto you of your brethren, like unto me” (Acts 7:34–37), echoing Deuteronomy’s promise of the Messiah. And Jesus Himself unveiled His eternal identity: “Before Abraham was, I am!” (John 8:58). He is our greater Deliverer, the timeless Christ whose name now reigns supreme over every shadow of the Law.

Consider who stands to gain when that name is not invoked—when the church fails to invoke Jesus’ name, whether in baptism or faith, it hands victory to the devil, who thrives on rebellion against God’s will. This rebellion festers, weakening the Spirit’s power that once fueled the apostles’ miracles and witness, leaving us spiritually diminished today compared to their thriving era. Moreover, this shift leads to the rise of mere believers, rather than devoted disciples, who no longer passionately follow His teachings, rejecting sound doctrine in favor of doctrines of devils, slowly diluting the work of salvation and diminishing the power to redeem souls. See how contrived the devil is in his subtle efforts to undermine the truth. The devil does not attack the whole truth outright, but subtly alters it—either removing or diminishing its core power, rendering it ineffective. His work is meticulous, premeditated, and often difficult to discern.

Once the name, which is endowed with all authority and power, is removed, the consequences are clear. While individuals may undergo baptism and partake in other rites, the outcome remains unchanged, and no genuine work of redemption is imparted to them. I have often pondered why many new converts appear to reflect behavior even more grievous than that of the unconverted. The Spirit’s work and operations are manifest only when the name that God has highly exalted is invoked, for it is through that name alone that authentic transformation and the redemptive power of salvation are brought to fruition.

Apostolic Truth: Remission in His Name

Post-Pentecost, apostles preached: “Repent and be baptized… in the name of Jesus Christ for the remission of sins” (Acts 2:38). “Wash your sins away, calling on His name” (Acts 22:16). “Baptism… saves you… through the resurrection of Jesus Christ” (1 Peter 3:21). It is always through His name—whether for the Samaritans (Acts 8:16) or Cornelius (Acts 10:48)—that we are united to His death and resurrection, as Paul writes in Romans 6:3–4. His name is the foundation of our salvation, uniting us to His redemptive work. Understand this: In Christian theology, the name of Jesus is not just a label or title but is deeply connected to His person and His divine authority. The name represents His identity, His essence, and His salvific work. When Scripture speaks of the power of His name, it is referring to the person of Jesus Christ and all that He is—His death, resurrection, and authority as the Son of God. So, invoking His name is, in a sense, invoking the very presence and power of Christ Himself. Even Matthew 28:19’s “in the name of” points to Jesus—singular, the name of Father, Son, and Spirit, for in Him dwells all (Colossians 2:9). How can I invoke “in the name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost” when it isn’t a name, and God Himself authorized only one name, highly exalted, in whom dwells all the fullness of the Godhead bodily? If we apply the Trinitarian formula, we might as well invoke Jehovah or other names of God in baptism—but that would be subversion or perversion of truth. Is there any other name by which devils submit, sinners are saved, and the spiritually blind restored sight? No—“Neither is there salvation in any other: for there is none other name under heaven given among men, whereby we must be saved” (Acts 4:12). Jesus said, “I am the way, the truth, and the life: no man cometh unto the Father, but by me” (John 14:6). Demons fled (Luke 10:17), the lame walked (Acts 3:6), the dead rose (John 11:43–44)—all in His name (Mark 16:17–18, Acts 16:18).

The Spirit revealed this; apostles grasped it. Heathens call their gods by name—Zeus for power, Athena for wisdom, and countless others—each tied to a need. So too, God commands us to call on one name: Jesus, not a mere label but imbued with authority to deliver and transform, unmatched by any other. Reluctance to invoke it forfeits redemption, healing, and deliverance. Can we baptize with just ‘the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit’—what is that, even? It’s not a name, but a title. What is that one name? It is Jesus Christ—for the apostles understood the name and they followed that pattern, knowing it as the name of God, the true God and eternal life, in whom dwells all the fullness of the Godhead bodily (Colossians 2:9, 1 John 5:20), exalted above all as King of kings (Philippians 2:9–11), to whom the Father has committed all judgment, that all should honor Him as they honor the Father (John 5:22–23). These gods—devils, as Scripture reveals—yield only to Him, for He alone triumphs over their works (1 John 3:8). Israelites called God ‘El,’ a name Canaanites gave their god too, and ‘Baal’—meaning master or husband—echoes in Isaiah where ‘your Maker is your husband’ (Isaiah 54:5). Pagans named their gods for power or harvest, yet OT prophets boldly applied such terms to the true God, subverting false deities. Even Paul, in Athens, took pagan words—‘in him we live’ (Acts 17:28)—to unveil the Creator. Heathens grasp naming’s power; so too, God commands one name: Jesus. Baptism’s authority hinges on that name—remission of sins is no mere rite but a covenantal act, the first step to peace with God (Romans 5:1), burying us with Christ (Colossians 2:12). The devil despises it, for it threatens his dominion over sin (1 John 3:8). The book of Acts trumps titles. No eisegesis muddies these verses—they shine clear as water.

Didache’s Fatal Flaw

Didache 7 falters—whether as a pre-Pentecost relic or a post-apostolic blunder—by ignoring the name of Jesus in favor of titles, remaining silent on remission, and fussing over minor details while neglecting the weightier matter of salvation (Matthew 23:23–24). It overlooks Israel’s role, the Spirit’s revelation, and the inclusion of the Gentiles. The apostles, filled with the Spirit, baptized in the name God has exalted. Thus, it either reflects an outdated perspective or has been tampered with, failing to align with apostolic truth.

The Root of Confusion

Which Bible are they reading? Leaders misread Gospels, blind to Jesus’ Israel-first mission (Matthew 15:24), covenant shift, and Gentile grafting (Romans 11). Cherry-picking Matthew 28:19 over Acts, they cling to titles, not the name Jesus—the Spirit’s revelation—sowing disarray (Ephesians 2:20). It’s a fatal mistake: they strain at mint and cumin, neglecting the core of the gospel, leaving millions deceived by muddied waters. Why does the devil resist baptism if it’s powerless? Because it’s God-ordained for remission (Acts 2:38), uniting us to Christ (Romans 6:3–4)—a threat he obscures through tradition. The Jews knew authority rests in a name—“By what authority doest thou these things?” (Matthew 21:23)—yet we invoke titles, not Jesus, producing shallow believers, not disciples (Matthew 28:19–20). Devils roam Christendom, for we’ve strayed from the name that saves.

The Call to Truth

The Didache fades—Acts reigns. Baptism “in the name of Jesus Christ for the remission of sins” is Scripture’s absolute truth, life-altering and eternal, rooted in God’s plan from Israel’s fall to Gentile grace. Follow the apostles, prophets, and teachers upon whom the church is built (Ephesians 2:20), not blind guides or post-apostolic echoes. Bury speculation. Silence the opposition. Lift high the Name above all names. The Spirit has spoken—let the church return to this unassailable standard and end the confusion once for all.

Unmasking the Truth: Breaking Free from FALSE IDENTITIES to Live Authentically

Introduction: The Invisible Chains of Falsehood

In a world saturated with expectations, pressures, and subtle deceptions, many of us live behind “masks”—false identities that obscure who we truly are. These masks are not always visible; they are psychological facades, social personas, and even spiritual distortions that we adopt to survive. But survival is not the same as thriving. Over time, these masks become prisons, locking us away from our true potential and the freedom God intends for us.

Do you ever feel like you’re living someone else’s life? Like you’re perpetually performing a role—smiling when you’re broken, laughing to hide your pain, or projecting confidence to mask your fear? If so, you’re not alone. Countless people are trapped behind these invisible barriers, constructed from childhood wounds, societal demands, or spiritual lies. This article unmasks the nature of these false identities, explores their devastating consequences, and offers a transformative path to break free and embrace the authentic self God created you to be.

The Masks We Wear: Lies That Bind Us

Masks are lies—deceptions orchestrated by the “evil one” to incapacitate us and restrain our growth. They begin as subtle protections: the perpetual smile to avoid judgment, the endless humor to deflect pain, or the polished persona to conceal insecurity. I’ve seen this firsthand—people who seem perpetually cheerful, only to reveal, through prayer and deeper connection, a hidden reservoir of sorrow beneath their facade. Their laughter and charm were not reflections of their true selves but shields, carefully crafted to avoid confronting the darkness within.

These masks often solidify over time. What starts as a coping mechanism in childhood—perhaps to please a demanding parent or fit into a rigid culture—becomes cemented into our identity. As we grow, the mask grows with us, hardening into a barrier that cripples our emotional and spiritual development. The longer we wear it, the more it distorts who we are, until we can no longer distinguish the mask from the person beneath.

The Problem: These false identities don’t just hide our pain—they perpetuate it. By refusing to face our true selves, we block healing, stunt our growth, and live in a state of inner conflict. The mask may protect us from rejection or vulnerability, but it also isolates us from authentic relationships and the freedom of being known.

The Solution: Unmasking begins with courage—the courage to peel back the layers and confront what lies beneath. It’s not about exposing ourselves to the world but about being honest with ourselves and God. This process requires vulnerability, but it’s in that vulnerability that we find healing and the space to grow into who we were meant to be.

The Origin of Masks: Agents of Deception

Masks don’t appear out of nowhere—they are initiated by our environment and the people who shape us. A child praised only for success might adopt a mask of perfectionism, fearing that failure will strip them of love. A person raised in a culture that shames emotion might wear a mask of stoicism, burying their feelings to fit in. Even well-meaning families can become unwitting agents of deception, passing down masks through generations—patterns of pride, denial, or silence that obscure the truth.

In today’s digital age, this pressure extends beyond the physical world. Social media amplifies the demand for curated personas, urging us to project a “perfect life” that deepens our disconnection from reality. These societal and familial influences are tools in the hands of the enemy, who seeks to keep us bound by lies about who we are.

The Problem: When our identity is shaped by external forces, we lose sight of our intrinsic worth. The mask becomes a substitute for the self, leaving us tethered to approval, performance, or appearances.

The Solution: Recognize the source of your masks. Reflect on the voices—past and present—that have convinced you to hide. By naming these influences, you reclaim the power to reject them and seek a higher truth about your identity.

The Spiritual Battle: Masks as the Enemy’s Weapon

Masks are more than psychological constructs—they are weapons in a spiritual war. The Bible calls Satan the “father of lies” (John 8:44), and his strategy is insidious: he whispers distortions about who we are, convincing us to hide behind false selves. These lies—”you’re not enough,” “you must perform to be loved,” “your true self is unworthy”—are the foundation of our masks. They incapacitate us, keeping us from stepping into the freedom and purpose God has ordained.

Ephesians 6:11 warns of the “wiles of the devil”—subtle deceptions that entangle us in false identities. A mask might seem harmless, even positive, like humility or resilience, but if it obscures the truth of who God says we are, it’s a chain. The enemy doesn’t always attack with overt destruction; often, he cripples us quietly, convincing us to live as shadows of ourselves.

The Problem: Spiritual deception blinds us to our true identity in Christ, leaving us trapped in a cycle of shame, fear, and self-doubt.

