Thursday, May 7, 2026

“For-Profit” or “Non-Profit” Prophets? (Part 2)

False Prophets and the Narrow Way

On this, did Jesus give us some warnings in the Gospel of Matthew 7:15–20? Yep:

“Beware of false prophets, who come to you in sheep’s clothing, but inwardly they are ravenous wolves. You will recognize them by their fruits. Are grapes gathered from thornbushes, or figs from thistles? In the same way, every healthy tree bears good fruit, but the diseased tree bears bad fruit. A healthy tree cannot bear bad fruit, nor can a diseased tree bear good fruit. Every tree that does not bear good fruit is cut down and thrown into the fire. Therefore by their fruits you will know them.”

The way is narrow and the gate is small. Jesus is the only way into the Father's holy heaven. 

He said, "Enter through the narrow gate. For wide is the gate and broad is the road that leads to destruction, and many enter through it. 14 But small is the gate and narrow the road that leads to life, and only a few find it." Matthew 7:13-14 niv

If we love Him, we will keep is commandments by His grace and power. 

Christ’s words above are both compassionate, serious and urgent. He lovingly calls sinners to salvation, yet He also warns that there are deceivers who seek to lead souls away from the truth and onto the broad road that ends in destruction.


A. The Divine Invitation

At the close of the Sermon on the Mount, Jesus brought every listener to a place of decision. In Matthew 7:13–14 He declared:

“Enter by the narrow gate. For the gate is wide and the way is easy that leads to destruction, and those who enter by it are many. For the gate is narrow and the way is hard that leads to life, and those who find it are few.”

The Lord Jesus does not merely offer information; He calls for repentance, faith, and surrender. Every person must choose between two roads: one leading to eternal life, and the other to judgment.


1. Christ’s Invitations in the New Testament

Throughout the New Testament, Christ continually invited sinners to come to Him.

In Matthew 4:17, Jesus proclaimed:

“Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand.”

Repentance means turning from sin and self-rule to God.

In Matthew 11:28 Jesus tenderly called sinners like me:

“Come unto Me, all ye that labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest.”

In John 7:37 He cried out publicly:

“If any man thirst, let him come unto Me, and drink.”

Again and again Christ revealed Himself as the only Savior:

  • “I am the bread of life” (John 6:35)
  • “I am the good shepherd” (John 10:11)
  • “I am the way, the truth, and the life” (John 14:6)
  • “I am the resurrection and the life” (John 11:25)

The heart of Christ is full of mercy toward sinners, calling them to Himself for forgiveness and eternal life.


2. God’s Invitation in the Old Testament

The gracious invitation of God is also seen throughout the Old Testament.

In Book of Isaiah 1:18–19 the Lord says:

“Though your sins be as scarlet, they shall be as white as snow.”

God promises cleansing and forgiveness to those who humble themselves before Him.

Again, in Isaiah 55:1:

“Everyone who thirsts, come to the waters… come, buy wine and milk without money and without price.”

Salvation cannot be purchased by human merit, religious works, or self-righteousness. We come to God empty-handed, trusting completely in His grace and mercy.

The Bible closes with the same gracious invitation in Book of Revelation 22:17:

“The Spirit and the bride say, ‘Come.’”

From Genesis to Revelation, God calls sinners to repentance and salvation.

Yet Scripture also reveals that God’s patience will not continue forever. Those who reject His mercy will face His judgment. The same Lord who lovingly invites sinners also warns of eternal destruction for those who refuse His Son.

As Second Epistle of Peter 3:9 teaches, God is patient, “not willing that any should perish, but that all should come to repentance.”

Still, the broad road ends in judgment.


B. The Two Roads Before Humanity

Every person stands at a spiritual crossroads.

One road is narrow. It is entered through repentance and faith in Christ alone. It is difficult because it requires denial of self, submission to God, and obedience to truth. Yet it leads to eternal life.

The other road is broad. It is crowded, popular, and easy. It allows man to keep his pride, self-righteousness, and sin. Yet it leads to destruction.

Both roads may appear religious. Both may claim to lead to heaven. But only one is true.

The narrow way rests upon God’s accomplishment through Christ. The broad way rests upon human effort, self-made religion, and deception.


C. The Warning About False Prophets

One reason the narrow gate is difficult to find is because false teachers stand nearby, pointing people toward the broad road.

Jesus therefore warned:

“Beware of false prophets” (Matthew 7:15).

These deceivers disguise themselves as spiritual guides while secretly leading souls away from truth. Like wolves among sheep, they appear harmless outwardly but inwardly seek destruction.

Many people follow them.

Jesus warned in Matthew 7:22–23 that multitudes will one day say:

“Lord, Lord, did we not prophesy in Your name?”

Yet Christ will answer:

“I never knew you; depart from Me, you workers of lawlessness.”

Religious activity alone does not prove someone belongs to Christ. False prophets may preach, perform impressive works, and speak religious language while remaining strangers to saving grace.


I. The Warning Concerning False Prophets

A. False Prophets Throughout Scripture

The Bible repeatedly warns about false teachers.


1. In the Old Testament

In Book of Deuteronomy 13:1–5, God warned Israel that even if a prophet performed signs or wonders, he was to be rejected if he led people away from the true God.

Truth is not measured merely by miracles, charisma, or outward success. Doctrine must agree with the revealed Word of God.

“Speak unto us smooth things.”

The people actually said that to the prophets. 

"Which say to the seers, See not; and to the prophets, Prophesy not unto us right things, speak unto us smooth things, prophesy deceits:" Isaiah 30:10

These words refer to flattering words, illusions, or messages that make people feel comfortable in their sins, rather than warnings about sin, repentance, or coming judgment. People today even have a preference for false comfort over inconvenient, straightforward truth, which ultimately leads to deception, rather than genuine peace. 

