Pastors and Leaders, Your Silence About Roe v. Wade Speaks Volumes

Share:

I don’t know what’s more disheartening—the anger of many because Roe v. Wade was overturned or the silent pastors and worship leaders who say nothing? (For more on “naming names,” click here.) To tackle this topic, I’m revisiting points from past articles that I’ve written.

Watchmen or Cowards

Over the last few decades, Americans have seen the destruction of the institution of marriage, the removal of God’s Word in several areas and the embracing of CRT.

Many pulpits are also silent about governmental abuse, the LGBTQ agenda and the blatant murder of millions of babies. This is an indictment against America and Christian leaders are partially responsible—our silence speaks volumes. Are we watchmen or cowards?

Leaders, whether through worship or preaching, can regulate the spiritual condition of God’s people which affects the nation. Leaders, why are you so silent? Why aren’t you rejoicing that our national curse may have been lifted? Is it because you may lose half of your audience? If so, you’re pleasing men rather than God.

Cheerleaders and Game Changers

Sadly, many popular worship bands and leaders are exchanging truth for passivity, boldness for cowardliness and conviction for comfort. They aim to be motivational speakers rather than champions of righteousness.

Pastors (and Christian leaders alike) must take responsibility for the spiritual health of today’s church, and the nation. We don’t need more political-correctness; we need men and women filled with the Spirit of God.

Leaders, we are not just cheerleaders, we are gamechangers. We are called to stir and to convict so that change takes place. Granted, there are many wonderful pastors and churches—I appreciate their ministry, but, as a whole, the church has drifted off course. They have lost the compass of truth and the boldness of the Spirit.

Four Ways to Get Back on Track

1. Return to the prayer closet. Without prayer, “the church becomes a graveyard, not an embattled army. Praise and prayer are stifled; worship is dead. The preacher and the preaching encourage sin, not holiness … preaching which kills is prayerless preaching. Without prayer, the preacher creates death, and not life” (E.M. Bounds).

The dry, dead lethargic condition of the church simply reflects an impotent prayer life. While five-minute devotionals and prayers are good, they aren’t going to cut it in these dire times. We need powerful times of prayer, devotion and worship. “Without the heartbeat of prayer, the body of Christ will resemble a corpse. The church is dying on her feet because she is not living on her knees” (Al Whittinghill).

Sermons should not come from pop-psychology and the latest fad; they must come from the prayer closet where God prepares the messenger before we prepare the message. It takes broken men to break men. Unplug the TV, turn off Facebook and get back into the Word of God, prayer and worship!

2. Return to a separated life. If a pastor or a worship band fills their mind with the world all week and expects the Spirit of God to speak boldly through them, they will be gravely mistaken. “The sermon cannot rise in its life-giving forces above the man. Dead men give out dead sermons, and dead sermons kill. Everything depends on the spiritual character of the preacher” (E.M. Bounds). Who he is all week is who he will be when he steps to the pulpit.

3. Worship must be a priority. A pastor who does not worship is not prepared to preach. Many sing “about” God but they have never truly experienced Him—head knowledge without heart knowledge. Styles of worship range from the old, beloved hymns to contemporary. All worship should be God-centered, Christ-exalted and doctrinally sound.

Worship allows us to shift our focus and praise toward God. Whether you prefer hymnals and organs or contemporary bands is really not the issue. The issue is: are you truly worshiping God in “spirit and in truth”? He is the Creator of heaven and earth. He is not a cosmic force, universal love or a doting grandfather; He is the King of kings and the Lord of lords. We must worship Him. He created, redeemed and saved us. As one of the countless hymns declares so well, “O’ The Blood: washes me; shed for me … what a sacrifice that saved my life, yes the blood, it is my victory!”

4. Preach the difficult truths that set people free. The church cannot neglect, water-down or avoid preaching sin, repentance or the fear of the Lord in the hope of not offending or securing an audience. Difficult truths often offend, and rightly so—sin put Christ on the cross. The goal of preaching is faithfulness to God, not crowd appeal.

The church, as a whole, may have forgotten the fear of the Lord, but it doesn’t follow that we should. {eoa}

Shane Idleman is the founder and lead pastor of Westside Christian Fellowship in Leona Valley, California. He also began the Westside Christian Fellowship Radio Network—WCFRadio.org—in 2019. His sermons, books, articles and radio program have sparked change in many people’s lives.

Share:

Leave a Reply


More Spiritual Content
Top of the Week: Phil Robertson Health Update: ‘The Prayers of Millions’ Are Working
PRAY: Car Rams Christmas Market, 11 Dead with Dozens Reportedly Injured
Israeli Minister in Letter to Pope: ‘Jesus lived and died as a Jew’
America’s ‘Superman Prophecy’: A Vision of Redemption
Are These 10 Prophetic Points Your Gamebreakers for 2025?
David Diga Hernandez: How to Grow with God in 2025
US Citizen Found ‘Guilty’ of ‘Hate Speech’ for Quoting Bible Verse
Larry Huch’s 2025 Word: ‘The Golden Era’
JD Vance Responds to Now-Viral Prayer Complaint
Morning Rundown: Kenneth Copeland’s Word for 2025
previous arrow
next arrow
Shadow

Most Popular Posts

Latest Videos
88.2K Subscribers
1.1K Videos
8.9M Views

Share