The Solution: Fight back with spiritual weapons—prayer, Scripture, and discernment. Ephesians 4:22-24 calls us to “put off the old self” and “put on the new self, created after the likeness of God.” This renewal of the spirit and mind dismantles the enemy’s lies, replacing them with God’s truth: you are loved, chosen, and free.

The Cost of Masks: A Heavy Burden

Living behind a mask exacts a toll—psychologically, emotionally, and even physically. The tension between who we are and who we pretend to be creates cognitive dissonance, a simmering turmoil that manifests as anxiety, depression, or exhaustion. Relationships erode as we hide our true selves, leaving us lonely even in a crowd. Over time, the weight of the mask can lead to physical symptoms—chronic fatigue, tension headaches, or a weakened immune system—because the body bears the stress of the soul’s deception.

The Problem: The longer we wear a mask, the heavier it becomes, draining our energy and distancing us from peace.

The Solution: Liberation comes through release. Shedding the mask lightens the load, allowing us to breathe freely and reconnect with ourselves, others, and God. Emotional healing follows as we trade pretense for authenticity.

The Path to Freedom: Practical Steps to Unmask

Breaking free from masks is a journey, not a moment. Here’s how to begin:

1. Reflect Honestly: Ask yourself: Where do I feel disconnected from my true self? What fears or pressures keep my mask in place? Journal your answers to uncover patterns.

2. Seek God’s Truth: Immerse yourself in Scripture—verses like Colossians 3:9-10 or Psalm 139:14—and pray for revelation about your identity in Christ.

3. Embrace Community: Find a trusted friend, mentor, or group where you can be vulnerable. Authenticity flourishes in safe spaces.

4. Pursue Healing: If masks stem from deep wounds, seek counseling or spiritual guidance to untangle the roots.

5. Live Boldly: Take small, intentional steps to align your actions with your true self, even if it feels risky at first.

A Promise: This process may feel uncomfortable—stripping away a mask exposes raw, tender places—but it leads to freedom. God’s grace meets us in our weakness, empowering us to stand unmasked and unafraid.

Conclusion: A Call to Authenticity

Masks are lies that bind us, distortions that cripple our growth and obscure our purpose. But you don’t have to stay imprisoned. The journey to unmasking begins with a single step: acknowledging the falsehood you’ve worn and choosing to let it go. It’s not easy—it demands honesty, vulnerability, and faith—but it’s worth it. God calls you to live authentically, to cast off the old self and step into the new, rooted in His love and truth.

As you read these words, consider one mask you’ve been wearing. Are you ready to release it? The freedom you seek is already yours—unmask it, claim it, and live it.

Signs of a DERAILED or BACKSLIDDEN Christian: Recognizing the Signs of Straying from God’s Grace

A Christian can indeed fail to live in the fullness of God’s grace, and there are several signs described in Scripture that indicate a person may be in a backslidden or derailed state. While someone may still identify as a believer, their life may not align with the way God intends for His followers to live. The Bible warns that it is possible to stray from God’s path, even while still outwardly claiming to be a believer. Here are key signs and characteristics of a backslidden Christian, as well as insights into what may indicate a failure to remain rooted in God’s grace and the vine of Christ.

1. Lack of Righteousness, Peace, and Joy in the Holy Spirit

The ‘Kingdom of God’ is described in Romans 14:17 as ‘righteousness, peace, and joy in the Holy Ghost.’ These three elements are marks of a life aligned with God’s will. When someone fails to experience these qualities, it strongly indicates that something is wrong in their spiritual walk. At the very least, it suggests that they have either not reached the point where they should be or have strayed from the course, making it a focal point for immediate concern and correction.

The ‘Kingdom of God’ and the qualities of righteousness, peace, and joy in the Holy Spirit are central to a Christian’s foundation. These elements reflect the heart of living in alignment with God’s will and are vital aspects of a believer’s spiritual walk. Just as a pilot relies on instruments to control and fly the aircraft, and ignoring them would be disastrous, these spiritual elements must become our indicators. We must continuously monitor them to check our spiritual status and keep ourselves on an even keel, ensuring we remain aligned with God’s will. They demonstrate the transformation that occurs when someone fully embraces God’s kingdom and His presence. If these qualities are missing, it suggests a need for spiritual reflection and growth, in line with the Christian pursuit of becoming more Christlike.

Being deficient in righteousness, peace, and joy can indeed suggest that a person is either off course, derailed, or has failed to fully embrace the grace of God in their lives. In spiritual terms, this could be seen as falling short of God’s intended plan for them, possibly due to sin, distraction, or a lack of spiritual discipline. As Hebrews 12:15 warns, failing to experience God’s grace can lead to bitterness or a lack of spiritual growth. It emphasises the importance of staying rooted in God’s presence and allowing His grace to transform us.

Now you understand why the Holy Spirit is urging us to examine ourselves to see whether we are truly in the faith, as it is written in 2 Corinthians 13:5: “Examine yourselves, whether ye be in the faith; prove your own selves. Know ye not your own selves, how that Jesus Christ is in you, except ye be reprobates?” And also, as Jesus said in John 15:4, “Abide in me, and I in you. As the branch cannot bear fruit of itself, except it abide in the vine, no more can ye, except ye abide in me.” This highlights the importance of remaining connected to Christ as our source of strength and spiritual vitality—and not swaying, drawing back, or falling away from Him. Our constant dependence on Christ ensures that we stay rooted in His grace and remain steadfast in our spiritual walk.

Entering into His Rest: A Foundational Virtue of the Christian Life

The promise of rest that Jesus offers in Matthew 11:28—“Come unto me, all ye that labour and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest”—is a foundational virtue for every believer, alongside righteousness, peace, and joy in the Holy Ghost. This rest is not merely a physical or emotional reprieve but a profound spiritual reality, the rest of God Himself, into which we are invited through faith in Christ. The Psalmist foresaw this rest as a divine inheritance for God’s people, yet Hebrews 4 warns that some failed to enter it due to unbelief. Importantly, this rest, along with righteousness, peace, and joy, does not mean a life free from struggle, sorrow, or tribulation. Jesus Himself declared, “In the world ye shall have tribulation: but be of good cheer; I have overcome the world” (John 16:33). Though the heart may face tumultuousness and trouble, through the Spirit of God, prayer, and tears, we can realign our hearts to abide in Christ’s rest, righteousness, peace, and joy. These virtues establish the heart, enabling us to stand firm despite life’s trials, for just as Christ overcame the world, so too can we through Him. Many saints through the ages have testified to this truth, such as Horatio Spafford, who, after losing all he held dear, penned the timeless hymn, proclaiming, “When peace like a river attendeth my way, when sorrows like sea billows roll, whatever my lot, Thou hast taught me to say, It is well, it is well with my soul.” As Philippians 4:4-7 exhorts, “Rejoice in the Lord alway: and again I say, Rejoice. Let your moderation be known unto all men. The Lord is at hand. Be careful for nothing; but in every thing by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known unto God. And the peace of God, which passeth all understanding, shall keep your hearts and minds through Christ Jesus.” This divine peace, coupled with joy, guards our hearts in trials. Likewise, 2 Peter 1:2-4 reminds us, “Grace and peace be multiplied unto you through the knowledge of God, and of Jesus our Lord, according as his divine power hath given unto us all things that pertain unto life and godliness, through the knowledge of him that hath called us to glory and virtue: whereby are given unto us exceeding great and precious promises: that by these ye might be partakers of the divine nature, having escaped the corruption that is in the world through lust.” This divine nature empowers us to live in God’s rest, sustained by His grace and peace. Furthermore, 1 Thessalonians 5:16-23 urges us to “rejoice evermore, pray without ceasing, in every thing give thanks: for this is the will of God in Christ Jesus concerning you. Quench not the Spirit. Despise not prophesyings. Prove all things; hold fast that which is good. Abstain from all appearance of evil. And the very God of peace sanctify you wholly; and I pray God your whole spirit and soul and body be preserved blameless unto the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ.” The enemy seeks to rob us of this rest through unbelief and the stirrings of the flesh, draining these Kingdom virtues from our lives. As believers, we must diligently labour, as Hebrews 4:11 urges, to enter this rest by crucifying the flesh and walking in the Spirit. Being filled with the Spirit is essential to guard our spiritual inheritance, ensuring that we remain steadfast in Christ’s rest, preserving the righteousness, peace, and joy that mark a life aligned with God’s will.

Righteousness: A failure to live according to God’s standards of holiness is often one of the first signs of a drifting Christian. When a believer lives in unrepentant sin or neglects God’s commands, their heart may begin to harden. Many Christians take their salvation for granted, thinking that justification is solely by faith and that works hold no weight. While it is true that the righteousness of Christ is imputed to us for the purpose of initiation and justification, this is not the end of the story. There is also a righteousness that becomes assimilated or naturalised in us through our obedience to the law of the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus (Romans 6:16).

Before the redemptive work on the cross of Calvary, no law could ascribe righteousness, and the blood of bulls and goats could never redeem the spirits of men. However, the blood of Jesus Christ is unlike any other. It has the power to wash away all the stains of sin. It can penetrate deep into the conscience, purging all defilements and transforming even the grossest sinner into a saint of God. After being grafted into the true Vine, our works should reflect this transformation. In that way, our actions speak volumes. A tree is known by its fruit, right? A fruitless tree is destined for burning.

Yes, Jesus did cleanse us from our sins, but which sins? He cleansed us from PAST sins and the condemnation inherited from Adam—those we committed in ignorance while being slaves to sin. “His righteousness for the remission of sins that are” ‘past’”—Romans 3:25. What about the sins we commit after coming to Christ? Yes, for those too, we have an advocate who allows us to approach the throne of grace to receive mercy and find grace. If we confess our sins, He is faithful and just to forgive and cleanse us. As we walk in the light, just as He is in the light, the blood of Christ will continually cleanse us. But we bear the consequences ourselves if we do not comply with these.

There’s a verse that’s often misquoted, saying that if we sin wilfully, there is no more remission of sin. However, this verse is not referring to the sins that a Christian may still commit, as we all possess a fallen nature, which we must put off, and the Bible itself says that if we claim to have no sin, we deceive ourselves. If we can’t sin, then why would we need to live according to the Spirit and make confessions and supplications for grace and mercy? The verse in question refers to those who intentionally reject the sacrifice of Christ—those who were once enlightened, who tasted the heavenly gift, shared in the Holy Spirit, experienced the goodness of God’s word, and witnessed the powers of the world to come. If they fall away, it is impossible to renew them to repentance because they are crucifying the Son of God all over again and openly shaming Him (Hebrews 6:4-6). Hebrews 10:28–30 emphasises that if someone rejects God’s grace, they are deserving of even greater punishment than those who despised the law of Moses because they have trampled on the Son of God, treating His sacrifice as unholy, and insulted the Spirit of grace. This is that sin unto death, which the Bible talks about (1 John 5:16).

Hebrews 6:4-6 and Hebrews 10:28-30 are addressing a wilful rejection of Christ’s sacrifice, not the ongoing struggles or sins that Christians may still face as they live in the flesh.