Yes, it's sad. In every generation, foolish people have preferred comforting lies over convicting truth.

Jeremiah repeatedly exposed false prophets who spoke from their own imaginations instead of from God. They encouraged sinners in rebellion rather than calling them to repentance.


2. In the New Testament

Jesus warned:

“Many false prophets shall rise, and shall deceive many” (Matthew 24:11).

Paul warned in Epistle to the Romans 16:17–18 that false teachers deceive hearts through “smooth words and flattering speech.”

Peter warned of “false teachers” who would secretly introduce destructive heresies (2 Peter 2:1).

John instructed believers:

“Test the spirits to see whether they are from God” (1 John 4:1).

False teaching has existed throughout redemptive history and will continue until Christ returns.


B. The Nature of a True Prophet

A true prophet was marked by two things:

  1. A divine calling
  2. A divine message

God chose certain men to speak His truth faithfully.

Moses was called directly by God and instructed to speak God’s words (Exodus 3–4).

True prophets did not invent messages to please people. They faithfully proclaimed what God had revealed.

False prophets, however, spoke from their own hearts, promoted error, and misled the people.


C. The Danger of False Prophets

Jesus said:

“Beware.”

The word carries the idea of being constantly alert and on guard.

False prophets are spiritually dangerous because they corrupt truth, distort the gospel, and lead souls toward destruction.

Peter described them as:

  • “destructive”
  • “greedy”
  • “deceivers”
  • “slaves of corruption” (2 Peter 2)

Epistle of Jude likewise portrays them as dangerous, selfish, and spiritually corrupt.


D. Wolves in Sheep’s Clothing

Jesus said false prophets come “in sheep’s clothing.”

They disguise themselves as servants of God.

They may even speak a lot about:

  • Jesus
  • grace
  • faith
  • the Bible
  • love
  • blessing

Yet they avoid truths such as:

  • repentance
  • denying your old fleshly nature and what the world system demands
  • holiness
  • sin
  • judgment
  • dying to self, self-denial regarding your own way
  • full surrender and obedience to the Lordship of Christ

They outwardly resemble shepherds while inwardly acting as wolves.

A wolf’s purpose is not to protect sheep, but to consume them.


E. Different Kinds of False Teachers

Scripture reveals several categories of false teachers.


1. Heretics

Some openly deny biblical truth and reject the authority of Scripture.


2. Apostates

Others once professed Christianity outwardly but later abandoned the faith altogether.


3. Deceivers

These are often the most dangerous.

They sound evangelical, use Christian vocabulary, quote Scripture selectively, and appear moral outwardly. Yet they subtly twist truth and distort the gospel.

Second Epistle to the Corinthians 11:14–15 warns that Satan disguises himself “as an angel of light,” and his servants likewise disguise themselves as ministers of righteousness.

Because of this, believers must exercise biblical discernment.


F. The Marks of False Prophets

1. Their Words

False teachers often emphasize comfort, success, self-esteem, and earthly happiness while avoiding difficult biblical truths.

They may speak much about blessings while saying little about repentance or holiness.


2. Their Lives

Some appear outwardly respectable and religious. Yet beneath the surface there is pride, greed, immorality, or self-exaltation.

Jesus said we are to examine their “fruit.” Fruit includes:

  • doctrine
  • character
  • conduct
  • motives
  • influence
  • obedience to Scripture

A corrupt tree cannot continually produce good fruit.


G. The Final Judgment of False Prophets

Matthew 7:22–23 gives one of the most sobering scenes in Scripture.

Many religious people will stand before Christ claiming spiritual works done in His name.

Yet Jesus will declare depart from me:

“I never knew you.”

Not “I knew you once,” but “I never knew you.”

Their ministry, miracles, religious language, and public reputation could not replace genuine salvation and obedience to God.


The Tragedy

False prophets will not perish alone.

Jesus said “many” follow them on the broad road.

The tragedy is multiplied because deception spreads destruction to others.


The Certainty of Judgment

God did not spare fallen angels, the world in Noah’s day, or Sodom and Gomorrah (2 Peter 2:4–6). Scripture therefore assures us that He will not ignore false teachers who corrupt truth and mislead souls.

Judgment upon false prophets is certain unless they truly repent and turn to Christ.


Final Exhortation

Jesus began this warning with one clear command:

“Beware.”

Believers must not be naïve or spiritually careless. We are commanded to test teaching by Scripture, examine fruit carefully, and remain steadfast in the truth of God’s Word.

Many today are easily deceived because they judge teachers by popularity, personality, eloquence, charisma, or outward success instead of biblical faithfulness.

But Christ said:

“By their fruits you shall know them.”

The true servant of God points people to Christ, repentance, holiness, sound doctrine, and obedience to Scripture. False prophets point people toward self, error, compromise, and destruction.

May we remain grounded in the Word of God, discerning in spirit, humble before the Lord, and faithful to “the faith once for all delivered unto the saints” (Jude 3).

Quite a few biblical prophets, apostles, and teachers either worked ordinary jobs for a time. They labored with their hands, or farmed crops, or shepherded animals, they served in government positions, or deliberately refused financial dependence on ministry income at times. Paul did that. In Scripture some figures are clearly identified with their work occupations, while others are not. But the pattern is unmistakable.

Why are we told to work while it is day (John 9:4)?

How many prophets are in the Bible?

Are there prophets in the church today?

Are there really false prophets.. spiritual wolves so to speak.. in sheep's clothing? Yes.

What was a prophet in the Old Testament?

What is a prophet's reward?

