Posts

When Transformation Becomes a Method (The Therapeutic Drift Series Pt 3)

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  In the previous post, we observed something that is easy to miss when viewed up close: movements that differ widely in theology and practice often share a similar understanding of where spiritual transformation takes place. Whether through powerful experiences, emotional healing, or structured recovery processes, many modern approaches increasingly focus on repairing or strengthening the inner life of the individual. At this point, an important clarification is necessary. The concern is not that these movements use tools. The church has always used tools — teaching methods, spiritual disciplines, pastoral practices, and communal structures — to help believers grow. Christian history is full of wise practices developed to guide discipleship and care for struggling people. The issue arises when a tool quietly becomes something more. When transformation itself begins to be understood primarily through a particular method, authority subtly shifts. What once served the gospel can begi...

Three Movements, One Center: Experience, Healing, and Recovery in the Modern Church (The Therapeutic Drift Series Pt 2)

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In the previous post, we traced how Western culture gradually moved toward a therapeutic understanding of the human person — one that places increasing emphasis on the inner self, emotional well-being, and psychological health. That cultural shift did not remain outside the church. Inevitably, it shaped how Christians began speaking about spiritual growth and transformation. What makes this change difficult to recognize, however, is that it does not belong to a single movement or tradition. Christians often evaluate modern ministries in isolation. Some debates focus on charismatic spirituality. Others center on psychology-informed discipleship. Still others examine recovery-based programs addressing addiction or persistent patterns of sin. These movements frequently disagree with one another theologically and stylistically. They appeal to different audiences, use different language, and often critique each other’s approaches. Yet beneath those differences lies something deeper — a shar...

How the Therapeutic Age Shaped Modern Christianity (The Therapeutic Drift Series Pt 1)

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In many churches today, the vocabulary of spiritual life has quietly changed. Words like  sin, repentance, holiness, and sanctification  increasingly share space with terms such as  trauma, emotional health, attachment, triggers, identity, and healing journeys . Discipleship materials often sound less like catechesis and more like counseling. Sermons sometimes frame the Christian life as an ongoing process of becoming whole inside. Some believers experience this language as compassionate and clarifying. Others sense a growing unease — not because compassion is misplaced, but because something about the  center  of Christian faith seems to be shifting. Before asking whether this shift is helpful or harmful, it is worth first asking a quieter question: How did the modern church come to speak about spiritual life in increasingly therapeutic terms at all? This post is not an argument against care for emotional suffering, nor an attempt to evaluate particular movemen...

The Lost Sheep and Repentance

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What Luke 15 Actually Teaches About the Parable of the Lost Sheep Some passages of Scripture slowly become slogans. Luke 15 is one of them. Over time, the parable of the lost sheep has been reshaped into a story primarily about divine pursuit — Jesus chasing us through forests of rebellion, relentlessly leaving the ninety-nine to find the one. Songs celebrate it. Sermons center on it. Entire ministries build their identity around the image. But when we allow Jesus to interpret His own parable, something unexpected emerges. The story is not ultimately about pursuit.  It is about repentance . The Context We Often Miss Luke 15 begins with a complaint. “This man receives sinners and eats with them.” (Luke 15:2) The Pharisees are scandalized. Jesus is welcoming the wrong people — sharing meals with those they consider morally and spiritually unclean. In response, Jesus tells three parables in succession: The Lost Sheep The Lost Coin The Lost Son And after the first story, He explains it...

Faithful Presence in a Political World (Politics and the Gospel Series Part 5)

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  A Necessary Clarification Throughout this series, we have explored the tension that arises when Christianity becomes closely tied to political power or cultural identity. We have seen how easily the Church, the State, and the Kingdom of God can be confused — and how that confusion can reshape faith itself. But an important clarification must be made before moving forward. Christians are not called to withdrawal from society. Nor are believers called to apathy toward justice, governance, or the well-being of their communities. Following Jesus has never meant disengaging from the world. The question has never been  whether  Christians should live within political societies, but  how  they should do so without losing sight of the Gospel’s true mission. Faithfulness does not require retreat. It requires clarity. Proper Political Engagement Scripture assumes believers will live as active members of society. Christians may participate responsibly in civic life in ma...

The Church and Power: A Recurring Temptation (Politics and the Gospel Series Part 4)

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Opening Statement By this point in the series, we have seen how confusion between the Church, the State, and the Kingdom of God can gradually reshape how faith is understood. When Christianity becomes closely tied to cultural identity or societal influence, discipleship can quietly give way to religiosity. It would be easy to assume this struggle belongs uniquely to our time. Yet history tells a different story. The tension between faith and power did not begin in our generation. In fact, it has appeared again and again throughout the life of the church. What we are witnessing today is less a new crisis than a familiar temptation — one Christians have faced for centuries. Understanding that history helps us move from reaction to wisdom. A Repeating Historical Pattern In the early centuries of Christianity, believers lived as a minority community without political influence. Their faith spread not through institutional power but through witness, sacrifice, and devotion. Christianity gre...

When Christianity Becomes Culture (Politics and the Gospel Series Part 3)

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Opening Observation In the previous post, we explored the biblical distinction between the Church, the State, and the Kingdom of God. Scripture presents each as having a different role and purpose, yet confusion arises when those categories begin to merge. When that confusion persists long enough, something deeper begins to change — not just how Christians engage society, but how faith itself is understood. Christian identity slowly shifts. Instead of being rooted primarily in conversion — a personal turning toward Christ marked by repentance and new life — Christianity begins to function as belonging. Faith becomes something connected to heritage, culture, or shared values rather than a transformed heart. The question is no longer,  “Have I been made new in Christ?”  but subtly becomes,  “Do I identify with Christian ideals?” This shift is often gradual, almost invisible at first. Yet its effects are profound. Cultural Christianity Explained Cultural Christianity emerges...