Monday, May 11, 2026

The Escape: Prepared for the Trial of Our Faith

 “Watch ye therefore, and pray always, that ye may be accounted worthy to escape all these things that shall come to pass, and to stand before the Son of man.”

— Luke 21:36 (KJV)

There are many today who speak of escaping the coming troubles of this world. Entire prophetic systems have been built around the hope that the Church will suddenly disappear before tribulation, persecution, and suffering come upon the earth.

I will be honest. I hope they are right.

I would rejoice if the LORD were to call His Church home before the darkest days arrive upon the nations. There is nothing in my heart that desires suffering, persecution, famine, or tribulation.

But as I read the Scriptures, I cannot ignore the repeated warnings given to believers to prepare spiritually for hardship.

Jesus never promised His followers exemption from trial. He promised victory through it.

“In the world ye shall have tribulation: but be of good cheer; I have overcome the world.”
— John 16:33 (KJV)

The modern Church has often been taught to expect escape from suffering, while the early Church expected to endure suffering faithfully.

The apostles were persecuted.
The prophets suffered.
The early Christians faced imprisonment and death.
Believers throughout history have endured tribulation for the name of Christ.

Why should we believe the final generation of believers will face less testing than those who came before us?

The Bible repeatedly compares faith to gold refined in fire.

“That the trial of your faith, being much more precious than of gold that perisheth, though it be tried with fire…”
— 1 Peter 1:7 (KJV)

Gold is purified in the furnace.
The impurities rise to the surface under intense heat.
The fire reveals what is genuine.

I believe the Church may soon enter such a refining fire.

The world is changing rapidly before our eyes:

  • wars and rumors of wars,

  • economic instability,

  • fear among nations,

  • moral confusion,

  • deception,

  • persecution growing against true biblical faith,

  • and societies increasingly hostile toward Christ.

Jesus called these things “the beginning of sorrows.”

The danger is not merely physical hardship. The greater danger is spiritual collapse.

Many who claim the name of Christ may fall away when faith becomes costly.

Jesus warned:

“And because iniquity shall abound, the love of many shall wax cold.”
— Matthew 24:12 (KJV)

That is why Luke 21:36 speaks so powerfully to me.

The escape may not be escaping hardship itself. The true escape may be escaping deception, apostasy, fear, compromise, and spiritual destruction.

The believer who remains faithful through trial has escaped the greatest danger of all.

The three Hebrew children were not removed from the fiery furnace.
Daniel was not removed from Babylon.
Noah was not removed from the flood.
Israel remained in Egypt during the plagues.

God preserved His people through judgment and tribulation.

Perhaps we too must prepare for such an hour.

This is why spiritual preparation matters so much.

A shallow faith will not survive deep waters.
A compromised Church will not stand in fierce persecution.
A prayerless believer will struggle when fear grips the world.

The hour is growing late, and many Christians are spiritually asleep.

Yet Scripture tells us:

“But ye, brethren, are not in darkness, that that day should overtake you as a thief.”
— 1 Thessalonians 5:4 (KJV)

Children of the day should recognize the signs and prepare their hearts.

This is not a call to panic.
It is a call to readiness.

We must:

  • deepen our prayer life,

  • know the Scriptures,

  • strengthen our families,

  • stand in holiness,

  • encourage one another,

  • and learn to trust God completely.

If harder days come, only a genuine faith will endure.

Yet there is hope even in tribulation.

The fire that destroys the worldliness of the flesh also purifies the saints of God.

Job declared:

“But he knoweth the way that I take: when he hath tried me, I shall come forth as gold.”
— Job 23:10 (KJV)

That is the cry of the faithful believer.

Not confidence in earthly systems.
Not trust in governments.
Not dependence upon comfort and prosperity.

But confidence that Christ will sustain His people through whatever lies ahead.

Whether the LORD calls His Church home before tribulation or carries us through it, our responsibility remains the same:

  • watch,

  • pray,

  • remain faithful,

  • and stand firm.

The true escape is not merely avoiding suffering.
The true escape is remaining faithful enough to stand before the Son of Man when this present world passes away.

May God help us become a people whose faith survives the fire.

Children of the Day: Reading the Signs of the Times

 There is a growing uneasiness worldwide today. Nations are trembling. Wars continue to spread. Earthquakes are increasing in strange places. Volcanoes awaken. Economies are shaken by debt and inflation. Families struggle to survive. Fear and confusion fill the hearts of millions as the world rapidly changes before our eyes.