Again, is the concept of personal prophecy even biblical?

What prophecy is Matthew 2:23 referring to regarding Jesus being a Nazarene?

I want to re-hear the story of Elijah from the Bible.. and the prophets of Baal?

What are the prophetic books of the Bible?

What was a seer in the Bible?

What does it mean when some kooky pastor gets way off and yet says that we are not to ask about it (test what we hear against the Bible)? Have you heard that.. we're not to touch God's anointed prophet or apostle? Sadly, Liney and I have heard that.

Please help me to recognize false teachers and false prophets so I don't get ripped off.

Don't get off the wall. I have some friends in So Cal who like to tell me about all their prophetic dreams. Sup with that? They try to give spiritual interpretation to every dream they have. 

What is prophecy? What does it even mean to prophesy?

What is 'the Law and the Prophets' mentioned in the New Testament?

We've often heard that He is, but is God really restoring the offices of apostle and prophet in the church today?

He took off so fast. Was Elijah afraid of Jezebel?

What does it mean that the church was built on the foundation of the apostles and prophets (Ephesians 2:20)?

What is the core message of the Major Prophets?

Give me the names of all of the Major Prophets and Minor Prophets?

Is there like a core message from the Minor Prophets?

Is there real prophetic ministry?

I want some passages about prophets?

What is the Bible referring to when it mentions the law and the prophets?

What was the school of prophets?

What does it mean that Saul is also among the prophets?

How can I know God's will for my life?

According to God what is a real prophet?

What did Jesus mean when He said, “If you love me keep my commandments”

What is the law of Christ? 

What does it mean that love is the fulfillment of the law?

How can I experience true intimacy with God?

Is it really possible for Christians to do greater works than Jesus?

God often called people to minister who already had ordinary work, and many continued on in their practical labor while serving Him wholeheartedly.

"Now because Jesus was doing these things on the Sabbath, the Jews began to persecute Him. But Jesus answered them, 'To this very day My Father is at His work, and I too am working.' Because of this, the Jews tried all the harder to kill Him. Not only was He breaking the Sabbath, but He was even calling God His own Father, making Himself equal with God. So Jesus replied, 'Truly, truly, I tell you, the Son can do nothing by Himself, unless He sees the Father doing it. For whatever the Father does, the Son also does.'John 5:16-19 (What's that chapter about contextually?)

Works (John 5:1–21). The Father works and so does Jesus. Let's not become workaholics, but take time out to be with Him before we work. For us comes acceptable worship and then acceptable works. God in the garden “broke” His Sabbath rest to help two sinners (Gen. 3:8ff.), and Jesus followed His good example. In the world of nature, the Father is healing bodies, multiplying food, turning water into wine, and so forth; but He takes longer to do those things. Our Lord’s miracles are the Father’s works done instantly. Whether instantly or gradually, they are wonderful works of God.

Wrath (22, 24–30). Today, Jesus is the Savior; tomorrow, He will be the Judge (Rev. 20:11–15). Even death cannot keep lost sinners from the judgment, for He will raise them from the dead. There is no escape, except faith in Jesus Christ (5:24).

Worship (23). If you worship God the Father, you must also worship the Son; and if you dishonor the Son, you dishonor the Father. Those who claim to worship God but ignore the Son are not even worshiping God! They are only fooling themselves.

Witness (31–47). How can anyone deny that Jesus is the Son of God when so many witnesses affirm that He is: John the Baptist (vv. 31–35), the miracles (v. 36), the Father (v. 37; Mark 1:11), and the Scriptures (vv. 38–39)? But when people believe on Him, they have the witness within themselves (vv. 39–47; 1 John 5:9–13).

Know this. The Bible teaches two truths simultaneously:

  1. Those who preach and teach the Word, including the untainted gospel message, may rightly receive support.
  2. Some servants of God voluntarily worked secular jobs to avoid burdening others or to silence all the cruel accusations of greed.

Paul taught:

“The Lord commanded that those who proclaim the gospel should get their living by the gospel.” 1 Corinthians 9:14

But Paul the tentmaker also said:

“You yourselves know that these hands ministered to my necessities.” Acts 20:34

And:

“We worked night and day.. that we might not be a burden.” 2 Thessalonians 3:8


True Prophets Work Hard and Wisely

Are There Teachers and Servants of God With Non-Ministry Kinda Work? Sure. 

Old Testament

Moses — Shepherd

  • Exodus 3:1
  • Spent 40 years tending sheep before leading Israel.

Amos — Shepherd & Fig Farmer

  • Amos 1:1
  • Amos 7:14–15

“I was no prophet… but I was a herdsman and a dresser of sycamore figs.”

Amos is one of the clearest examples of a working prophet.

Elisha — Farmer

  • 1 Kings 19:19
  • Called while plowing with oxen.

David — Shepherd

  • 1 Samuel 16:11
  • Though later king, his early life involved labor and sheep tending.

Daniel — Government Administrator

  • Daniel 6:1–3
  • Served administratively in Babylon and Persia.

Nehemiah — Cupbearer to the King

  • Nehemiah 1:11

Ezekiel — Priest

  • Ezekiel 1:3
  • Priestly service was vocational, not merely prophetic.

Samuel — Judge/Leader

  • Functioned in civil leadership in addition to prophetic ministry.

New Testament

Paul the Apostle — Tentmaker

  • Acts 18:3

This is the most famous example.

Paul often supported himself financially while preaching.

  • Acts 20:33–35
  • 1 Thessalonians 2:9
  • 2 Thessalonians 3:7–10
  • 1 Corinthians 9

Why Paul Did This The Way He Did

  • To avoid accusations of greed
  • To model diligence
  • To avoid burdening poor churches
  • To silence false teachers
  • To preserve gospel integrity

Paul fiercely opposed ministers who commercialized ministry.


