Friday, January 30, 2026

There’s Going To Be a Reckoning





We have watched too long

as sanctuaries applauded hate

and called it holy.

We have felt the tremor in the pews

when cruelty passed for courage

and the name of Christ

was spoken like a weapon.


We have mourned

for the church that sheltered a predator

and named it forgiveness.

For the church that defended a fraud

convicted of deceit

and named it discernment.


For the church that excused a man

who broke vow after vow

and named it grace.

We have grieved

for the church that baptized racism

and called it heritage.


For the church that justified the deaths

of unarmed, innocent bodies

and called it order.

For the church that looked at immigrants

and saw “less than,”

forgetting the God who wandered as a stranger.


For the church that mocked diversity

as “DEI nonsense,”

forgetting Pentecost’s wild, many‑tongued fire.

For the church that shrugged at stolen secrets

and called it loyalty.


For the church that traded the kingdom of God

for the kingdoms of men

and pretended not to notice.

We speak this not in fury

but in sorrow ripened into truth.

Because hypocrisy always bears fruit—

bitter, heavy, impossible to hide.


Because every compromise of conscience

returns home eventually

and asks to be reckoned with.


There’s going to be a reckoning—

not thunder, not flame,

but the quiet collapse of what cannot stand,

the slow undoing of what was never rooted

in justice, mercy, or humility.

The natural consequence

of choosing power over compassion,

fear over welcome,

idols over the living God.


And still—

we believe in resurrection.

We believe the church can remember

her first love.

She can lift the wounded,

welcome the stranger,

protect the vulnerable,

and tell the truth even when it trembles.


Hope is not gone.

The Spirit still whispers in the ruins:

Begin again.

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