Yet amid all this chaos, many Christians sense something deeper at work. There is a burden in the spirit that tells us these are not ordinary times.

The Bible warned us these things would come.

Jesus Himself said:

"And ye shall hear of wars and rumours of wars… For nation shall rise against nation, and kingdom against kingdom: and there shall be famines, and pestilences, and earthquakes, in divers places. All these are the beginning of sorrows."

— Matthew 24:6–8 (KJV)

Notice carefully that Jesus called these events "the beginning of sorrows." The word "sorrows" carries the idea of birth pains. Birth pains start slowly, then increase in frequency and intensity until the final moment arrives.

What we are witnessing today feels very much like the beginning of those pains.

Many in the world refuse to see it. They dismiss every warning sign. They mock those who speak about prophecy. Others are so distracted by entertainment, politics, and worldly pursuits that they cannot discern the spiritual condition of the times.

But the believer is not supposed to walk in darkness.

Paul wrote:

"But ye, brethren, are not in darkness, that that day should overtake you as a thief."

— 1 Thessalonians 5:4 (KJV)

Again, he said:

"Ye are all the children of light, and the children of the day."

— 1 Thessalonians 5:5 (KJV)

Children of the day can see what others cannot see.

This does not mean we know the exact day or hour of Christ's return. Jesus clearly said, "No man knows that." But Scripture also teaches believers should recognize the season.

Jesus rebuked the religious leaders of His generation because they could predict the weather but could not recognize the spiritual signs unfolding before them.

"Ye can discern the face of the sky; but can ye not discern the signs of the times?"

— Matthew 16:3 (KJV)

The signs are everywhere now.

The world economy hangs by a thread. Wars in the Middle East affect fuel, food, and transportation worldwide. Nations are preparing for larger conflicts. Fear spreads faster than truth through social media, and propaganda—violence and lawlessness increase. Many churches have become spiritually asleep while the world grows darker around them.

Even nature itself seems unsettled.

Jesus warned there would be:

  • earthquakes,
  • pestilences,
  • fear among nations,
  • distress and perplexity,
  • and men's hearts failing them for fear.

Does that not sound like the world we live in now?

Yet the greatest danger may not be war or economic collapse. The greatest danger is spiritual deception.

Many who claim to follow Christ have become entangled with worldly systems, political idols, false prophets, and materialism. They trust governments more than God. They seek comfort more than holiness. They know the language of religion but lack spiritual discernment.

Meanwhile, the true Church is being awakened.

Across the world, believers are sensing that the hour is late. There is a stirring to prepare spiritually, to return to prayer, holiness, repentance, and the Word of God.

The purpose of prophecy is not to create panic. It is to awaken the sleeping.

Paul warned:

"Therefore let us not sleep, as do others; but let us watch and be sober."

— 1 Thessalonians 5:6 (KJV)

Sadly, much of modern Christianity has fallen asleep. Many pulpits avoid preaching repentance, prophecy, holiness, or judgment. Churches entertain people while the storm clouds gather on the horizon.

But the children of the day are waking up.

We can feel the shift taking place in the world. We see systems becoming unstable. We see morality collapsing. We see governments struggling to maintain order. We see fear growing in men's hearts.

And yet believers should not walk in terror.

Jesus said:

"And when these things begin to come to pass, then look up, and lift up your heads; for your redemption draweth nigh."

— Luke 21:28 (KJV)

The world sees chaos.

The believer sees prophecy unfolding.

The world sees fear.

The believer sees the nearness of Christ.

The world looks for political salvation.

The believer looks for the Kingdom of God.

This is not the hour for the Church to compromise. This is the hour to stand firm. Families must pray together again. Churches must return to the truth. Christians must separate from worldly deception and walk in the light of God's Word.

Children of darkness stumble unthinkingly into the future.

Children of the day can read the signs.

May God help us remain awake, discerning, faithful, and ready for whatever lies ahead.

"Watch ye therefore, and pray always, that ye may be accounted worthy to escape all these things that shall come to pass, and to stand before the Son of man."

— Luke 21:36 (KJV)

Sunday, May 10, 2026

Faithful in Troubled Times: Christians, Politics, and the Danger of Losing Our Hope

 Many Christians today are weary.