Aquila and Priscilla — Tentmakers

  • Acts 18:2–3
  • Ministry coworkers with Paul while working a trade.

Several Apostles — Fishermen

Peter

Andrew the Apostle

James the Great

John the Apostle

  • Matthew 4:18–22
  • Mark 1:16–20

They worked in commercial fishing before doing full-time ministry. Don't do another person's calling, do the ministry that God calls you to. 


Matthew the Apostle — Tax Collector

  • Matthew 9:9

Luke the Evangelist — Physician

  • Colossians 4:14

Jesus Christ — Perhaps a Carpenter for a time (Do you actually see Him doing that in the Bible? His earthly dad did.)

  • Mark 6:3

Before public ministry, please do go to work with your hands. We all need good character and to work hard. Do it as unto the Lord -- this profoundly dignifies ordinary secular labor.


Approximate Count

Depending on how strictly one defines all this:

  • “prophet,”
  • “teacher,”
  • “apostle,”
  • or a full-time minister while on the job site, even while “working secular occupation,”

It's true, all Christians are to be in touch with the Lord as they help others in all type of trades.. get rightly in touch with the Lord. We are to be full-time ministers for Jesus. 

Now, there are at least 15–25 clearly identifiable servants of God connected with so called ordinary labor, trades, agriculture, fishing, administration, or government service.

The Bible repeatedly destroys the idea that spiritual authority must equal wealth, celebrity status, or professional religious status from titles.


What Did They Commonly Have in Common?

1. Godly Humility

God often called workers, shepherds, farmers, fishermen, craftsmen, and laborers.

“God has chosen the foolish things of the world to shame the wise.” 1 Corinthians 1:27


2. Godly Integrity

They were not primarily motivated by profit.

Paul especially emphasized this.

“I coveted no one’s silver or gold.” Acts 20:33


3. Godly Willingness to Sacrifice and Fulfill the Calling

Many endured poverty, persecution, and hardship.

  • Hebrews 11:37–38
  • 2 Corinthians 11:23–28

4. Faithfulness to the Lord in Ordinary Work

God often calls people while they are faithfully laboring.

  • Moses tending sheep
  • David shepherding
  • Amos farming
  • Peter fishing
  • Elisha plowing

You Can Enjoy The Right Balance In The Lord! Be Fruitful And Faithful. Live Effectively And Not For Self

I'm of course, no prophet, bishop or apostle (I'm a simple ordinary servant like many are), but I've been paid before to go minister the Word to people here and abroad. I was sent and not went as a missionary pastor in Bavaria and in other locations. 

The Bible does NOT condemn full-time paid ministry in and of itself. Most of my minister friends are sound teachers and preachers -- they are freed up by the Christians to do what they do best. What they are called and equipped to do for God's glory. 

Faithful elders and teachers may rightly receive support.

“The laborer is worthy of his wages.” 1 Timothy 5:18

“Let the elders who rule well be counted worthy of double honor.” — 1 Timothy 5:17

The danger comes when ministry becomes:

  • merchandise,
  • manipulation,
  • celebrity culture,
  • greed,
  • luxury-seeking,
  • or spiritual profiteering.

That is exactly what Scripture repeatedly condemns.


There Is Indeed A Contrast

What Did True Prophets Say?:

  • “Repent.”
  • “Obey God.” The Word and Holy Spirit (they agree).
  • “Take up your cross.” Live for Jesus!
  • “Fear the Lord.”
  • “Christ must increase.” I must decrease.

What Did False Prophets Say?:

  • “Peace, peace” when there was no peace.
  • “Give, dig deep, use your credit card, and get rich.”
  • “You will not surely die.” (when their sinning was leading to that)
  • “What people want to hear.”

Hey, I'm not a calvinist, but here are some good truths for ya

“The minister who cares not for his flock is no shepherd.” John Calvin

“A servant of God has but one Master.” George Müller

“God’s work done in God’s way will never lack God’s supply.” Hudson Taylor

“There is no substitute for holiness.” Harry Ironside

You can know God in a personal way today--now is good, it's time to get right with the Lord, Sport!  

“For-Profit” or “Non-Profit” Prophets? (Part 1)

Man, how did I know they were a prophet? 

Well, it was because without any inquiry, they told me that's what they were. 

That would be kinda humorous if it were not so spiritually tragic. 

Why would anyone need to go around telling people such a thing? Ever encounter a false prophet/teacher? They love their ecclesiastical garb and lingo. There are gobs of so-called "reverends" out there today (some way out there). So many love to tell you about their high office, their title, their special apostolic anointing, and their superior giftings. 

If it's new, it ain't true -- if it's true, it's never new like they say it is. 

Some so-called Christians are just misinformed and gullible (unlike the Bereans were in Acts), and then they (with some motives) propagate their weirdness of doctrine and practices. 

Liney and I have been in many solid and whacko "Christian churches" in Europe, in the USA, in South America etc. Have you too been in some? 

One day I heard an individual tell me they had a special Revelation for my personal guidance. Strange, not that I never need counsel, but don't I have the Holy Spirit inside for that? 

I've seen these presumptuous individuals in a congregation with much volume clash on the drum symbols and then loudly declare they have a new revelation from God that they allegedly "prophesy over the people." 

And then they verbally take off with it all -- it's horrible! They might throw half a Bible verse in there to sell it better. 

Hey, don't walk, run from such places and people! Hit the crash bar, aka "panic bar" on that exit door!

Christian, what does it mean to properly contend for the faith?