Don’t believe that your heart is completely purified and free from sinful tendencies the moment you are born again; do not deceive yourself into thinking this.

– “Peace”: The inner peace that comes from the Holy Spirit is essential for a right relationship with God. Without peace, a Christian may experience anxiety, fear, or inner turmoil, which signals a disconnect from God’s presence. This peace is not the fleeting peace the world offers but the very peace of Christ Himself—shalom. Shalom is not merely peace in the heart; the ancient Hebrew understanding means “to destroy the one who created chaos.” Wouldn’t that imply that, despite our struggles in life, we must have the assurance that Christ Jesus has already defeated the enemy of our souls? Hebrews 2:14; Colossians 2:15

In other words, shalom refers to much more than just peace or tranquillity—it signifies wholeness, restoration, and the defeat of chaos or disorder. It’s the kind of peace that comes from the victory Christ has already won over sin, fear, and the enemy. So, even in the midst of life’s struggles, a believer can experience deep, lasting peace, knowing that Christ has already overcome the forces that would seek to disrupt our spiritual well-being. As a crown to it all, the peace of Christ Himself will reign in our hearts.

Listen to what Romans 2:6-10 (AMP) says: God will pay back to each person according to his deeds [justly, as his deeds deserve]: to those who, by persistence in doing good, seek [unseen but certain heavenly] glory, honour, and immortality, [He will give the gift of] eternal life. But for those who are selfishly ambitious and self-seeking and disobedient to the truth but responsive to wickedness, [there will be] wrath and indignation. There will be tribulation and anguish [torturing confinement] for every human soul who does [or permits] evil, to the Jew first and also to the Greek, but glory and honour and inner peace [will be given] to everyone who habitually does good, to the Jew first and also to the Greek.

So, if we lack inner peace, we now understand where the problem originates!

  • 1 Corinthians 3:3 says, For ye are yet carnal; for whereas there is among you envying, strife, and divisions, are ye not carnal and walk as men?
  • James 3:14-18 says, If ye have bitter envy and strife in your hearts, glory not, and lie not against the truth. This wisdom descends not from above but is earthly, sensual, and devilish. Where envy and strife are, there is confusion and every evil work. But the wisdom that is from above is first pure, then peaceable, gentle, and easy to be entreated, full of mercy and good fruits, without partiality, and without hypocrisy. And the fruit of righteousness is sown in peace of them that make peace.

This is a chaotic situation—one that has arisen because souls have not been embraced by the shalom of God. It is the kind of wisdom one comes to possess that ultimately determines the outcome.

You can’t simply possess this wisdom, nor can you access it through education or mere knowledge, nor is it a spiritual gift in the traditional sense, nor is it automatically imputed to us when we come to Christ. If it were, there would be no need to instruct us to acquire it in the first place. While the Bible says, ‘If any lack wisdom, let him ask of God, who gives liberally’ (James 1:5), the way you receive it and the nature of this wisdom is not what we often think it is. It’s not merely about gaining knowledge or understanding through study or gifting. This wisdom comes through a process of spiritual transformation, requiring purging, sanctification, and growth. It’s not about intellectual achievement but about a profound change in your inner character as you absorb God’s divine nature and live out His will.

To simply put, Wisdom is a person of the Godhead—1 Corinthians 1:24, and being aligned with His person is what it’s all about. That alignment requires the scraping away of our own selves by the Spirit and the Word, doesn’t it? Do you see the process one must go through to reach Him on that level?

You could say this is a hard road to life, and yes, it is. But it’s not a life that we accomplish through our own effort; rather, it’s about letting Christ live within us, making what seems impossible a reality. Our duty is to prepare the way for the Lord in our hearts through the Spirit and the Word. It is God who works in us, giving us the will and the ability to do His good pleasure, not the other way around. Is there anything too hard for the Lord?

As Jesus said, “The Son can do nothing on His own; He only does what He sees the Father doing” (John 5:19). Similarly, just as He was in the world, we too are completely dependent on the Father and His Spirit, as it is written, “As He is, so are we in this world” (1 John 4:17).

I can assure you that you’ve probably been trying to live your Christian life on your own up until now, haven’t you? And now, my message comes as a surprise, doesn’t it?

Did God ever ask you to live the Christian life on your own? Why do we assume that we must live out the Christian life when, as humans, we can’t possibly meet the standards that Jesus set? The Pharisees believed that breaking any law was a transgression, but Jesus took it a step further, saying that even lusting in the heart is equivalent to committing adultery, and hatred is like murder. So, how can we ever measure up to that level of righteousness, especially when we are saved by grace? Why do you think the Holy Spirit was poured out on humanity at Pentecost if God expected us to do it all on our own? Why would Christ need to live through us if we are in control? The sad truth is, many Christians try to live the life themselves, relying more on human effort than on the work of God within them.

Many call Jesus “Lord, Lord,” but in reality, they are their own lord. They may acknowledge Him with their words, but their lives are still driven by their own desires, control, and decisions. It’s easy to claim Him as Lord with our mouths, but true lordship means surrendering our will to His and allowing Him to lead us, not the other way around.

A sheep can’t shepherd itself—it needs the guidance, protection, and care of the shepherd. Similarly, as believers, we can’t navigate life on our own strength or wisdom. Without the Good Shepherd, Jesus, we’re lost and vulnerable. Just as a sheep relies fully on its shepherd for direction and safety, we too are called to rely on Christ to lead us, nourish us, and protect us. Trying to shepherd ourselves is like a sheep wandering without purpose—it needs the guidance of the shepherd to thrive.

Joy”: “Joy in the Lord” is the joy we experience in response to knowing God and walking closely with Him—Galatians 4:9; 1 John 4:6, 7, 16. It arises from a deep connection with God, His love, and His work in our lives. This joy is both an emotional and spiritual response to God’s goodness, guidance, and presence. The Spirit of God makes God’s presence tangible, imparting all the heavenly experiences to the soul that has been regenerated or quickened by Him. Joy in the Lord is rooted in Christ in us, the hope of glory. It’s His light shining in the dark places of our hearts, illuminating us from within. As the Day Star rises in our hearts, His presence brings the joy that transcends circumstances, filling us with peace and strength. It doesn’t come through religious practices or rites but through being born of God. It is the inheritance of a child of God. As Jesus said, one must be born again to inherit the kingdom of God, which is righteousness, peace, and joy in the Holy Ghost. This joy is a fruit of the new birth, made possible through the work of the Holy Spirit in our hearts. It is the liberation of the soul from the grasp of the enemy that brings about this joy.

On the other hand, “the joy of the Lord” refers to the joy that God Himself possesses and provides, and that’s what gives strength to the soul. It is a divine joy that sustains and strengthens us, even in difficult times. As Nehemiah 8:10 says, “The joy of the Lord is your strength,” meaning that this joy, rooted in God’s own nature, empowers and upholds us through life’s challenges. The joy of the Lord is the joy of the Lord Himself.

Psalm 16:11 tells us, “In Your presence is fullness of joy; at Your right hand there are pleasures forevermore.” And this is where Christ is seated—at the right hand of God, the place of ultimate honour and authority—Romans 8:34; Hebrews 12:2. This position signifies not only His divine status but also the eternal joy and peace that flow from God’s presence. For in Christ dwells all the fullness of the Godhead bodily—Colossians 1:19; 2:9. The pleasure and joy that come from being in Christ’s presence are immense and immeasurable, like a reservoir that will never deplete. No matter how much we partake in it, there is always more to experience. It is a never-ending well of love, grace, and fulfilment, reserved for all who are in Christ. This truth invites us to rest in the unshakeable joy that Christ offers, knowing that the depths of His goodness are limitless, and His joy will sustain us forever. This joy is not merely a fleeting emotion; it is the joy that comes from being in the presence of God, where true fulfilment and lasting joy are found.

It’s the assurance of Christ in us—the hope of His presence and His promises—that fuels our joy. It’s not about what we can do on our own, but about the confidence that, through Him, we have everything we need. That hope, knowing He is with us and working in us, ignites a joy that doesn’t depend on circumstances. It’s a deep, unwavering joy that comes from knowing we’re not alone and that He’s fulfilling His purpose in us every day.

Just as Jesus said, ‘My peace I give unto you’ (John 14:27), the joy of the Lord is not simply a human emotion, but a divine joy that flows from His presence, His nature, and His work in our lives. This joy is not based on circumstances but on a deep connection to God and the transformation He brings through the Holy Spirit.

Both forms of joy are essential for the Christian walk. Joy in the Lord comes with the saving of the soul or when the Spirit of God quickens a person. It is the effect of God’s redemptive work in the soul of man, as Scripture says, “Restore to me the joy of your salvation” (Psalm 51:12). This joy is the result of being made spiritually alive through salvation and the indwelling of the Holy Spirit. The joy of the Lord, however, comes later as the person continues with the Lord, matures spiritually, and is sanctified wholly. As believers grow in their faith, they experience a deeper, sustaining joy that strengthens them through trials, as Nehemiah 8:10 says, “The joy of the Lord is your strength.” This joy becomes a powerful force that empowers and sustains the believer, no matter the circumstances.

A Christian who has lost their joy or isn’t experiencing joy in their heart is likely not abiding in Christ and is missing out on the fullness of life He offers. When we speak of the joy of the Lord, it refers to a deeper, enduring state of joy that comes from a relationship with God. It is not simply a fleeting emotion based on circumstances but a deep sense of peace, fulfilment, and strength that arises from being connected to God’s presence and His promises.

This joy can exist even in difficult or challenging times because it is rooted in trust, faith, and God’s character rather than external circumstances. As the Bible says in Nehemiah 8:10, “The joy of the Lord is your strength,” showing that this kind of joy can sustain and empower us through life’s trials. Therefore, the joy of the Lord is not merely a momentary feeling of gladness, which is often triggered by positive events or external circumstances. Instead, it is a profound, inner joy that transcends temporary happiness.

The joy of the Lord is not a one-time gift given at the moment of new birth but rather something that comes through continual fellowship with the Lord Jesus Christ. It is indeed a progressive acquisition, not something automatically given or fully experienced right away. The joy of the Lord is deeply tied to ongoing intimacy and connection with Christ. As believers walk with Him, spend time in His Word, pray, and live in obedience, they grow in experiencing His joy. It is nurtured and strengthened through this relationship, much like any other aspect of spiritual growth.

The joy of the Lord is nurtured over time through a deepening relationship with Christ. The Psalmist expresses in Psalm 1:2 that ‘his delight is in the law of the Lord,’ indicating that there is a deep love and joy found in God’s Word. You cannot truly profess to delight in the Lord if you do not find His Word delightful, because the Word is God Himself (John 1:1). This is reflected in the experience of the prophet in Ezekiel 3:3, who says that when he ate the Word, it was as sweet as honey. The law, or Word of God, is not just a set of rules but a source of life, peace, and joy. This joy, rooted in the Word, comes from meditating on it, following its guidance, and experiencing the fellowship it brings with God. As we grow in understanding God’s truth and align our lives with His will, we experience His joy more fully.