They are tired of political corruption, tired of empty promises, tired of recycled candidates, tired of being manipulated by fear, and tired of watching political parties demand absolute loyalty while ignoring the concerns of ordinary people.

Across America, many believers feel politically homeless. Some have become angry. Others discouraged. Some have withdrawn completely from the political process, believing their voice no longer matters.

I understand the feeling.

When elections seem controlled by party systems, when candidates run unopposed, when politicians vote along party lines rather than their consciences, and when the concerns of citizens are ignored, it is easy to become cynical. Many Americans no longer believe their government truly represents them.

Yet in the middle of this frustration, Christians must remember something important:

Our hope has never been in political systems.

"Put not your trust in princes, nor in the son of man, in whom there is no help." — Psalm 146:3 (KJV)

America is politically divided, emotionally exhausted, and spiritually confused. Political parties now demand something that belongs only to Christ — unquestioning loyalty.

This is dangerous.

The Church must never become merely a religious branch of a political movement. The moment believers excuse pride, corruption, dishonesty, cruelty, hatred, or immorality simply because it comes from "their side," politics has become an idol.

Jesus Christ did not die for a political party.

He did not shed His blood for Republicans or Democrats.

He died for sinners.

Christians must remember that we are citizens of another Kingdom first.

"For our conversation is in heaven; from whence also we look for the Saviour, the Lord Jesus Christ." — Philippians 3:20 (KJV)

This does not mean Christians should abandon civic responsibility, far from it.

Voting is not salvation, but it is stewardship.

We should still pray.

We should still stand for truth.

We should still defend righteousness.

We should still care about justice.

We should still speak for the innocent, the weak, the unborn, the elderly, and the oppressed.

But we must stop believing that elections alone can heal a nation's soul.

No president can save America spiritually.

No Congress can create revival.

No political movement can replace repentance.

Revival has never come from Washington.

It comes when hearts turn back to God.

"If my people, which are called by my name, shall humble themselves, and pray, and seek my face, and turn from their wicked ways; then will I hear from heaven, and will forgive their sin, and will heal their land." — 2 Chronicles 7:14 (KJV)

The problem in America is not merely political.

It is spiritual.

We are witnessing a nation filled with anger, greed, division, deception, pride, and moral confusion. Political leaders often reflect the condition of the people themselves. Elections reveal the heart of a nation more than they solve its problems.

Yet Christians must not surrender to hopelessness.

One of Satan's greatest weapons is discouragement.

If believers become so disgusted that they withdraw completely from society, corruption grows unchecked. The answer is not unquestioning political loyalty, nor total disengagement. The answer is faithful Christian witness.

The early Church changed the world without political power.

They had no wealthy lobbying groups.

No television networks.

No social media influence.

No voting majority.

They lived under corrupt rulers, pagan governments, persecution, and injustice.

Yet they transformed civilization through truth, holiness, courage, prayer, sacrifice, and unwavering faith in Christ.

The modern Church must recover that spirit.

We must become people who speak truth without hatred.

People who stand firm without becoming bitter.

People who refuse to worship political leaders.

People who love righteousness more than party loyalty.

Nathan rebuked King David.

Elijah rebuked Ahab.

John the Baptist rebuked Herod.

The prophets of God did not protect political parties.

They spoke truth to power.

The Church must once again become prophetic instead of partisan.

This world is becoming darker.

Fear and anger dominate the headlines.

Many people are anxious about war, economic instability, corruption, violence, and the future of the nation.

But Christians are not called to panic.

We are called to remain faithful.

"Ye are the light of the world." — Matthew 5:14 (KJV)

Light is most visible in darkness.

Perhaps this is why God has allowed such troubled times — to reveal whether His people will place their faith in earthly kingdoms or in the eternal Kingdom of God.

Do not surrender your conscience to politicians.

Do not allow discouragement to silence your witness.

Do not become consumed with anger.

Do not place your hope in princes.

Stand for truth.

Pray for wisdom.

Vote according to conscience.

Remain engaged where you can.

Help your neighbors.

Strengthen your family.

Support your Church.

Encourage the weary.

Warn against evil.

Preach the Gospel.

And above all, remain faithful to Jesus Christ.

Because long after political parties fade away, Christ will still be King.