Listen, one of the best ways to deal with false doctrine from false teachers is to prayerfully.. boldly preach the Word in season and out (it doesn't need to be done in a churchy or preachy sort of way, and let your godly life preach too). 

The most dangerous false prophets are rarely the loudest about Christ—they are the loudest about themselves.

Scripture repeatedly warns that false teachers often arrive draped in confidence, charisma, emotionalism, and spiritual theatrics. They speak with dramatic certainty, manufacture atmosphere, and claim private revelations from God, yet their message subtly shifts people away from the sufficiency of Scripture and toward dependence on personalities, experiences, feelings, and mystical impressions.

“If it’s true, it’s really not new. If it’s new, it’s really not true.”

The faith has already been delivered. God is not rewriting Christianity every generation to fit trends, personalities, or spiritual entertainment culture. Jude wrote with urgency:

“Contend earnestly for the faith which was once for all delivered unto the saints” (Jude 3).

Notice those 4 important words: once for all delivered.

The gospel is not evolving and changing for each era. The methods to win em might change, but the Message is not to be added to, or watered down any. Truth does not need upgrading to 2.0. The Holy Spirit NEVER EVER contradicts the inerrant Word that He inspired. God has never contradicted Himself. 

Far too many professing Christians today are biblically illiterate and malnourished yet spiritually impressionable. Because they do not deeply know Scripture, they become vulnerable to sensationalism disguised as revival. Some chase emotional experiences the way the world chases adrenaline. A dramatic voice, a loud platform, dim lights, swelling music, prophetic jargon, and a half-quoted Bible verse can suddenly convince undiscerning people that God is speaking something “fresh.”

We are warned plainly:

“Beloved, do not believe every spirit, but test the spirits, whether they are of God; because many false prophets have gone out into the world” (1 John 4:1).

One of the clearest marks of false teaching is the constant obsession with “new revelation.”
“I have a word from the Lord for you.”
“God told me privately.”
“The Spirit revealed something beyond Scripture.”

This is not humility. That is from spiritual presumption.

The apostle Paul warned:

“Even if we, or an angel from heaven, preach any other gospel unto you… let him be accursed” (Galatians 1:8).

The issue is not whether someone sounds passionate. False teachers often sound passionate. The issue is whether their doctrine aligns faithfully with the written Word of God in proper context.

Many modern movements elevate subjective impressions above careful biblical interpretation. In some gatherings, emotional frenzy replaces reverence. Drums thunder, voices rise, personalities dominate, and then someone boldly announces a supposed prophecy over the congregation. Yet when Scripture is opened carefully and contextually, these “words” often collapse into confusion, manipulation, self-exaltation, or doctrinal error.

Charles Spurgeon wisely warned:

“Discernment is not knowing the difference between right and wrong. It is knowing the difference between right and almost right.”

That “almost” has shipwrecked many souls.

Jesus Himself warned:

“Many false prophets will arise and mislead many” (Matthew 24:11).

Notice: not a few—many.

According to research from Barna Group, a large percentage of professing Christians struggle to identify basic biblical doctrine or recognize worldview contradictions. While exact percentages vary by study and year, Barna’s broader research consistently shows widespread biblical illiteracy within the modern church. That helps explain why emotionalism and celebrity spirituality spread so quickly today.

The answer is not cynicism.

The answer is the living Word of God. Yes, Jesus. Stick with His Authoritative Scriptures.

The answer is not spiritual paranoia.

The answer is spiritual maturity in the Holy Spirit.

The answer is not chasing after goosebumps, cozy feelings, heebe jeebies and exotic experiences.

It is about prayerfully abiding (instead  of striving) in Christ through His Word.

Jude does not merely warn believers about deception; he tells them how to get past it and spiritually survive, even thrive without it:

1. Rightly Build Yourself Up in the Faith -- Edify You First

Are you malnourished spiritually? False teachers/prophets love to find and share new ways (with each other cuz they validate each other like on TV) to fleece the flock, not how to properly and faithfully feed the flock

A starving Christian becomes an unstable Christian.
God’s people must become discerning people of the Book again. Prove all things and hold tightly to what is so! 

“Study to shew thyself approved unto God” (2 Timothy 2:15).

Weak doctrine produces weak discernment.
Strong discernment grows where Scripture richly dwells.

The church does not need less preaching. It needs more biblical preaching—careful, contextual, Christ-centered exposition that feeds souls instead of entertaining consumers.

Martyn Lloyd-Jones once said:

“What is the chief end of preaching? To give men and women a sense of God and His presence.”

2. Pray in the Holy Spirit

Truth is not merely intellectually learned; it is spiritually discerned.

“The natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God” (1 Corinthians 2:14).

Prayer humbles us before God. It keeps us dependent, sober-minded, and spiritually alert in an age intoxicated with spectacle.

3. Keep Yourself in the Love of God

False religion often produces either pride or immorality.
True Christianity produces holiness, humility, and love for Christ.

Jude warned about those who “turn the grace of God into lasciviousness” (Jude 4). In every generation, some twist grace into permission for carnality. But biblical grace never trains believers to love sin; it teaches them to deny it.

“The grace of God… teaches us to say ‘No’ to ungodliness” (Titus 2:11–12).

4. Live With Hope in Christ’s Return

A church that loses eternity eventually becomes obsessed with novelty.
But believers who eagerly await Christ do not need artificial spiritual hype.

“Looking for that blessed hope, and the glorious appearing of the great God and our Saviour Jesus Christ” (Titus 2:13).

The early church did not conquer Rome through theatrics.
They conquered through truth, holiness, prayer, sacrificial love, and unwavering devotion to Christ.

I don't mind being friendly towards seekers or others, but don't want to make everything "seeker-sensitive." Acceptable worship in a service is for God, not for sinners.

