I am not trying to sound like I am the enlightened one when it comes to truth, but I am concerned that the Church is fulfilling the prophecy Jesus made when he said, "I know your deeds; you are neither cold nor hot." I wish you were either one or the other! So, because you are lukewarm—neither hot nor cold—I am about to spit you out of my mouth. You say, ‘I am rich; I have acquired wealth and do not need a thing.’ But you do not realize that you are wretched, pitiful, poor, blind, and naked.
There is a danger more subtle than persecution, more destructive than open opposition, and more deadly than any external enemy the Church has ever faced.
It is not the sword.
It is not the prison.
It is not the voice of the unbeliever.
It is deception within the people of God.
In the Gospel of Matthew 24, one of the very first things Jesus Christ says when asked about the end times is not about wars or signs in the heavens, but about deception.
“Take heed that no man deceive you.” (Matthew 24:4, KJV)
That is not a casual statement—it is a primary warning. Before He mentions wars, famines, persecution, or tribulation, He warns that people will be misled.
What Jesus Was Warning About
In Matthew 24, deception takes several forms:
1. Religious deception
“For many shall come in my name… and shall deceive many.” (v.5)
Not all deception looks evil—some comes clothed in religious language, even claiming to represent Christ.
2. Misinterpreting world events
“Ye shall hear of wars… see that ye be not troubled.” (v.6)
People can take real events and draw false conclusions—fear, propaganda, or manipulation can distort truth.
3. False prophets and narratives
“Many false prophets shall rise, and shall deceive many.” (v.11)
Voices claiming authority—political, religious, or cultural—can lead people away from truth.
4. Moral confusion
“Because iniquity shall abound, the love of many shall wax cold.” (v.12)
Deception isn’t just intellectual—it affects the heart. Right and wrong begin to blur.
Why This Matters So Much
Jesus didn’t say deception would affect a few—He said “many”.
That means:
- People can be sincere and still be deceived
- Entire groups—even religious ones—can be misled
- Deception often feels like truth while you’re inside it
That’s why the warning is repeated later in the chapter:
“If it were possible, they shall deceive the very elect.” (v.24)
A Key Spiritual Principle
The greatest danger is not obvious evil—it’s the subtle distortion of truth.
Deception often looks like:
- Mixing truth with error
- Justifying actions that contradict Christ’s teachings
- Letting fear or loyalty override discernment
- Following voices instead of testing them
The Safeguard Against Deception
Jesus doesn’t leave His followers without protection. Throughout Scripture, the safeguards are clear:
- Stay grounded in Scripture (not just what others say about it)
- Test every spirit and teaching (1 John 4:1)
- Watch for the fruit (Matthew 7:16)
- Remain anchored in Christ’s character—truth, love, righteousness
A Sobering Reflection
The warning in Matthew 24 forces every believer to ask:
- Am I following Christ—or a version shaped by culture or politics?
- Do my beliefs align with His teachings—or justify what He would condemn?
- Am I seeking truth—or defending what I already believe?
Bottom Line
Jesus made it clear:
In the last days, the greatest threat is not just persecution or suffering—but deception.
And the most dangerous deception is the kind that people don’t recognize as deception at all.
The First Sign: Moral Inconsistency
When deception takes root, truth no longer governs behavior—convenience does.
What was once called sin is now excused.
What was once grieved is now justified.
What was once clear becomes clouded.
“Woe unto them that call evil good, and good evil…” — Isaiah 5:20 (KJV)
Moral inconsistency is not always loud. It often whispers:
- “This situation is different.”
- “There are bigger issues at stake.”
- “We must be practical.”
And slowly, almost imperceptibly, the standard shifts.
The same voice that once declared:
“Thou shalt not kill.”
now finds reasons to explain why some lives are less protected than others.
The same people who once wept over injustice begin to weigh it, measure it, and sometimes ignore it.
That is not discernment.
That is deception.
The Second Sign: Political Entanglement
When deception deepens, the Church begins to lean—not on Christ—but on power.
The Kingdom of God becomes intertwined with the kingdoms of this world.
“My kingdom is not of this world…” — John 18:36 (KJV)
Yet history shows us a repeated pattern:
- The Church gains influence
- The Church gains access
- The Church gains a voice
…but in gaining these things, it often loses its witness
Because when the Church becomes dependent on political systems, it becomes hesitant to challenge them.
Instead of speaking prophetically, it begins to speak strategically.
Instead of declaring truth, it begins to calculate outcomes.
And when that happens, allegiance quietly shifts:
From Christ…
to causes
to parties
to nations
The Church was never called to rule through power.
It was called to transform through truth.
The Third Sign: Silence in the Face of Suffering
This may be the most telling sign of all.
When deception has fully settled in, something tragic happens:
The Church stops weeping.
Suffering becomes distant.
Pain becomes political.
Lives become statistics.
And instead of mourning, we begin explaining.
“Rejoice with them that do rejoice, and weep with them that weep.” — Romans 12:15 (KJV)
But deception hardens the heart.
It teaches us:
- to justify instead of grieve
- to defend instead of discern
- to stay silent instead of speaking
And perhaps most dangerous of all—it convinces us that our silence is righteousness.
How Does This Happen?
Deception rarely enters through rebellion.
It enters through:
- fear
- loyalty to systems
- misplaced trust
- unquestioned teaching
And once accepted, it reshapes how we see:
- truth
- justice
- even the teachings of Christ
“Take heed that no man deceive you.” — Matthew 24:4 (KJV)
The Call Back to Clarity
The answer is not anger.
The answer is not division.
The answer is not abandoning the Church.
The answer is returning to Christ as the standard.
Not culture.
Not politics.
Not tradition.
Christ.
- His words
- His example
- His commands
When Christ is the standard:
- moral clarity returns
- Political entanglement loosens
- Compassion is restored
Final Word
The greatest danger is not that the world opposes the Church.
The greatest danger is that the Church begins to mirror the world while believing it still reflects Christ.
Deception does not announce itself.
It does not warn you.
It does not feel wrong at first.
But its fruit is unmistakable:
- moral inconsistency
- political entanglement
- silence in the face of suffering
And where those things exist, something has gone wrong.
Not with the Gospel.
But with how it is being lived.
“And ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free.” — John 8:32 (KJV)
May the Church never lose its love for truth.
And may we never become so aligned with this world
that we can no longer see it clearly.