There was a time when the Church believed she was called to endure.
She believed she was a soldier in enemy territory.
She believed suffering was part of discipleship.
She believed holiness mattered.
She believed judgment begins at the house of God.
She believed the Church would stand faithful even in the fires of persecution.
But somewhere along the road, much of modern Christianity exchanged endurance for escape.
And I believe one of the greatest influences behind that change has been the rise of modern dispensational theology.
Now before someone gets angry, let me say this plainly: there are many sincere Christians who hold dispensational views and truly love Jesus Christ. Salvation is not found in understanding prophecy charts. Salvation is found through the blood of Jesus Christ and repentance toward God.
But doctrines shape expectations.
And expectations shape behavior.
That is where the danger lies.
The Shift From Endurance to Escape
The early Church did not expect escape from tribulation.
They expected opposition.
Jesus said:
“In the world ye shall have tribulation: but be of good cheer; I have overcome the world.” — John 16:33 (KJV)
Paul told Timothy:
“Yea, and all that will live godly in Christ Jesus shall suffer persecution.” — 2 Timothy 3:12 (KJV)
The apostles prepared believers to stand, suffer, endure, and overcome.
But modern dispensational teaching often centers around the idea that the Church will be removed before great trouble comes upon the earth. Entire generations have been taught:
“Don’t worry. We won’t be here.”
That mindset has done something dangerous to the modern Church.
It has produced spiritual complacency.
Why prepare for persecution if you believe you will escape it?
Why build deep faith if suffering is only for “those left behind”?
Why strengthen your family spiritually if the Church supposedly disappears before the storm?
Brother, that thinking has weakened many churches.
Prophecy Became Entertainment
There was once a reverence around prophecy.
Now prophecy conferences often resemble speculation seminars.
Charts.
Timelines.
Predictions.
Headlines interpreted every week.
People become more fascinated with identifying the antichrist than becoming like Christ.
And while Christians debate red heifers, rebuilt temples, blood moons, and political alliances, many churches have forgotten repentance, holiness, prayer, conviction, and the power of the Holy Ghost.
The devil does not fear prophecy experts who live worldly lives.
He fears holy people.
The Gospel Was Replaced With Comfort
One of the great dangers of modern prophetic systems is that they can produce false security.
Many people believe they are spiritually ready simply because they “believe in the rapture.”
But Jesus did not say:
“Watch prophecy only.”
He said:
“Watch therefore: for ye know not what hour your Lord doth come.” — Matthew 24:42 (KJV)
Watching means living ready.
Holiness.
Faithfulness.
Obedience.
Prayer.
Repentance.
The danger is not merely theological error.
The danger is spiritual sleep.
Some churches now preach almost nothing about:
repentance
sanctification
self-denial
separation from the world
perseverance
suffering for Christ
Instead, Christianity becomes a message of comfort, success, escape, and emotional reassurance.
But the New Testament Church was not built on comfort.
It was built on the cross.
The Church Lost Its Fighting Spirit
One of the saddest results of escapism theology is that many Christians no longer see themselves as spiritual warriors called to stand against darkness.
The early Christians faced Rome.
Martyrs faced lions.
Reformers faced execution.
Missionaries faced death.
Yet they endured because they believed overcoming mattered.
Revelation says:
“And they overcame him by the blood of the Lamb, and by the word of their testimony; and they loved not their lives unto the death.” — Revelation 12:11 (KJV)
That does not sound like a defeated Church waiting to disappear.
That sounds like a victorious Church standing faithful in the middle of tribulation.
Fear Has Replaced Faithfulness
Another tragedy is this:
Many prophecy teachings today create fear instead of holiness.
People become obsessed with:
global conspiracies
microchips
hidden governments
economic collapse
end-time speculation
Brother, the Church should not be driven by fear.
The Church should be driven by truth.
The focus of Scripture is not merely identifying the beast.
The focus is remaining faithful to Christ.
The disciples did not turn the world upside down because they mastered prophecy systems.
They turned the world upside down because they were filled with the Holy Ghost.
The Historic Church Emphasized Readiness, Not Escape
For most of church history, believers understood that suffering, persecution, and tribulation were part of the Christian walk.
The call was always:
endure
overcome
remain faithful
be spiritually awake
Jesus said:
“He that shall endure unto the end, the same shall be saved.” — Matthew 24:13 (KJV)
That is not the language of spiritual passivity.
That is the language of perseverance.
Final Thoughts From an Old Country Preacher
Brother, I am not saved because of a prophecy chart.
I am saved because Jesus Christ died for my sins, rose again, and changed my life.
And whether the Lord comes tonight or a hundred years from now, the command remains the same:
Be faithful.
Walk holy.
Stay awake.
Keep oil in your lamp.
Pray.
Endure hardness as a good soldier of Jesus Christ.
The Church does not need more sensationalism.
The Church needs conviction again.
Prayer again.
Repentance again.
Holiness again.
Courage again.
We do not prepare people for the future by promising escape.
We prepare them by teaching them how to stand when the storm comes.
Because one thing is certain:
Jesus Christ is coming again.
And the question is not whether we can predict every event correctly.
The question is whether the Church will still be faithful when He comes.