Also.. I never want to allow any weird extra-biblical stuff to scare off sinners! If God via Christians bring them there, we each can do our best (minus any spiritual compromise) to win them to Christ. Preach not a;; about the gospel -- just preach the gospel and leave the results up to the Spirit. 

Today, many churches chase trendy "relevance" while neglecting real reverence. Yet the power of God has never rested upon gimmicks. The Spirit of God works through the Word of God to exalt the Son of God.

“If the Holy Spirit was withdrawn from the church today, much of what we do would go right on and nobody would know the difference.” ~ A.W. Tozer

“Discernment is not knowing the difference between right and wrong. It is knowing the difference between right and almost right.”Charles H. Spurgeon

“A time will come when instead of shepherds feeding the sheep, the church will have clowns entertaining the goats.” — often attributed to Charles Spurgeon 

“The greatest enemy to human souls is the self-righteous spirit which makes men look to themselves for salvation.” Charles Spurgeon

“What is the chief mark of false teaching? There is always something of man in it.” J. C. Ryle

“The church has no greater need today than to hear the voice of God through men aflame with holy truth.” —  A.W. Tozer

“The devil is not fighting religion; he is too shrewd for that. He is producing a counterfeit Christianity.” A. W. Tozer 

That is a devastating thought.

The cure for false teaching is not merely exposing darkness. It is flooding hearts with truth.

Preach Christ.

Teach the Scriptures carefully.

Disciple believers deeply.

Pray fervently.

Live holy lives.

Love people sincerely.

Stand firm courageously.

And when you encounter so-called Christian ministries obsessed with self-appointed prophets, heavy revys (new revelations) aka manufactured revelations, manipulative emotionalism (pushing, slapping, throwing coats at, snake handlers etc), and teachings untethered from Scripture—do not casually stroll away casually. No! Just run. Lovingly warn, and take your friends with you out the door, never to return

I will sprint, because... 

“My hope is built on nothing less
Than Jesus’ blood and righteousness.”

“On Christ the solid Rock I stand,
All other ground is sinking sand.”

Churches across this Land and others do need to see authentic Spiritual Awakening. Yes, we need a fifth one in the USA, with an evangelistic revival too that exalts none other than Jesus Christ. That's what real Awakening produces -- tactful, effective Bible based soul-winning

Qs: Do you yet know the Lord in a personal sorta way? Does your life, attitude, demeanor, and message honor and point to Jesus Christ?

The church in any era does not need any “new move” that's detached from Scripture.
It needs a fresh return to the old paths.

“Thus says the Lord: ‘Stand by the roads and look, and ask for the ancient paths, where the good way is; and walk in it’” (Jeremiah 6:16).

The true prophets of Scripture were not religious entrepreneurs building personal kingdoms, selling spirituality, or flattering crowds for financial gain. They were servants of the living God, often rejected, persecuted, poor, imprisoned, lonely, and brokenhearted—yet faithful. They feared God more than men.

Many of the false prophets, however, were marked by greed, self-promotion, compromise, and a craving for applause, influence, comfort, and money.

Man, the contrast is striking:

“For we are not, as so many, peddling the word of God.” 2 Corinthians 2:17

“Through covetousness shall they with feigned words make merchandise of you.” 2 Peter 2:3 kjv

“Her prophets divine for money.” Micah 3:11

“I have not sent these prophets, yet they ran.” Jeremiah 23:21

A true prophet seeks God’s glory, not to promote or glorify themselves.
A false prophet seeks personal gain--the lust after it.

A true prophet trembles with holy godly fear at God’s Word.
A false prophet manipulates God’s Word and people for selfish reasons.

A true prophet with proper use of the Scriptures directly calls people to repentance, to get right with God, to holiness, to truth, to obedience, and to Christ.
A false prophet usually tells people what their itching ears want to hear. Yes, they already want to hear.


What True Prophets Throughout Scripture Had in Common

Although the personalities and ministries of God’s prophets differed greatly, there are unmistakable characteristics repeatedly seen throughout Scripture.

Common Marks of True Prophets

1. Loyalty to God and His Word

They spoke what God said—even when it cost them dearly.

“Whether it is right in the sight of God to listen to you more than to God, you judge.”Acts 4:19

“Your word was in my heart like a burning fire.” — Jeremiah 20:9

2. Holiness and Reverence

True prophets feared God.

“To this man will I look: to him who is poor and of a contrite spirit, and trembles at My word.” Isaiah 66:2

3. Earnest Prayer

Nearly every true prophet was deeply connected to God in prayer.

  • Moses interceded for Israel repeatedly — Exodus 32:11–14
  • Samuel prayed continually — 1 Samuel 12:23
  • Daniel prayed three times daily — Daniel 6:10
  • Elijah prayed fervently — James 5:17–18

4. Courage

True prophets often stood alone against nations, kings, priests, and crowds.

Micaiah: “What the LORD says to me, that I will speak.” — 1 Kings 22:14

5. Repentance-Centered Ministry

They confronted sin instead of entertaining sinners.

  • John the Baptist: “Repent!” — Matthew 3:2
  • Jeremiah warned Judah continually
  • Ezekiel called Israel to turn from wickedness

6. Suffering and Rejection

Most true prophets were hated.

“Which of the prophets did your fathers not persecute?” Acts 7:52

  • Moses was opposed.
  • Elijah was hunted.
  • Jeremiah was imprisoned.
  • Zechariah was murdered.
  • John the Baptist was beheaded.
  • Jesus Himself was rejected.

7. Faithfulness Over Popularity

False prophets gained crowds. True prophets often wept alone.