The more we delight in God’s Word, the more we receive His joy because we are brought closer to His heart and purpose for our lives. As the Psalmist said, “His delight is in the law of the Lord,” and in the same way, the Word of God imparts the joy of the Lord to those who meditate on it and follow its guidance. This connection between joy and the Word highlights the importance of staying rooted in Scripture as we seek to experience the fullness of joy in Christ.

2. Decreased Desire for God’s Word and Prayer

In John 15, Jesus refers to Himself as the ‘true vine’ and His followers as the branches. He says, ‘If you remain in me and I in you, you will bear much fruit’ (John 15:5). In verse 7, He adds, ‘If you remain in me, and my words remain in you.’ To remain in the vine means staying in constant communion with Christ through prayer, Bible study, and worship. It is about being transformed by the renewal of our minds and living according to the law of the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus.

When a Christian neglects these spiritual disciplines, it could be a sign of a heart that is leaning away from God—ultimately resulting in spiritual apathy, diminished zeal, or a loss of spiritual fervour, which becomes entrenched in the heart—a spiritual condition nurtured by the dark world through the avenue of the flesh. This lack of desire to engage in prayer, study of the Word, worship, and fellowship may reveal an inner complacency or a disconnection from the life-giving source of faith. This gradual erosion of passion for the things of God often reflects the subtle influence of worldly distractions, temptations, and spiritual complacency, which can lead the believer further away from the life-giving relationship with Christ. This lack of desire to engage in prayer, study of the Word, worship, and fellowship may reveal an inner complacency or a disconnection from the life-giving source of faith. Over time, such neglect can lead to spiritual dryness, reduced sensitivity to the Holy Spirit, and an inability to discern God’s will. This decline often mirrors a deeper, internal struggle that must be addressed through repentance, renewal, and a reawakening to the power and joy of living in communion with God.

The Christian life is like a tightrope walk, with a narrow margin of error—one step away from the Lord can lead to disastrous consequences. However, the Lord will preserve His saints whose hearts remain true to Him, while those who intentionally stray, despite many admonitions from the Lord—as He warned Solomon in 1 Kings 11:4-10—will fall away to perdition. Solomon’s heart turned after other gods despite God’s repeated admonitions, and his failure to heed God’s commands resulted in the Lord’s anger and judgement.

As a Christian is transplanted into a new life in Christ, becoming a new creation, the culture of God’s Kingdom should replace everything he has absorbed throughout his life since birth. Without a transformation of the heart and life, Christianity would simply become a religion—and that is not enough.

The Christian life is not merely about adopting a new set of beliefs or practices; it is not just about attending church and singing songs. It is about a profound transformation of the heart and life, becoming like Jesus on the inside. This change goes beyond external actions, shaping one’s identity, values, and worldview to reflect the culture of God’s Kingdom. It is about a personal relationship with Christ and a new way of living that mirrors His teachings and character. If this inner transformation doesn’t occur, faith can become nothing more than a set of rituals or rules, lacking the true power and life-changing impact that Christianity is meant to bring.

Neglect of Scripture: A backslidden Christian may begin to neglect the Bible, treating it as less of a priority. Their focus is on the world—on their own lives, their children, their ambitions, and passions in life—their life in this world. The cares of life, the deceitfulness of riches, the pleasures of this world, and the love of other things enter their hearts, gradually replacing their first love, which is Christ. As a result, they become fruitless, unable to bring any fruit to perfection—Luke 8:14.

Jesus made it clear that if we love anything more than Him, we’re not truly worthy of Him (Matthew 10:37). When our hearts are consumed with the things of this world—whether it’s our desires, possessions, or relationships—it becomes difficult to fully surrender to Christ. Our love for Him must take precedence over everything else, or else we risk becoming distracted and unfruitful. True devotion to Christ means prioritizing Him above all else, recognizing that nothing else can satisfy or fulfil us the way He can.

When Jesus says someone is “not worthy of Me,” He’s pointing to a deeper commitment. It means that if we prioritize anything over Him—whether it’s relationships, possessions, or even our own ambitions—we’re not fully embracing Him as Lord of our lives. To be “worthy” of Him means to give Him our first love, our full devotion, and to place Him above all else. It’s not that He won’t be in our lives, but rather that we won’t be truly following Him if He isn’t the ultimate priority—and if He isn’t the ultimate priority, He won’t be their Lord. This is whom the Lord was speaking of when He said, ‘They worship Me in vain’ (Matthew 15:9), because their hearts are far from Him. If our hearts are divided, then we’re not reflecting the kind of wholehearted commitment that He desires. This is what the Bible calls a double-minded person, and such a person cannot receive anything from the Lord (James 1:8).

The Greek word used for “double-minded” in James 1:8 is “dipsychos” (δίψυχος—DEE-psoo-khos), which is a compound word derived from “di-” (meaning “two”) and “psychē” (meaning “soul” or “mind”). The word “dipsychos” literally means “two-souled” or “double-souled,” indicating someone whose mind or heart is divided or torn between two different directions. It describes a person who is wavering between conflicting desires or allegiances, making them unstable and indecisive. This instability affects their relationship with God, as they cannot fully commit to Him while still holding onto the world.

In the context of James 1:8, this double-mindedness reflects a lack of wholehearted devotion to God, making it difficult to receive guidance or blessings from Him. It’s like trying to serve two masters—God and the world—at the same time, which leads to confusion and spiritual weakness.

In short, a divided heart or mind results in spiritual instability and an inability to receive from God.

Some see Christ as their marriage broker, someone who will help them find their partner, help their business grow, or one who will help them settle in life and prosper. That’s why they come to Christ—when they face troubles in life and need answers for the challenges of this world. But their original intention is not about being saved from the burden of sin and becoming a child of God. Once, when I asked the Lord to help many Christians struggling to find partners and experiencing loneliness, I was shocked to hear Him say, ‘I am not their marriage broker. I attend to those who are diligent and devoted in their hearts to Me.

I’ve come to understand that, in a way, He was conveying to me that these were professing Christians whose hearts were not aligned with His Spirit. And yes, it was true. As I had closer associations with some, I could clearly see how spiritually barren they were and how worldly their minds were set. What shocked me even more was the kind of performance and worship they put up on Sundays, which seemed completely disconnected from true spiritual devotion. On the outside, they appeared to be Christians, and some were even ministers of God, but on the inside, there was rottenness and corruption. It terrifies me to even think of living such a life, knowing all too well where the Lord has saved me from and how vulnerable I am without being close to His heart.

A healthy fear of God is what is missing in much of Christendom today. This lack of reverence is reflected in the Scriptures, where we are reminded of God’s severity and goodness. As Romans 11:21-22 warns, ‘For if God spared not the natural branches, take heed lest He also spare not thee. Behold therefore the goodness and severity of God: on them which fell, severity; but toward thee, goodness, if thou continue in His goodness; otherwise thou also shalt be cut off.’ In Hebrews 2:3, we are asked, ‘How shall we escape, if we neglect so great salvation?’ The writer of Hebrews continues to emphasize the need for godly fear, saying, ‘Wherefore we receiving a kingdom which cannot be moved, let us have grace, whereby we may serve God acceptably with reverence and godly fear: for our God is a consuming fire’ (Hebrews 12:28-29). Moreover, Philippians 2:12 calls us to ‘work out your own salvation with fear and trembling,’ highlighting the serious, reverent attitude with which we must approach our salvation. These verses show us that a true fear of God is essential for our walk of faith, and without it, we risk losing sight of His holiness and the seriousness of our salvation. We cannot afford to take things for granted, as the stakes are far too high.

I am not saying that the Lord doesn’t care for His own; on the contrary, He deeply cares for His beloved. As a father pities his children, so the Lord pities those who love Him (Psalm 103:13). However, those He has disowned are superficial Christians who have not fully surrendered their lives to Him. They hold onto their passions and ambitions in the world—the pride of life, which is not from the Father but from the world (1 John 2:16). This pride, too, is their driving motive, as they seek to gain leverage in the world rather than live for God’s Kingdom.

The Greek word used in Matthew 10:37 when Jesus says, “He who loves father or mother more than me is not worthy of me,” is “axios” (ἄξιος). Axios means “worthy,” “deserving,” or “having the proper value or weight.” In this context, it implies that someone who loves something more than Jesus is not properly aligned with the value or priority He should hold in their life. They are not living in a way that reflects His supreme worth.

So, when Jesus says we are “not worthy of Him,” it means we’re not giving Him the rightful place of priority and honour that reflects His true value. It’s about our relationship with Him not being in the right balance, not just about His availability to us, but more about us not fully living up to the devotion that should be given to Him.

If you say someone is “not worthy of me,” it implies that you are choosing not to be available to them or not giving them your time or attention because they haven’t shown the right level of respect or devotion. In the same way, when Jesus says someone is “not worthy of Me,” He’s essentially saying that if our hearts are divided or we place other things above Him, we are not in the right position to truly receive or experience the fullness of a relationship with Him. It’s not that He won’t be present in our lives, but rather that He will not have the rightful place of honour and priority in our hearts, which means we can’t fully experience the depth of that relationship.

He’s also indicating that He won’t be available to us in the way we might expect, because we haven’t truly prioritized Him above all else. It’s about the depth of commitment and the kind of relationship He desires with us. If we don’t put Him first, we’re not in a place to experience all that He offers. In essence, Jesus is saying that a genuine relationship with Him requires wholehearted devotion, and without it, we can’t fully engage with Him the way we’re meant to.

John 14:23, where Jesus says, “Anyone who loves me will obey my teaching. My Father will love them, and we will come to them and make our home with them.” This verse directly supports the idea that Jesus is looking for a personal, intimate relationship with those who are wholeheartedly devoted to Him. It emphasizes that those who prioritize Him above all else—those who love and obey His teachings—will experience His presence in a deep and personal way.

“We will come to him”—In this context, Jesus is pointing to a specific person: someone whose heart is fully aligned with His will. This is the kind of person with whom Jesus and the Father will make their “abode.” The key here is that it’s not about mere acknowledgement or casual faith; it’s about a deep commitment and surrender, which makes space for God to dwell fully in their lives.

The Word of God is where His voice is heard, and His instructions are found, so this neglect can lead to spiritual dryness. A soldier would never go into battle without his sword; it’s both his weapon and his means of defence. Similarly, as Christians, we are called to “take the helmet of salvation” and “the sword of the Spirit, which is the word of God” (Ephesians 6:17). The helmet of salvation guards our minds and keeps us grounded in the security of Christ, while the sword—the Word—empowers us to stand firm against the enemy’s attacks. Without these, we’re vulnerable. A soldier who is unarmed is easy prey for the enemy, and the same applies to a believer who neglects the power and protection found in God’s Word. We can’t face the world and its challenges without fully relying on the armour God provides.

