When the Church trades truth for approval, culture becomes the pulpit
We are living in a day when much of the Church has grown silent on issues that openly oppose the Word of God. In large part, this silence has been fueled by the fear of man, the desire to be accepted by mainstream culture, and the pressure to appear tolerant in a generation that has redefined compassion apart from truth. Yet Scripture never calls the people of God to be cruel, hateful, or arrogant — but neither does it call us to be silent, cowardly, or compromised.
Paul warned the Church, “Do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind” (Romans 12:2). That word is not a suggestion for private spirituality only; it is a command to the Ecclesia not to take on the mold, values, language, approval systems, and moral confusion of the age. When the Church begins to measure truth by what culture permits, applauds, or celebrates, culture has become her master.
Because of this silence, many pulpits have unintentionally given permission to lifestyles, ideologies, and spiritual compromises that Scripture clearly confronts. What previous generations would have discerned as rebellion against God is now often celebrated under the banner of love, inclusion, and cultural progress. But biblical love does not rejoice in iniquity; it rejoices in the truth (1 Corinthians 13:6). Love without truth becomes sentiment. Truth without love becomes harshness. But the Kingdom carries both — mercy that reaches and holiness that transforms.
Jesus never taught His Church to seek acceptance from the world. He said, “If the world hates you, know that it has hated Me before it hated you” (John 15:18). He also warned, “Woe to you, when all people speak well of you, for so their fathers did to the false prophets” (Luke 6:26). The approval of culture has never been the evidence of faithfulness. Often, it is the first warning sign that the Church has softened the message until offense has been removed from the cross.
This is why the letters to the seven churches in Revelation are so urgent for our hour. Jesus did not only rebuke the lost world; He rebuked His own churches when they drifted from faithfulness. To Ephesus, He said they had abandoned their first love, even though they still had works, labor, and doctrine (Revelation 2:2–5). That means a church can be busy, active, structured, and even doctrinally aware, yet still lose the burning love that keeps obedience alive.
To Pergamum, the Lord rebuked the toleration of corrupt teaching and mixture, saying there were those among them who held to the teaching of Balaam, leading God’s people into compromise (Revelation 2:14–16). Pergamum reveals a terrifying truth: a church can dwell in a hostile culture and still survive persecution, yet begin tolerating mixture from within. External pressure is dangerous, but internal compromise is often deadlier.
To Thyatira, Jesus confronted the toleration of Jezebel, a spirit of seduction, false prophecy, and moral compromise that led His servants into defilement (Revelation 2:20–23). The issue was not merely that wickedness existed in the culture around them. The issue was that the church tolerated what the Lord commanded them to confront. Tolerance becomes treason when it protects what Jesus died to deliver people from.
To Sardis, the Lord said, “You have the reputation of being alive, but you are dead” (Revelation 3:1). That word should shake the modern Church. Reputation is not resurrection. Crowds are not necessarily life. Platforms are not necessarily presence. A church can have activity, branding, influence, buildings, music, and motion, yet be spiritually dead because it has lost the voice, fire, holiness, and government of Holy Spirit.
To Laodicea, Jesus rebuked lukewarmness, self-sufficiency, and spiritual blindness. They said, “I am rich, I have prospered, and I need nothing,” but the Lord said they were “wretched, pitiable, poor, blind, and naked” (Revelation 3:17). This is the danger of a Church that has become comfortable with cultural success. It can mistake wealth for favor, influence for authority, and self-confidence for spiritual maturity.
Yet the mercy of Jesus is seen in the fact that He rebukes because He loves. He said, “Those whom I love, I reprove and discipline, so be zealous and repent” (Revelation 3:19). The rebuke of the Lord is not the rejection of the Church; it is His call to awaken her before judgment hardens what mercy was sent to correct. The Lord does not expose compromise to destroy His people, but to purify them.
The tragedy of our hour is that while many in the Church are shaking hands with the very systems that oppose the Lord’s authority, the doors of persecution continue to open against those who still refuse to bow. The same culture that demands the Church’s silence will not be satisfied until the Church also gives its agreement. First it asks for tolerance. Then it demands celebration. Then it punishes refusal.
But the apostles already told us this day would come. Paul wrote that in the last days people would be “lovers of self, lovers of money, proud, arrogant,” and “lovers of pleasure rather than lovers of God,” while still having “the appearance of godliness” but denying its power (2 Timothy 3:1–5). That is not merely a description of the world; it is a warning about religious forms that remain visible after holiness has departed.
The Church must recover the courage to say what God has said. Not with hatred. Not with cruelty. Not with religious arrogance. But with tears, conviction, authority, and holy fear. “We must obey God rather than men” (Acts 5:29). When the fear of man governs the pulpit, the fear of the Lord departs from the house.
The Remnant must understand this clearly: silence in the face of deception is not wisdom. Compromise in the name of acceptance is not love. Agreement with culture at the expense of obedience to Christ is not ministry — it is surrender. The Church was never called to be mastered by Babylon, trained by Jezebel, celebrated by Rome, or shaped by the spirit of the age. She was called to be the Bride of Christ, washed by the Word, clothed in righteousness, and governed by Holy Spirit.
Now is the time for the Ecclesia to recover her voice, cleanse her garments, and stand once again as a witness to the truth, the holiness, and the government of the Kingdom of God. The Lord is still saying, “He who has an ear, let him hear what the Spirit says to the churches” (Revelation 2:7).
The question before us is not whether culture will approve of the Church. The question is whether Jesus will.
Stay tuned, the journey continues…..
— Dr. Russell Welch
Dr. Russell Welch is a published author, prophetic teacher, apostolic builder, author, and founder of faith-driven publishing and media initiatives. He is known for crafting bold, Kingdom-centered messages that call the Ecclesia into maturity, doctrinal clarity, and governmental authority. With a passion for equipping the Remnant and honoring generational legacy, Dr. Welch writes and teaches at the intersection of Scripture, history, and spiritual governance, challenging believers to live as sons and daughters who legislate Heaven on earth through truth, holiness, and unwavering fidelity to Christ.
Be sure to check out his book: Restoring God’s Watchmen: Modern-day Jeremiah’s walking in the authority & power of His Glory, available exclusively on Amazon … here