“They have healed the hurt of My people slightly, saying, ‘Peace, peace,’ when there is no peace.” Jeremiah 6:14


Are There Major True Prophets in Scripture? Yes. 

Old Testament Prophets

  • Enoch — Jude 14–15
  • Noah — 2 Peter 2:5
  • Abraham — Genesis 20:7
  • Moses — Deuteronomy 34:10
  • Samuel
  • Nathan
  • Gad
  • Ahijah
  • Elijah
  • Elisha
  • Micaiah
  • Isaiah
  • Jeremiah
  • Ezekiel
  • Daniel
  • Hosea
  • Joel
  • Amos
  • Obadiah
  • Jonah
  • Micah
  • Nahum
  • Habakkuk
  • Zephaniah
  • Haggai
  • Zechariah
  • Malachi

New Testament Prophetic Voices

  • John the Baptist — Matthew 11:9
  • Jesus Christ — Prophet, Priest, King (Deuteronomy 18:15; Luke 24:19)
  • Agabus — Acts 11:28
  • Silas — Acts 15:32
  • Philip the Evangelist’s daughters — Acts 21:9

False Prophets Throughout Scripture

The Bible contains many warnings because false prophets are numerous.

Those Named False Prophets or Deceptive Religious Bible Figures

Old Testament

  • Balaam — Numbers 22–24; 2 Peter 2:15
  • Hananiah — Jeremiah 28
  • Zedekiah son of Chenaanah — 1 Kings 22
  • Shemaiah the Nehelamite — Jeremiah 29:24–32
  • Noadiah — Nehemiah 6:14
  • Prophets of Baal — 1 Kings 18
  • Prophets of Asherah — 1 Kings 18

New Testament

  • Simon Magus — Acts 8:9–24
  • Elymas — Acts 13:6–12
  • Jezebel — Revelation 2:20
  • The False Prophet — Revelation 13:11–18
  • False apostles — 2 Corinthians 11:13
  • False teachers infiltrating churches — 2 Peter 2; Jude

Common Characteristics of False Prophets and False Teachers

1. Greed and Financial Exploitation

“In their greed these teachers will exploit you with fabricated stories.”2 Peter 2:3

“They rushed for profit into Balaam’s error.”Jude 11

2. They Tell People What They Want to Hear

“Speak unto us smooth things.” Isaiah 30:10

3. Sexual Immorality or Corruption

“In the prophets of Jerusalem I have seen a horrible thing: they commit adultery and walk in lies.” Jeremiah 23:14

4. Pride and Self-Exaltation

Like Korah in Numbers 16, many false spiritual leaders seek prominence and authority.

5. Distortion of Scripture

“They twist the Scriptures.” 2 Peter 3:16

6. Denial of Christ’s True Nature

“Every spirit that does not confess Jesus Christ has come in the flesh is not of God.”1 John 4:3

7. Outward Appearance of Godliness

“Having a form of godliness, but denying its power.”2 Timothy 3:5

Jesus warned:

“Beware of false prophets, who come to you in sheep’s clothing but inwardly are ravenous wolves.” Matthew 7:15


Difference Between a False Teacher and a False Prophet

False Prophet

A false prophet falsely claims divine revelation -- direct divine messages for you.

Like what? 

  • “For His guidance, God told me to tell you…”
  • Predicting falsely
  • Claiming visions/dreams from God
  • Speaking presumptuously in God’s name
  • Deuteronomy 18:20–22
  • Jeremiah 23
  • Ezekiel 13
  • Matthew 24:24

A false teacher might have a token proof text or half a verse that corrupts sound Christian doctrine. I call this scriptorture as they pull out of context and twist biblical truths. Does it go against the Essentials? Do they lovingly cling to Jesus, His Bible truths, and our historical Cardinal Doctrines of the faith to man-made traditions or worthless religious ceremonies?

Like what? 

  • Distorting salvation
  • Denying Christ
  • Adding works to grace
  • Promoting sensuality, greed, universalism, or heresy
  • Galatians 1:6–9
  • 2 Peter 2
  • Jude
  • 1 Timothy 4:1–3
  • Titus 1:10–11

Can a person be both a false teacher and a false prophet at different moments? Sure, they can so beware!

Jesus Christ even solemnly warned about this kind of thing. He said that in the last days “false christs and false prophets” would arise, putting out/displaying persuasive words, counterfeit spirituality, and deceptive signs (lying wonders, false healings or miracles) in an attempt to mislead the masses—even, if possible, the very elect of God. The apostles gave people the same warnings, declaring that mockers, deceivers, and corrupt teachers would infiltrate the church in the latter times (See 2 Peter 3:3; Jude 17–18).

"Then if anyone says to you, ‘Look, here is the Christ!’ or ‘There!’ do not believe it. 24 For false christs and false prophets will rise and show great signs and wonders to deceive, if possible, even the elect. 25 See, I have told you beforehand.  26 “Therefore if they say to you, ‘Look, He is in the desert!’ do not go out; or ‘Look, He is in the inner rooms!’ do not believe it. 27 For as the lightning comes from the east and flashes to the west, so also will the coming of the Son of Man be." Matthew 24:23-27 nkjv

Because deception often disguises itself in religious garb and churchy language, in herky jerky emotional experiences (I don't need any liver-quiver). Have you seen some pentihossile charismania before? It's popular and outwardly successful-looking in some areas and scary in other locations. 

It's God's will that all believers must become deeply rooted in the truth of God’s Word (from cover to cover), that we continue unto spiritual maturity as we prayerfully walk with the Jesus of the Bible, and as an outgrowth.. respectfully win people to Him. 