Prayerlessness: If prayer becomes more mechanical or is neglected altogether, it indicates a loss of intimacy with God. Prayer is meant to be relational, not simply a duty. Praying always, as Ephesians 6:18 tells us, is how a true Christian is strengthened and built up from within. It’s more than just asking for things; it’s about maintaining an ongoing, intimate connection with God—the kind of relationship that transforms us. It is being aligned with God on the inside. Prayer is a spiritual stance of being attuned to the Lord Jesus Christ. Prayer is about bringing everything to the Lord—both the good and the bad—laying it all before Him with openness and vulnerability. Though He knows us inside and out, He desires our confession and expects it. It’s not just about knowing Him, but about Him wanting to know you and to help you know yourself more deeply in His presence. Through prayer, we discover solutions to our struggles by exposing the hidden, dark elements within us that harass, torment, and seek to destroy. Prayer is like a constant link, a two-way communication line with the Father. As we pray, we pour out our hearts, thoughts, struggles, desires, and needs while also receiving His guidance, peace, and strength. It’s this ongoing exchange that shapes us into the people He’s called us to be, helping us persevere in faith and stand firm in His will. Without constant communion, we become disconnected. But when we pray continually, we remain rooted and aligned with His purpose. And the peace of God will guard our hearts and minds in Christ Jesus, as Philippians 4:7 says: ‘And the peace of God, which transcends all understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus.’ Praying in the Holy Spirit also builds our faith, as Jude 1:20 says: ‘But you, beloved, building yourselves up on your most holy faith, praying in the Holy Ghost.

Prayer isn’t just about transmitting our personal thoughts and feelings—it’s also about bringing the situations we face into God’s presence. It’s recognizing that we are not only praying for ourselves but for the world around us, for the challenges we encounter, and for others who are struggling. We bring the reality of the “situation on the ground” to God, knowing that He is fully aware of it and is working in every circumstance. Through prayer, we align ourselves with His will, seeking His guidance, intervention, and strength to navigate the struggles of life. It’s an act of surrender, allowing God to work in us and through us, transforming both our hearts and the situations around us.

A Christian can indeed work as an ombudsman, gathering the information around them and bringing it to God in prayer. Just as an ombudsman collects and reports crucial details to ensure proper action, a Christian observes the world, situations, and the needs of others, then brings those concerns to the “central command”—God. In doing so, the believer doesn’t just passively observe but actively participates in God’s work by lifting up what’s happening around them. The Lord gathers insights about His church through such vessels. I have witnessed God responding with great impact after receiving such reports from His faithful people. I speak with such assurance, for it was the Lord Himself who taught this to me. It was God who did great things among His people, but it was the effect of the prayers of His faithful saints that compelled Him to come down and do things that would not normally take place.

At times, prayer may feel like we are confronted with an enormous, impenetrable bronze door, closed before us, with no certainty of it ever being opened or any understanding of what lies beyond it. Yet, in those moments, we sense a quiet prompting from the Spirit of God, urging us to persist, to not lose heart, or to withdraw. Instead, we are called to continue knocking in faith, believing that even in uncertainty, God is working through our perseverance.

It’s so true how prayer can feel like an uphill battle, especially when the answers seem distant or unclear. But there’s a deep prompting in the Spirit to keep pushing forward. It’s almost like a test of faith and perseverance, where we’re called to trust in God’s timing and wisdom, even when the situation feels like a closed door.

That constant knocking can be exhausting, but there’s something so profound in the act of staying persistent, even when everything around us feels uncertain. It’s a reminder that prayer isn’t just about receiving answers—it’s about deepening that relationship and learning to trust in the process, whatever the outcome may be. And you would find that when you press on in those moments, there’s a peace that comes with it?

At the time of this writing, the author is personally experiencing this very scenario, and it is from this place of firsthand struggle and reflection that these words are shared. And let it not be assumed that these words are simply the work of a skilled wordsmith; rather, they are the product of a life lived, deeply etched into the fabric of this writing. This is my own life I am sharing with you, not just words on a page, but a personal journey laid bare.

The prayer closet is the sacred space where you experience intimate fellowship with the Lord Jesus Christ, a place where personal communion with Him unfolds.

When we pray, we offer our observations—our concerns, struggles, and the needs of others—into God’s hands. These observations, made in the light of His truth and guidance, are taken as valuable evidence for His action. They aren’t just idle words; they carry weight and authority, as we are co-labourers with Christ in His mission to restore and heal. Our prayers and petitions become the channels through which God can move in the world, with our faithful reporting providing Him the space to act. Through this process, we engage with God’s purposes and align ourselves with His will in a way that brings both transformation to our hearts and change to the world around us.

3. Growing Worldliness and Attachment to Sin

The Bible consistently warns against loving the world or its desires (1 John 2:15-17). When a Christian begins to prioritize worldly pleasures, material success, personal ambitions, or sinful habits over their relationship with Christ, it signals a move away from a true Christian walk.

The relationship with Christ is not what many might assume it to be, merely a casual connection. It is unlike any other relationship—it requires a transformation of our nature and obedience to His Word. Without this alignment, deep fellowship with Him becomes impossible. Not to mention, it creates an environment where the spirit man gets choked, and it is through the inner persona that is born of God that the Lord reigns in us. When we fail to put on the new man, which after God is created in righteousness and true holiness, we remain hindered in our spiritual growth. You could only imagine the state of being unable to fully embrace the transformation that Christ offers, leaving us spiritually stunted and disconnected. It is only through the renewal of the mind and the putting on of the new man that we can truly live in the fullness of God’s purpose for us.

Our flesh, at enmity with Christ, prevents us from experiencing His presence as deeply as we desire. It’s not that He doesn’t love us—His love is the very reason He saved us in the first place. However, as James 4:4 points out, a person who loves the world is considered an enemy of God and a spiritual adulterer. Unless we conform to His standard of living, He cannot provide us with what we are truly deficient in. So be ye transformed by the renewal of your mind—Romans 12:2.

Please get this: While salvation through faith in Jesus Christ is a gift that cannot be earned (Ephesians 2:8-9), many aspects of the Christian life are conditional upon our response, obedience, and alignment with God’s will.

The good news is, you don’t have to do it alone. God provides the grace and power to accomplish everything. As 2 Peter 1:2 says, “Grace and peace be multiplied unto you through the knowledge of God and of Jesus our Lord.” Can grace and peace be multiplied unto us in any other way? The key to receiving them is through knowing God and His Son.

In 1 Thessalonians 5:19-23, we are reminded that God sanctifies us wholly—spirit, soul, and body—preserving us blameless by His power until the return of Christ. And the peace of God is the effect of compliance, flowing naturally from our obedience and alignment with His will. Can we accomplish this in any other way? These are only two examples of how God provides grace, peace, and sanctification, all conditional upon our response, obedience, and alignment with His will.

Just as in any system, where membership and participation are conditional upon adherence to its doctrines and rules, the Kingdom of Christ also has its own principles and dogma, which the devotee must adhere to. Without such adherence, the devotion is not considered valid, as it is through our response, obedience, and alignment with God’s will that we experience the fullness of His grace, peace, and sanctification.

That doesn’t mean, however, that you need to be perfect to come to Christ; rather, it means coming as you are, acknowledging your need for Him. Let me be clear about this: It has nothing to do with the initiation into Christ, which is a drawing by God to Christ, but the life that follows requires some reconstruction as we align ourselves with His will and grow in obedience. Because we have built lofty things in our minds, and our souls have absorbed the filth and errors of the world, these must be torn down. Every high and exalted thought must be brought into the obedience of Christ, dismantling the false foundations we’ve built and allowing God’s truth to rebuild us from within.

So, this coming is not without transformation—because it is an entrance into the life that God, through Jesus Christ, has led you into by His Spirit. It is a divine passage that ushers you from death into life, where your mind, heart, and soul are renewed, and you are shaped into the image of Christ. It is a new and living way that Christ opened for us to come in, a way of life that is transformative and vibrant. This is not a mere play of religion, as we see around us—empty practices and rituals that lack power and substance. Christ’s way is a life-giving path, where His Spirit leads us into genuine transformation, empowering us to live out His will with purpose and strength.

Whether you deem this true or not, the fact remains that, although it is by grace that we are saved, it was our adherence to a specific form of doctrine that made this initiation into Christ possible. As Romans 6:17 says, ‘But God be thanked, that ye were the servants of sin, but ye have obeyed from the heart that form of doctrine which was delivered you.’ And verse 16 emphasizes obedience unto righteousness. It is through the quickening of the Holy Spirit that we are empowered to adhere to this doctrine of Christ, aligning our hearts with His truth and entering into the new life He offers. Now, we know that all is conditional—salvation, transformation, and the fullness of the Christian life are all dependent on our response, obedience, and alignment with His will. Yet, this empowerment to respond is itself a gift of grace, the divine strength God provides to live according to His will. For it is God which works in you both to will and to do of his good pleasure—Philippians 2:13. Isn’t this powerful and beautiful?

This transformation begins the moment you respond to His call and continues as you align yourself with His will, growing in grace and truth. It requires a willingness not only to transition from your broken, fallen world into His but also to shed your fallen culture and corrupt nature, embracing His holiness and righteousness. As 2 Corinthians 5:17 tells us, “Therefore, if anyone is in Christ, he is a new creature: The old has gone, the new is here!” This process is about a radical shift—leaving behind what is destructive and stepping into the fullness of His life and character.

The phrase “New creature” (ἄνθρωπος καινὴ κτίσις, anthrōpos kainē ktisis) literally means “new creation” or “new creation of a person,” signifying the revival of a dead spirit and a transformation in nature, identity, or being through Christ. As 1 Corinthians 15:48-49 states, “As is the earthy, such are they also that are earthy: and as is the heavenly, such are they also that are heavenly.” This transformation involves moving from the earthly nature—defined by sin and death—to a new, heavenly nature, defined by life and righteousness in Christ. It can be thought of as a kind of hypostatic union, where the person, once earthly, becomes both divine and human, participating in the divine nature through the power of Christ’s resurrection.

– Love of the World: A derailed Christian may become consumed with the lust of the flesh, the lust of the eyes, and the pride of life (1 John 2:16). Their pursuit of wealth, status, or sensual pleasures may overshadow their passion for godly things.

– Recurrent Sin: Sin (inherent or indwelling sinful disposition) may no longer be seen as serious, and a believer may justify pride, anger, bitterness of heart, unforgiveness, lust, or other recurring sins. This reflects a failure to walk in holiness and repentance.

4. Unfruitfulness in Life

In John 15, Jesus teaches the importance of abiding in Him to bear much fruit. He explains that those who remain connected to Him, the true vine, will produce abundant fruit, while those who do not bear fruit are cut off. The Greek word used for “cut off” in this passage is “αἴρω” (airō), which means “to take up, lift, or remove.” In this context, it signifies the removal or separation of branches that do not produce fruit. This serves as a stark reminder of the necessity of staying connected to Christ, as failure to do so leads to spiritual disconnection, highlighting the critical importance of remaining in Him to experience the fullness of life and fruitfulness. Similarly, in Romans 11, Paul speaks of genuine branches being cut off to warn us of the consequences of unbelief and disobedience. This principle is also evident in the history of Israel, as God brought His people out of Egypt, but many were destroyed in the wilderness due to their lack of faith and disobedience (1 Corinthians 10:5). This further emphasizes the importance of not just beginning the journey with God but remaining faithful to Him throughout, as those who fall away or refuse to obey face serious consequences. Therefore, the fruit of the Spirit (Galatians 5:22-23) should be evident in the life of every Christian. This includes qualities like love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control.

