Kingdom Perspective
Many in the American church have embraced a view of Christianity that is neither biblical nor historical.
Through movies, TV, and false teachers, believers have been conditioned to accept a defeated, marginalized faith—expecting to be walked over by the world rather than advancing victoriously.
But church history tells a different story. Throughout the centuries, we see a recurring pattern: in certain times and regions, Christians stopped being the church, and darkness invaded those areas.
Yet time and again, a generation of believers would rise up, flip the light switch back on, and usher in the blessing of God.
Reformation. Revival. Awakening. Cultural transformation.
This is the historical norm, not the retreat theology we've been sold.
This isn't the Christianity of Scripture or history. It's a counterfeit that has produced exactly what Jesus warned about: saltless salt, good for nothing but to be trampled underfoot.
The Matthew 11 Wake-Up Call:
Jesus drops a bombshell in Matthew 11: the least believer under the New Covenant possesses greater authority than the greatest Old Testament prophet. From John the Baptist forward, the Kingdom of God advances violently—taken by force through passionate, pressing believers, not passive spectators.
"The Law and the Prophets were until John." Everything in the Old Testament pointed to this moment.
If someone truly believes the Old Testament, they will receive Christ—because it all testified of Him. Now the Kingdom must be preached, the gospel must be believed, and we must press in with holy violence.
Jesus immediately condemns the cities where most of His miracles occurred. His indictment is devastating: if pagan cities like Tyre, Sidon, and Sodom had witnessed what these privileged cities saw, they would have repented and still be standing today.
The problem wasn't lack of power or proof—it was hard hearts refusing to respond despite overwhelming evidence.
The Question That Haunts America: 🇺🇲
What if the persecuted church in China had our freedom of speech?
What if believers in illegal underground churches had our constitutional protections, resources, and platforms?
To whom much is given, much is required. Jesus' warning to Chorazin and Capernaum echoes directly to the American church: unprecedented privilege demands unprecedented accountability.
The sleeping giant is stirring.
A generation is rising to reclaim the biblical mandate the church abandoned—moving from retreat to engagement, from passivity to Kingdom advancement, from self-focused spirituality to culture-transforming faith.
We possess the same authority as the apostles. We have freedom they never dreamed of.
The only question is whether we'll steward what we've been given or squander it like the cities Jesus condemned.
Will you be the generation that flips the light switch back on, or will you play games on the playground while judgment looms?