The Christian who diligently studies Scripture from cover to cover, correctly handles all the counsels of God -- “the word of truth” (See 2 Timothy 2:15). They love to walk in fellowship with the Father, Son and Holy Spirit.. with other growing believers in church and small group. They will be equipped to minister God's way not their own way, discerning and recognizing both the genuine from the counterfeit. Mr. Lu-Cifer and his thugs love to counterfeit the good things from God to fool ya! 

Strange weirdness.. begets strange weirdness. 

What is the meaning of the strange fire in Leviticus 10:1?

In the Book I see that God is the only one to be revered. What.. should the title of "reverend" really be given to a church leader? 

Is it biblical to call the wife of a pastor, elder, or bishop the First Lady of the church?

Minister means servant. So what does God say about church leadership?

It's crazy how cheap and easy it is to get ordained on the web now. What does God say about real ordination?

How really.. can I help new believers go grow in the Word?

Should Christians judge the teachings of their leaders?

Who exactly were those Bereans in the Book?

What does it mean that the Bible is God-breathed?

Is a dream or warm feeling or “burning in the bosom” a reliable way to validate a move from God

What does it mean to test the spirits?

Who exactly were Nadab and Abihu?

Who was Balaam.. a for-profit kinda prophet?

What's strange fire.. and what's holy fire?

Who was Balak in the Bible?

Why does God tell Balaam to go with the Moabites and then get angry because he went?

What was Baal Peor in the Bible?

What is the strange flesh in Jude 1:7?

What does 2 Timothy 4:3 mean by itching ears? 

What is our spiritual food?

You, Mr. or Ms. Christian, are to grow in your faith.

What is the key to growing as a new believer?

Do ya recall when Jesus told Peter to “feed my sheep” in John 21?

What does it mean that solid food is for the mature (Hebrews 5:14)?

What does it mean to preach the Word (2 Timothy 4:2)?

What does “fulfill your ministry” mean (2 Timothy 4:5)?

What is spiritual milk (1 Peter 2:2)?

What does the Bible say about traditionalism?

What does it mean that people will not endure sound doctrine? 

Who was Ithamar in the Bible?

Did Balaam's donkey really talk to him in his language?

What is the doctrine of Balaam?

Historically, how many times has God sent fire from heaven?

What does it mean that God is a consuming fire?

Some people get burnout in the ministry.. literally! Why was it bad that Aaron and his sons burned the sin offering in Leviticus 10:16–20?

Our Lord taught that “a tree is known by its fruit” (Matthew 12:33). It's true -- in the same way that a healthy tree can be (with some responsible study) distinguished from a diseased one by its fruit.. so spiritual believers and leaders are revealed over time by the doctrine that they choose to live and teach. the character they display, the gospel they preach, and the spiritual effect they produce in others.

Scripture gives several tests for discerning true and false ministers:

1. What Do They Teach About Jesus Christ?

Any teacher who denies the full deity, humanity, lordship, atoning death, bodily resurrection, or exclusive saving work of Jesus Christ departs from the faith once delivered to the saints.

  • Matthew 16:15–16
  • 2 John 9
  • 1 John 2:22
  • 1 John 4:1–3

True prophets exalt the Jesus Christ of the Bible, not one they say was created as an angel (as Mormons do). False teachers they add to, or take from -- they diminish the deity of Christ (He's God the sinless Son and Lord of all).

2. Do They Preach the True Gospel?

The biblical gospel is the good news that Christ died for our sins, was buried, and rose again according to the Scriptures (1 Corinthians 15:1–4). Any message that replaces repentance, grace, faith, and the cross with self-exaltation, greed, worldly success, or human-centered spirituality is another gospel.

Paul warned with holy seriousness:

“Though we, or an angel from heaven, preach any other gospel unto you… let him be accursed.” — Galatians 1:8–9

3. What Kind of Fruit Is Seen in Their Life?

False teachers are often marked by pride, greed, sensuality, rebellion, manipulation, and a craving for recognition. Jude compares them to Cain’s pride, Balaam’s greed, and Korah’s rebellion (Jude 11).

True servants of God will grow in the Word and increasingly display:

  • holiness,
  • humility,
  • love for truth,
  • reverence for Scripture,
  • prayerfulness,
  • repentance,
  • integrity,
  • and obedience to Christ.

Jesus said it plainly:

“By their fruits ye shall know them.” — Matthew 7:16 

"Hey Kurt, don't judge me, man. Dude, judge not lest ye be judged" (One of the most quoted verses by unbelievers today. We are not to cast any final judgement cuz only God sees hearts and knows where they'll go). We indeed can evaluate, and should. 

How can we judge with righteous judgment (John 7:24)?

What does God mean when the Bible says, “Do not judge”?

What are some Bible verses about judging?

On True Prophets and Godly Bible Ministers

  • Deuteronomy 18:15–22
  • Jeremiah 1
  • Ezekiel 2–3
  • Amos 3:7
  • Matthew 5–7
  • John 10
  • Acts 20:28–31
  • 1 Thessalonians 2:3–12
  • 1 Timothy 4:12–16
  • 2 Timothy 4:1–5
  • Titus 1
  • James 3:1
  • 1 Peter 5:1–4

On False Prophets and False Teachers

  • Deuteronomy 13
  • Jeremiah 23
  • Ezekiel 13
  • Micah 3
  • Matthew 7:15–23
  • Matthew 24:11, 24
  • Acts 20:29–30
  • Romans 16:17–18
  • Galatians 1:6–9
  • Colossians 2:8
  • 1 Timothy 4:1–3
  • 2 Timothy 3–4
  • 2 Peter 2
  • 1 John 4:1–6
  • 2 John 7–11
  • Jude
  • Revelation 2:20
  • Revelation 13