– A lack of spiritual fruit can be a clear sign of disconnection from Christ. If a Christian is not exhibiting the fruits of the Spirit, their life may be marked by selfishness, bitterness, or frustration, indicating that they are not abiding in Him. It could also reflect spiritual immaturity, as Paul addressed the Corinthians in 1 Corinthians 3:1-3, where he noted their inability to digest deeper spiritual truths because they were still “babes” in Christ. Paul went on to say that they were still acting in worldly ways, full of jealousy and strife, because they were unskilled in the word of righteousness. Similarly, James 3 warns that embracing wisdom, which is “earthly, sensual, and devilish,” gives rise to bitter envying and strife in the heart (James 3:14-16). Such wisdom, which is rooted in the flesh and not in the Spirit, leads to disorder and division, further emphasizing the need for spiritual maturity and alignment with God’s wisdom. Just as a tree that doesn’t bear fruit is unhealthy, so too, a believer who is not growing in maturity and fruitfulness is a sign that they are not fully connected to the life and power of Christ.

That being said, God doesn’t expect you to bear fruit immediately, as growth is not spontaneous—it takes time. Just as a farmer patiently waits for his crops to mature—weeding, nurturing, and nourishing them—so too does God work in us over time. The point here is that, regardless of our current state—whether immature or still growing—we are rooted and planted in Christ. Our foundation is secure in Him, and even in our immaturity, God is at work in us, patiently bringing about transformation. Just as the farmer trusts the process, we must trust that, though it takes time, the fruit will come as we remain in Him. But what we should be diligent about is not being derailed from the track by allowing the flesh or the corrupt self to dominate, thus choking the life of the Spirit.

– A failure to evangelize or serve can also reflect a deeper issue of disconnection from Christ. Bearing fruit includes not only sharing the gospel but also serving others in love and using the gifts God has provided. This does not mean that one must be an evangelist by specific calling, but rather that every believer, according to the gift the Spirit has furnished them with, is called to contribute to the body of Christ. If a Christian is no longer actively engaged in serving or sharing the gospel in whatever capacity their gifts allow, it may be an indication that they are disconnected from the true vine. When we are connected to Christ, His love compels us to serve others, and our actions become an outflow of the life He has given us.

5. Hardness of Heart and Dullness of Spirit

A backslidden Christian may experience a gradual hardening of their heart and diminishing spiritual sensitivity. Hebrews 3:12-13 warns against having a “hardened heart through the deceitfulness of sin.” When a Christian compromises little by little, over time they may become spiritually numb.

– Unwillingness to Repent: A backslidden Christian may no longer feel convicted by sin or may refuse to confess and repent. This shows a hardened heart and a loss of spiritual sensitivity. I have come across many Christians who show no remorse for things like lying, harbouring hatred, or holding grudges, even though the Bible tells us that these actions defile us. What shocks me is that they will still rush into church, worship, pray, and do things they deem righteous, all while thinking they are on good terms with God. How can they be like this if not for the fact that their conscience is seared? The Bible warns us that when we persist in sin without repentance, our hearts become calloused, and we lose the ability to feel the weight of our actions. This is a dangerous place to be, as it leads to a disconnect from God and the life He desires for us.

And many times, when I tried to instill truth in them and warn them, I felt their intense displeasure towards me. I would often withdraw, having received blows of hatred, with some making me feel as if I were no longer one of them. Some even went so far as to call me false and sick in mind. It was painful to experience, but it only highlighted how deeply hardened their hearts had become, unable to hear the truth and respond to the conviction of the Holy Spirit.

– Spiritual Laziness: A person who once had a vibrant relationship with God may become lethargic in their spiritual life, with little to no desire to worship, pray, or serve. This may be the result of a malnourished spirit, lacking the spiritual “sap” that comes from consistent fellowship with God. Just as a tree that is deprived of water and nourishment becomes dry and withered, so too does the soul that neglects to feed on the Word of God and neglects prayer and worship. Without the lifeblood of God’s presence and His word, spiritual lethargy sets in, and the desire to grow and serve diminishes.

The book of Proverbs speaks of slothfulness, where a lazy person refuses to sow, and instead, lets thorns and thistles overtake the field they should have cultivated. When they come looking for fruit, they find none. Similarly, the New Testament reminds us in Galatians 6:7-8, “God is not mocked; whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also reap. He that soweth to his flesh shall of the flesh reap corruption; but he that soweth to the Spirit shall of the Spirit reap life everlasting.” If we neglect our spiritual lives and fail to invest in our relationship with God, we cannot expect to bear good fruit. Spiritual laziness leads to a barren life, while sowing to the Spirit brings forth life and fruitfulness in Christ.

6. Neglecting Fellowship with Other Believers

In Hebrews 10:25, Christians are urged not to forsake the “gathering of believers.” The Christian faith is not meant to be lived in isolation. A strong community of believers provides mutual support, accountability, and encouragement. I am not suggesting that one must be part of a large congregation, as many would argue, but Jesus said, “Where two or three are gathered in My name, there I am in the midst of them.” I know many missionary families who are left in solitary, spiritually dry, and volatile places, with no churches around to support them. Yet, the Word of God comforts us with the fact that the spiritual body of Christ is made up of all believers in Christ, scattered across the globe. Each believer is linked to one another through the Holy Spirit. Just as a natural body functions with each member connected and working together, so too does the body of Christ, with each believer contributing to the whole. This action maintains the unity of the spiritual body of Christ. When we walk in the light as He is in the light, we have fellowship with one another, and the blood of Jesus Christ, His Son, cleanses us from all sin (1 John 1:7). This is why Ephesians 4:3 urges us to “endeavour to keep the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace. It becomes an automated process when we maintain our stance in Christ. Loving one another as Christ loved us is what keeps us united.

That said, local church fellowship is crucial for a newborn believer to grow and be nurtured. When Paul wrote Hebrews 10:25, it’s important to remember that the Bible wasn’t readily available to all believers at that time. Access to Scripture was limited, and when a letter was sent to a church, it was expected that the entire congregation would gather to hear it and receive what the Lord was saying. Neglecting that gathering meant potentially missing out on the spiritual nourishment that was essential for their growth.

However, the world is not the same today. We are immersed in a wealth of written material, especially the Word of God, and resources that provide life. The Bible has been translated into over 700 languages in its entirety (Old and New Testament), with the New Testament available in over 1,500 languages. There are portions of the Bible in more than 3,000 languages. We now have access to countless churches and ministers through digital platforms and are richly blessed with such resources. However, the truth is that this dispensation also holds some of the most corrupt and godless churches. Many have strayed from the truth, following the Nicolaitans’ ways and being confounded by a different spirit, just as Israel gave birth to alien children through spiritual whoredom. Hosea 5:4 and 5:7 describe how Israel, by forsaking God, was influenced by a foreign spirit and led into idolatry, producing “strange children”—spiritual offspring that were corrupted by this unholy influence. Similarly, many churches today are allowing foreign, ungodly influences to shape their teachings and practices, resulting in a distorted faith that no longer aligns with the truth of God’s Word. Instead of remaining rooted in Christ, they give birth to “alien” doctrines, drifting further from the authentic gospel.

– Isolation: A backslidden Christian may begin to isolate themselves from others in the faith, making them more vulnerable to the enemy’s attacks, as 1 Peter 5:8 warns: “Be sober, be vigilant; because your adversary the devil, as a roaring lion, walketh about, seeking whom he may devour.” In today’s world, we see denominational biases and divisions that at times create barriers to unity within the body of Christ. These divisions often cancel out the bond of love and fellowship through the Holy Spirit, undermining the very essence of the Church. When you observe such discord and separation, one must ask: Does the Spirit of Christ truly rule in these churches? It’s evident that the unity that Christ prayed for (John 17:21) seems absent in many places, where personal or doctrinal preferences take precedence over the love and unity that should characterize the body of Christ. These divisions only serve to weaken the church and make believers more susceptible to spiritual isolation and the enemy’s influence.

Many professing Christian churches today remain limited to mere religion and institutional structures, such as episcopacy, while leaving behind the true essence of Christ and His doctrines. They have valued the seat of episcopacy and positions of authority more than embodying the humility of a child and the servant-hearted nature that Christ calls us to. These churches have become like a shell, retaining only the framework of faith, yet lacking the spirit of life that should animate and empower believers. Though they may have started with genuine fervour and a desire to follow Christ, over time, they have become dry and withered, forsaking a living relationship with the Lord for the comforts of ritual and tradition. Their faith has become shallow, stripped of the vibrancy and power that comes from abiding in Christ, and as a result, they fail to bear fruit in keeping with true discipleship.

– Avoiding Accountability: Fellowship and accountability are vital for spiritual growth. If a Christian resists accountability or avoids close relationships that challenge them spiritually, it may indicate they are not walking in God’s grace.

7. Doubts About Salvation and Lack of Assurance

Backsliding can lead to deep doubts about salvation. A Christian who is disconnected from God may struggle with assurance, feeling unsure about their relationship with God. While it’s normal for Christians to sometimes question their faith, persistent doubt is often a sign of spiritual drift.

– Loss of Assurance: When a believer stops abiding in Christ, they may begin to doubt God’s promises of salvation and eternal life.

– Guilt and Shame: A backslidden Christian often feels guilty or unworthy, which can lead to spiritual isolation and a sense of separation from God’s grace. The Bible tells us that there is no fear in love, but perfect love casts out fear because fear has torment. “He that feareth is not made perfect in love.” (1 John 4:18). We love Him because He first loved us. In the past, it was terrifying for the high priest to enter the Holy of Holies, let alone for an ordinary person. As Hebrews 12:20-21 describes, the fear was so intense that even Moses trembled at the sight of God’s holiness at Mount Sinai, where anyone who approached His presence without proper sanctification was struck down. Deuteronomy 5 further emphasizes this fear: “If we hear the voice of the LORD our God any more, then we shall die” (Deuteronomy 5:25)—that was the situation then. But now, through Christ, He has paved the way for us to enter the holiest of all without fear. Instead of trembling in terror, we are called to come boldly to the throne of grace to find mercy and grace to help in time of need (Hebrews 4:16). This is the transformative power of Christ’s sacrifice—what was once a fearful and distant experience has now become an invitation for boldness and confidence in God’s presence. Jesus assured us of this in John 6:37, where He says, “All that the Father gives me will come to me, and whoever comes to me I will never cast out.” In Matthew 11:28, He further invites us, saying, “Come unto me, all ye that labour and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest. For God hath not given us the spirit of fear, but of power, and of love, and of a sound mind—2 Timothy 1:7.

8. Fruitless Efforts in Serving God

Even when a Christian attempts to serve God while backslidden, their efforts may lack effectiveness or fruitfulness. Jesus warns in John 15:5 that apart from Him, we can do nothing. When a Christian is disconnected from the vine (Jesus), even acts of service can become empty or self-serving. This is in line with the concept of “holding the truth in unrighteousness” from Romans 1:18. Without being rightly connected to Christ, any good works or acts of service can lack the righteousness and life that come from Him. They may become self-centred or devoid of true spiritual value, as the power to serve effectively and righteously comes only from abiding in Him. Furthermore, holding the truth in unrighteousness is a punishable offence. As Romans 1:18 says, “For the wrath of God is revealed from heaven against all ungodliness and unrighteousness of men, who hold the truth in unrighteousness.” This shows the seriousness of living in a way that distorts or suppresses God’s truth. It is not merely about outward actions; the heart must remain aligned with God’s will, and when truth is misused or ignored, it invites divine judgement. To remain spiritually effective and fruitful, we must continually abide in Christ, ensuring that our actions are rooted in His righteousness rather than in selfish motives or disobedience.