When The Church Lost It's Message of Salvation

 Many believers today are struggling with a question they never imagined they would ask: How can evangelical Christians condemn pride, immorality, blasphemy, and worldliness in one leader, yet excuse or ignore those same things in another simply because he advances their political goals?

For decades, evangelical Christianity preached strongly against pride, vulgarity, adultery, greed, mockery, and the exaltation of self. Pastors warned congregations about celebrity worship, idolatry of man, and the dangers of placing political power above spiritual truth. Yet today, many Christians who once preached those very sermons now remain silent — or even applaud — when behavior they once condemned comes from a political figure they support.

This inconsistency is troubling many sincere believers.

The issue is not merely politics. Christians can disagree about taxes, immigration, foreign policy, or economics. The deeper issue is spiritual and moral consistency. If evangelical Christians had denounced another president for mocking opponents, speaking with arrogance, displaying self-exalting imagery, or surrounding himself with praise that bordered on worship, why is it now tolerated?

The Bible is very clear concerning pride:

"Pride goeth before destruction, and an haughty spirit before a fall."

— Proverbs 16:18 KJV

Yet modern evangelical culture often excuses pride when it appears useful politically. Many believers once warned against men who publicly exalted themselves, but now some cheer displays of self-glorification that would have shocked previous generations of Christians.

Even more concerning is the willingness of some religious leaders to defend imagery and rhetoric that many ordinary Christians immediately recognize as spiritually dangerous. Golden statues, messianic comparisons, and the elevation of political leaders to near-savior status should alarm anyone familiar with Scripture.

The Bible repeatedly warns against exalting human leaders beyond their proper place:

"Put not your trust in princes, nor in the son of man, in whom there is no help."

— Psalm 146:3 KJV

and:

"Little children, keep yourselves from idols."

— 1 John 5:21 KJV

Many evangelicals spent decades preaching against America's moral decline while insisting that character matters in leadership. They rightly criticized presidents for sexual immorality, dishonesty, profanity, arrogance, and irrelevance. Yet now many seem willing to overlook nearly anything as long as political victories are achieved.

What changed?

Some Christians justify this by saying God uses imperfect men. That is certainly true. God used flawed people throughout Scripture — David, Samson, Solomon, Peter, and others. But Scripture never celebrated their sin, pride, or rebellion. The prophets confronted kings. Nathan rebuked David. Elijah rebuked Ahab. John the Baptist rebuked Herod. True men of God did not excuse sin because it was politically convenient.

The danger facing the modern Church is not simply support for a politician. The greater danger is that many believers now appear willing to compromise biblical principles for political influence and cultural power.

Jesus warned:

"How can ye believe, which receive honour one of another, and seek not the honour that cometh from God only?"

— John 5:44 KJV

Some evangelical leaders now speak of political figures with language that borders on religious devotion. Critics are attacked as enemies not merely of a political movement, but almost as enemies of God Himself. This spirit should deeply concern believers.

The early Church did not conquer the world through political power or personality cults. They changed the world through holiness, humility, truth, sacrifice, and unwavering loyalty to Christ above all earthly kingdoms.

Jesus Himself demonstrated humility:

"And being found in fashion as a man, he humbled himself…"

— Philippians 2:8 KJV

Christ never demanded worship through intimidation, pride, or self-exaltation. He washed the disciples' feet. He associated with the lowly. He warned against hypocritical religious leaders who loved public praise and power.

Yet today, parts of American Christianity seem increasingly consumed with political victory at any cost. Many believers who once warned against worldliness now excuse behavior they would never have tolerated from political opponents.

This inconsistency is causing many Christians — especially younger believers — to question the credibility of modern evangelical leadership. They see churches condemning sin selectively depending on political affiliation, and they recognize the hypocrisy.

Jesus gave one of the strongest warnings in Scripture against religious hypocrisy:

"Woe unto you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites!"

— Matthew 23:13 KJV

The Church must remember that no political leader is the hope of the world. No president is a messiah. No nation is the Kingdom of God.

America does not need political idolatry disguised as Christianity. The Church needs repentance, humility, discernment, and a renewed commitment to the teachings of Jesus Christ above party loyalty and political power.

Christians should pray for leaders, support righteousness where they find it, and oppose evil consistently — regardless of whether it comes from the Left or the Right.

If believers lose the courage to speak truth because of political loyalty, then the Church risks becoming nothing more than a religious arm of worldly power rather than the prophetic voice of Christ in a fallen world.