“For whatsoever is not of faith is sin.” (Romans 14:23, KJV) – This verse emphasizes that actions or decisions made without faith, or without a clear conscience before God, are considered sinful. This doesn’t only apply to eating or certain practices but speaks more broadly about how our actions must be rooted in faith and aligned with God’s will. The key idea is that faith must guide everything we do, ensuring our hearts and actions are aligned with God’s righteousness and His Word. And this faith, which comes from God, is activated only by putting on the new man, which after God is created in righteousness and true holiness (Ephesians 4:24). When we embrace the new nature in Christ, we are empowered to live in a way that reflects His righteousness and holiness, allowing our faith to grow and be expressed in all that we do. Without this transformation, our faith remains dormant and ineffective, but when we walk in the newness of life, faith becomes the driving force behind our actions.

Conclusion: A Christian Can Feel Saved but Not Live as God Intended

It is possible for someone to identify as a Christian and still be living outside of God’s perfect will. The Bible cautions believers to “examine themselves” to make sure they are still abiding in Christ and not letting sin, worldliness, or indifference derail their spiritual walk (2 Corinthians 13:5).

If righteousness, peace, and joy are missing from one’s life, it’s a strong indicator that they may not be living in God’s grace or abiding in Christ as they should. “Repentance, restoration, and abiding in Christ” are essential for returning to the fullness of life in God’s grace, where peace, joy, and spiritual fruitfulness are restored.

If you sense that you may be in a backslidden state, I urge you to run into the arms of God, seeking His forgiveness. Open your heart to Him, allowing Him to help you out of your struggles and replant you in Christ. Ask Him to rekindle your thirst for Christ and His Word. Pray for the filling of the Holy Spirit, that you may walk worthy of the Lord and live in a way that is pleasing to Him. Imagine the Father of the prodigal son, whose arms were wide open to receive him, even when the son couldn’t envision such love and grace. Despite the son’s waywardness, the Father was waiting, eager to restore him. So, no matter how far you’ve strayed, the Father’s love and mercy are ready to welcome you back, even if you can’t fully comprehend it. His embrace is always there, waiting to receive you with open arms. Today, if ye will hear his voice, harden not your hearts.

Allow His transforming power to renew your mind and spirit so that you may bear the fruit of righteousness and grow deeper in your relationship with Him. Remember, He is always faithful to restore, heal, and strengthen those who come to Him with a humble heart, seeking His grace. His mercy is limitless, and He is eager to bring you back into the fullness of His love and purpose.

If you or someone you know feels distant from God or is experiencing spiritual drift, remember that God’s grace is always available. 1 John 1:8, 9 reminds us that if we confess our sins, He is faithful and just to forgive us and cleanse us from all unrighteousness. The road to restoration begins with repentance and a return to the true vine, Jesus Christ.

Overcoming BESETTING SIN: A Call to Spiritual Maturity in Hebrews 12:1

In Hebrews 12:1, the Apostle challenges believers to live with perseverance, casting off everything that hinders their spiritual journey. This passage offers profound insight into the nature of sin and spiritual growth, especially when it speaks of “the sin which doth so easily beset us.” The phrase here invites us to reflect on how sin, particularly besetting sin, can hinder our walk with Christ. This article explores the meaning of besetting sin, its connection to iniquity, and the path to spiritual maturity that enables believers to overcome such entanglements, enriched with practical steps, broader context, and diverse perspectives on this timeless call.

Hebrews 12:1 – "The Sin Which Doth So Easily Beset Us

The verse says:

“Let us lay aside every weight, and the sin which doth so easily beset us, and let us run with patience the race that is set before us.”

This verse is part of a broader exhortation in the book of Hebrews, likely written to Jewish Christians facing persecution, urging them to stay faithful. It highlights the importance of laying aside any distractions or sin that slows us down in our spiritual race—a marathon of endurance, not a sprint, reflecting the athletic contests of their day. The specific sin described in this passage is one that entangles or ensnares us, hindering our spiritual growth and progress.

Understanding "Besetting Sin"

The phrase “beset” is translated from the Greek word “euperistaton” (εὐπερίστατον), meaning something that is easily surrounding, or entangling. It conveys the image of sin as something that easily encircles or ensnares a believer, preventing them from advancing in their faith and spiritual maturity.

So, what exactly is besetting sin? This term can refer to:

1. A Specific Temptation or Habitual Sin: Besetting sin is often seen as a recurring, habitual sin—a pattern or inclination that continually trips up the believer. It might be something like pride, anger, lust, lying, gossiping, covetousness, unforgiveness, or dishonesty—sins that seem to persistently ensnare the believer’s thoughts, actions, and attitudes. These are not occasional lapses, but rather persistent struggles that hold a believer back.

Besetting sins can also manifest as envy and jealousy, where a person continually desires what others have and feels resentment about their success or blessings. Addiction to substances, behaviors, or habits, such as pornography, gambling, or alcohol, can grip the believer’s life. Selfishness and self-centeredness may lead one to prioritize their own desires over others, while laziness and slothfulness prevent spiritual or physical growth.

A believer might also struggle with impatience and irritability, constantly feeling frustrated by others, or fear and anxiety, allowing worry to overshadow faith in God’s promises. Unbelief and doubt may plague the heart, causing one to question God’s goodness or provision. In other cases, pride in achievements or status can result in boasting and conceit, while greed and materialism drive one to focus on accumulating wealth or status instead of seeking God’s Kingdom. Some may wrestle with a lust for power or control, attempting to manipulate others or situations, or a critical spirit and judging others, constantly finding fault without offering grace.

Unforgiveness and bitterness often hinder spiritual growth, while deceit and hypocrisy make it difficult to live authentically. Lastly, the idolatry of comfort and convenience, or a lust for attention or approval, can lead a person to prioritize ease, pleasure, or validation over faithfulness to God.

These besetting sins are not isolated incidents but recurring struggles that require intentional effort, prayer, and accountability to overcome. They demand deep transformation by the Holy Spirit and continual reliance on God’s Word to break their hold and allow the believer to grow in spiritual maturity.

2. Iniquity (Lawlessness): The concept of besetting sin aligns with the biblical idea of iniquity—a deeply entrenched moral perversity that is not merely a one-time act of sin but a persistent condition. Iniquity speaks to lawlessness or rebellion against God, and it manifests in habits or attitudes that entangle the believer in sinful behavior. This sin may be so deeply ingrained in the believer’s nature that it keeps them from growing spiritually, often because they have not fully submitted to Christ’s transformative work. From this root, presumptuous sins (Psalm 19:13) can sprout—willful, arrogant acts of defiance, like rejecting God’s truth in pride or greed. While besetting sins entangle through habit, iniquity’s rebellion can fuel these bold transgressions, deepening our need for deliverance.

Yet, perspectives vary. Some scholars suggest “besetting sin” isn’t always a personal habit but a situational temptation—like the Hebrews’ pressure to abandon faith amid trials. Others see it as communal, with the “us” implying the church collectively shedding sins like division or apathy. These views enrich our grasp of the term, showing its depth beyond a single definition.

The Role of Sin and Iniquity in Spiritual Immaturity

The nature of besetting sin is often tied to spiritual immaturity. In Hebrews 5:13-14, the writer describes the difference between spiritual infancy and spiritual maturity, highlighting that immature believers are unskilled in the Word of righteousness and struggle with distinguishing good from evil. Just as an immature person may be unable to eat solid food, spiritually immature believers struggle with besetting sins—sins they are unable to overcome because they lack the maturity to discern what is good or right in God’s eyes. This reflects their place in sanctification—the lifelong process of becoming more like Christ, shedding sin for holiness.

– Spiritual immaturity can lead to habits of sin that persist in a believer’s life, as they are still caught in elementary principles and unable to grasp the fullness of the gospel’s power to deliver them from sin. These besetting sins can become habitual, often reflecting a lack of spiritual growth and understanding.

– Iniquity entangles a person because they have not yet fully learned to put off the old self and live in the freedom of Christ. Instead of relying on the gospel’s power to overcome sin, they may fall back into old patterns of rebellion and disobedience, unaware of the maturity and spiritual freedom that Christ offers.

Laying Aside Every Weight and Sin

In Hebrews 12:1, the command to “lay aside every weight, and the sin which doth so easily beset us” speaks to the deliberate action needed to free ourselves from what hinders our spiritual journey. Every weight refers to things that are not necessarily sinful in themselves but can still impede our progress—distractions, misplaced priorities, or even good things that consume too much of our attention. These can be anything from worldly pursuits to unnecessary anxieties. Some debate whether “weights” are distinct from “sin” or overlap—perhaps neutral burdens like cultural traditions or excessive busyness—but the call remains to shed them.

However, the besetting sin refers to the specific sin that ensnares or entangles us. These are the habitual or recurring sins that prevent us from running the race with endurance. This sin is often persistent and deeply ingrained, and overcoming it requires both spiritual maturity and intentional effort.

How do we lay these aside practically? Consider these steps empowered by Christ:

– Pray and Confess: Set aside time daily to name your besetting sin—be it lust or pride—and ask the Holy Spirit to reveal its roots and grant strength to resist (James 5:16).

– Engage Scripture: Memorize Hebrews 12:1-2 or Psalm 119:11 (“Thy word have I hid in mine heart, that I might not sin against thee”) and recite it when tempted, renewing your mind.

– Seek Accountability: Share your struggle with a trusted believer who can pray with you and check in regularly, fostering mutual encouragement.

– Replace Habits: If anger ensnares you, redirect that energy by serving others or journaling triggers to avoid future traps.

Thus, the call to lay aside every weight and besetting sin is an invitation to spiritual maturity—a growth that involves setting aside distractions and habitual sins that keep us from fully pursuing Christ. Freedom in Christ empowers us to overcome entangling sins and to live out our faith with perseverance.

The Race Set Before Us: Perseverance in Christ

The latter part of Hebrews 12:1—”let us run with patience the race that is set before us”—reminds us that the Christian life is a race of perseverance, requiring endurance and focus on the ultimate goal. The race symbolizes the journey of sanctification, in which believers are called to grow in spiritual maturity, leaving behind the sin that hinders and running towards the goal of Christlikeness—a marathon of trust, not a fleeting sprint.

– Overcoming besetting sin is part of the sanctification process—a continual movement toward spiritual maturity where we learn to trust in Christ and grow in our ability to overcome sin. The call to run with patience means that we will face challenges, temptations, and struggles along the way, but we are to remain focused on the prize—the high calling of God in Christ Jesus (Philippians 3:14).

– The focus on Jesus as the author and perfecter of our faith is crucial in overcoming besetting sin. We cannot win the race by our own efforts alone. Our victory over sin, iniquity, and spiritual immaturity comes through looking to Jesus, who has already secured the victory for us.

Traditions vary here: Catholics might emphasize sacraments like confession as aids, while Reformed believers stress God’s sovereign grace enabling triumph. Both affirm Christ’s centrality, deepening the verse’s call.

Conclusion: Overcoming Iniquity and Besetting Sin

The “sin which doth so easily beset us” is a vivid image of the entangling nature of iniquity—sins that persistently hinder the believer’s spiritual progress. Whether this refers to specific recurring temptations or a more pervasive struggle with iniquity, Hebrews 12:1 calls us to lay it aside and run the race with endurance, focused on Jesus as our strength.

Freedom in Christ means that we no longer need to remain ensnared by besetting sin. With the help of the Holy Spirit, the Word of God, and the community of believers, we are called to grow in spiritual maturity, discern good from evil, and ultimately overcome the iniquity and sin that once easily entangled us. The journey toward spiritual maturity requires perseverance, but it is through Christ that we are enabled to run with patience and endure to the end, experiencing the fullness of God’s righteousness and grace.

Signs of a TRUE APOSTLE According to the Bible

Introduction: Unveiling True Apostleship in a Conflicted Age

In an era where the title “apostle” adorns countless ministers—pastors, prophets, and gospel workers alike—the biblical essence of apostleship risks dilution. This proliferation prompts a vital question: what distinguishes a true Apostle according to Scripture? Far from a self-appointed badge of honor, apostleship in the Bible is a sacred, divinely ordained role, marked by distinct qualifications that anchor the Church’s foundation.

False claims to this office can mislead believers, distort the gospel, and fracture Christian unity. Yet, rather than merely decrying such trends, we are called to discern with wisdom—honoring the authentic while guarding against deception. True apostles, as revealed in the New Testament, were Christ’s chosen emissaries, tasked with proclaiming His resurrection, wielding divine power, and forging the early Church through sacrifice and truth.

This study explores the biblical signs of genuine apostleship, from divine commissioning to Christ-like living. By grasping these hallmarks, we not only uncover the profound legacy of the apostles but also equip ourselves to evaluate spiritual leadership today with clarity and grace. Let us journey into Scripture to rediscover what it means to be a true Apostle—and how that truth resonates in our time.

Chapter 1: Called by Christ Alone

Summary: A true Apostle is directly commissioned by Jesus, not self-appointed.

The heartbeat of apostleship begins with a voice—Christ’s voice. Mark 3:13-14 reveals Jesus ascending a mountain, calling those He desired, and appointing twelve to be His apostles. This divine selection, not human ambition, defines their role. Paul, too, underscores this in Galatians 1:1: “not from men nor through man, but through Jesus Christ and God the Father.” His dramatic encounter on the Damascus road (Acts 9:3-6, 15) seals his calling as an instrument to the Gentiles, proving that apostleship transcends the original Twelve but never escapes Christ’s direct summons.

These encounters—whether by a Galilean shore or a blinding light—carry authority from the risen Lord. Apostles are not volunteers; they are conscripts of grace, sent with His mandate to preach, heal, and build. In a world of self-made titles, their commissioning stands as a clarion call: true authority flows from Christ alone.

Profound Takeaway: Authority flows from Christ’s voice, not human ambition—a whisper that reshapes destinies.

Chapter 2: Witnesses of the Risen Lord

Summary: Apostles saw the resurrected Christ, grounding their testimony.

From calling, we turn to seeing. A true Apostle bears witness to the resurrection, the cornerstone of the gospel. Acts 1:21-22 sets this as a criterion for replacing Judas: one who walked with Jesus from baptism to ascension must testify to His rising. Paul, defending his apostleship, cries, “Have I not seen Jesus our Lord?” (1 Corinthians 9:1), pointing to his vision of the risen Christ (Acts 9:3-6).

This eyewitness role is no mere credential; it’s the fire in their bones. The resurrection—Christ’s triumph over death—fuels their preaching, turning fishermen and persecutors into heralds of eternity. Today, we might ask: what validates a leader’s claim if not a transformative encounter with the living Christ?

Profound Takeaway: The resurrection fuels their mission—eyewitnesses of eternity proclaiming life beyond the grave.

Chapter 3: Signs, Wonders, and the Power of God

Summary: Miracles affirm the apostles’ calling and God’s presence.

The apostles’ words were matched by wonders. Paul declares, “The signs of a true Apostle were performed among you with utmost patience, with signs and wonders and mighty works” (2 Corinthians 12:12). Acts 5:12 echoes this: “many signs and wonders were regularly done among the people by the hands of the apostles.” These acts—Peter and John healing a lame man (Acts 3:6-8), Paul casting out a spirit (Acts 16:18), Peter raising Tabitha (Acts 9:36-42), Paul reviving Eutychus (Acts 20:9-12)—were God’s fingerprints, as Hebrews 2:3-4 affirms: “God also bore witness by signs and wonders and various miracles.”

These were not stunts but sermons in action, piercing skepticism and exalting Christ. Wrought amid persecution, they bore witness to a power beyond human reach. Do today’s leaders reflect such divine endorsement, or do they lean on charisma alone? The apostles’ miracles compel us to look for God’s hand in those who claim His mantle.

Profound Takeaway: Divine acts pierce human doubt, exalting Christ through hands stained with patience.

Chapter 4: Heralds of the Gospel

Summary: Apostles preach Christ’s death and resurrection as their core mandate.

From wonders, we turn to the message they served. Jesus commands, “Go into all the world and proclaim the gospel to the whole creation” (Mark 16:15), and at Pentecost, the Spirit empowers this charge (Acts 2:1-4; 1:8). Paul distills it: “Christ died for our sins… was buried… was raised on the third day” (1 Corinthians 15:3-4). The early Church “devoted themselves to the apostles’ teaching” (Acts 2:42), a doctrine of repentance and faith unshaken by rival gospels (Galatians 1:6-9).

This was no abstract theology but a living proclamation, birthed in obedience to Matthew 28:19-20. Apostles were not innovators but stewards of a truth so simple, yet so vast, it demands a lifetime to unpack. Their mandate echoes: the gospel’s clarity is its power.

Profound Takeaway: The gospel’s simplicity is its unshakable depth—a seed that topples empires.

Chapter 5: Architects of the Church

Summary: Apostles lay the Church’s foundation with Christ as cornerstone.

The apostles’ words built more than ideas—they built a people. Ephesians 2:19-20 declares the Church “built on the foundation of the apostles and prophets, Christ Jesus Himself being the cornerstone.” Paul, a “wise master builder” (1 Corinthians 3:10), planted churches across the Roman Empire, appointing elders (Acts 14:23) and guiding them through letters and visits.

Their labor was architectural, not ornamental—establishing communities rooted in Christ’s teachings. From Jerusalem to Corinth, they sowed unity and truth, ensuring the Church stood firm. Their foundation invites us to ask: are we building on their work, or on shifting sand?

Profound Takeaway: Their labor endures as living stones rise, cemented by Christ’s unyielding corner.

Chapter 6: Bearing the Cross of Suffering

Summary: Persecution marks apostles as Christ’s partners in sacrifice.

The apostles’ path was no parade but a crucible. Paul catalogs his scars: “imprisonments, countless beatings, and often near death” (2 Corinthians 11:23-28). Peter and John faced the Sanhedrin’s threats (Acts 4:1-22), rejoicing to suffer for Jesus (Acts 5:41). Paul was stoned (Acts 14:19-20), James beheaded (Acts 12:1-2)—yet they pressed on, sharing Christ’s sufferings (Philippians 3:10).

This was no accident but a seal of authenticity. Suffering stripped away pretense, revealing hearts forged in loyalty to the cross. In a world that flees pain, their endurance whispers: true calling bleeds.

Profound Takeaway: Suffering forges credibility in a broken world—cross-bearers mirroring the Crucified.

Chapter 7: Guardians of Truth

Summary: Apostles teach and defend sound doctrine with authority.

Apostles were not just builders but sentinels. Paul urges Timothy to hold “the pattern of sound words” (2 Timothy 1:13) and leaders to “give instruction in sound doctrine and rebuke those who contradict it” (Titus 1:9). At the Jerusalem Council (Acts 15:1-29), they affirmed grace over legalism; Paul’s letters—rooted in revelation (Galatians 1:11-12)—command obedience (1 Corinthians 14:37). Peter warns of twisting Scripture (2 Peter 3:16), guarding the faith’s purity.

Their authority was not domineering but protective, wielding truth against heresy. Today, their charge persists: stand firm where doctrine bends.

Profound Takeaway: Truth is their sword, unity their shield—watchmen of an eternal deposit.

Chapter 8: Reflections of Christ

Summary: Apostles embody Christ’s holiness and humility.

Beyond words and works, apostles mirrored Christ’s life. Paul beckons, “Be imitators of me” (1 Corinthians 4:16), living so “to live is Christ, and to die is gain” (Philippians 1:21). Jesus washed feet, saying, “Do just as I have done” (John 13:14-15); Paul recalls Christ’s poverty for our riches (2 Corinthians 8:9). To the Thessalonians, they were models in affliction and joy (1 Thessalonians 1:6).

Their holiness was no veneer but a call to follow. In humility and sacrifice, they reflected the One they served, proving faith by footsteps.

Profound Takeaway: Their lives preach louder than words—mirrors of a Savior’s love.

Chapter 9: Unity in the Apostolic Brotherhood

Summary: Apostles collaborate, preserving the Church’s oneness.

Apostles were not lone wolves but a fellowship. Ephesians 4:3-4 urges “the unity of the Spirit”; Paul receives “the right hand of fellowship” from James, Peter, and John (Galatians 2:9). The Jerusalem Council (Acts 15:1-29) models collective discernment; Paul honors Apollos (1 Corinthians 16:12), weaving a tapestry of mutual respect.

This unity amplified their witness, binding diverse gifts into one mission. In our fractured age, their harmony beckons: the Church thrives when hands clasp.

Profound Takeaway: Fellowship amplifies their witness—many voices, one song.

Conclusion: The Apostolic Legacy Today

A true Apostle, Scripture reveals, is:

– Called directly by Christ,

– A witness to the resurrection,

– Marked by signs and wonders,

– A preacher of the gospel,

– A builder of the Church,

– Steadfast in suffering,

– A guardian of truth,

– A reflection of Christ,

– United with fellow apostles.

In a time when “apostle” is claimed freely, these signs are not relics but lanterns—guiding us to discern with wisdom, not judgment. The apostles’ legacy, etched in Scripture, calls us to honor their foundation while testing today’s voices against it. Their lives and teachings remain the Church’s bedrock, urging us to build faithfully.

Reflection Questions:

1. How do your leaders echo the apostles’ marks—by power, truth, or sacrifice?

2. Are you rooted in the apostles’ timeless truth, unshaken by winds of change?

3. How will you uphold the gospel’s purity, a steward of their sacred trust?

By anchoring ourselves in these biblical hallmarks, we ensure the gospel’s flame—lit by Christ, carried by His apostles—burns bright through every generation.