When Truth is Optional…

There are moments when silence becomes complicity. I firmly believe we are living in one of those moments.

We are living in a time when truth is not merely contested, it is routinely discarded. Falsehood is no longer something to be ashamed of; it is wielded as a tool of power. Lies are seen as an acceptable means to an end. Perhaps most troubling of all, many who claim the name of Jesus have grown comfortable with it.

We live in a time where one of the most visible (and powerful) political leaders made over 30,000 false or misleading claims in his first four years in office! As this leader entered a second term, that pattern did not slow. Reports have noted that this leader is consistent in keeping pace with false and misleading statements the second time around. On his first day of his second term, he told at least 20 lies. 

Let’s be honest…we’ve all told our fair share of lies. But 20 per days is dizzying. How can one even keep up with that volume of lies?

This isn’t partisan commentary. This is a crisis of truth. The deeper crisis is not simply that a political leader lies…it is that so many are willing to accept, defend, and repeat those lies. 

Here’s the deal…Jesus does not leave us wiggle room here. “I am the way, and the truth, and the life.” (John 14:6) Not a version of the truth. Just the truth. To follow Jesus is to commit ourselves to truth in word, in spirit, and in practice.

Scripture is unflinching. In John 8:32, Jesus proclaims, “You shall know the truth, and the truth will make you free.” The author of Ephesians, in the 25th verse of the 4th chapter says, “Putting away falsehood, let all of us speak the truth to our neighbors.” The wisdom literature of the Bible is full of thoughts on telling the truth, including Proverbs 12:22 which states, “Lying lips are an abomination to the Lord.” 

The biblical witness does not treat truth as optional. As followers of the Way of Jesus, neither can we.

Here is a hard truth we must face: The greatest threat is not that politicians lie. The greatest threat is that the Church stops caring.

When Christians excuse dishonesty because it serves their preferred outcomes…When we share misinformation because it confirms what we already believe…When we defend what is false rather than confront it…We are no longer bearing witness to Jesus. We are bearing witness to something else entirely.

That should trouble us. Once truth is sacrificed, everything else eventually follows…justice, compassion, integrity, even faith itself become optional.

Scripture commands us not just to tell the truth, but to discern it. “Beloved, do not believe every spirit, but test the spirits to see whether they are from God.” (1 John 4:1)

Discernment requires effort. It requires courage. It requires a willingness to resist the pull of our own biases and the pressure of our communities. It requires the courage to admit when we are wrong. It requires the humility that allows others to change. It requires a commitment to be a people of honesty and integrity. 

Paul writes: “Do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your minds, so that you may discern what is the will of God.” (Romans 12:2) In the spirit of honesty, let’s go ahead and admit that many of us have been conformed more by cable news, social media, and political talking points than by the teachings of Jesus. We have traded discernment for outrage. We have traded wisdom for foolishness. We have traded truth for talking points and slogans.

If we are serious about following Jesus, then we must reclaim truth as a core practice of our discipleship. We must tell the truth, even when it costs us. Integrity is not situational. If something is false, we name it as false…even when it comes from leaders we support.

We need to stop spreading what we have not verified. If we would not stake our reputation on its accuracy, we should not share it. Period. We need to examine and name our own biases. We are all susceptible to believing what we want to be true. Discernment requires humility and self-examination.

As followers of the Way of Jesus, we must stay rooted in Scripture, not slogans. God’s Word is not a prop for our opinions. It is a light that exposes them. Psalm 119:105 reminds us, “Your word is a lamp to my feet and a light to my path.” 

We need to quiet the noise around us so we can listen for the voice of the Spirit. Jesus promises: “When the Spirit of truth comes, he will guide you into all the truth.” (John 16:13). We must be willing to listen and willing to be led somewhere we did not expect. We must be willing to stand apart and even alone. Truth-telling will put you at odds with people. Even people in our own churches. Faithfulness has always carried that cost.

The Church does not exist to echo the culture. The Church exists to bear witness to the truth. Not a watered-down truth. Not a convenient truth. But the kind of truth that sets people free. Too many churches and church leaders just share “happy go lucky” messages that keep people content and feeling good about themselves. Maybe there is a time and place for that. But this simply is not the time!

This is not the time to soften our language or blur the lines. If we cannot name lies as lies, we have already lost our way. If we cannot discern truth from falsehood, we are not being formed by Christ. If we cannot commit ourselves to truth, we cannot claim to follow the One who is Truth.

The world does not need more noise. It needs a Church that refuses to trade truth for power. A Church that refuses to baptize falsehood. A Church that still has the courage to live and speak in the light.

About Fruit

It seems like almost every hour of the day, something happens in our world that reminds us how far we are from the heart of God. Another act of violence. Another racist rant. Another policy rooted in fear. Another “Christian” voice defending cruelty in the name of righteousness.

We live in a moment thick with fear, hatred, xenophobia, racism and all the isms and phobias that portray a spirit not of Christ. In the middle of it all, the Apostle Paul’s words echo with piercing clarity: “By contrast, the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, generosity, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control. There is no law against such things.” (Galatians 5:22–23, NRSV)

Paul doesn’t describe the fruit of the Spirit as doctrinal precision. He doesn’t name national dominance. He doesn’t list power, influence, or political victory. He names love.

Not just love, but a whole ecosystem of Spirit-shaped virtues that make domination impossible and idolatry obvious.

What we are witnessing in American Christianity is not simply political engagement. It is theological confusion.

Christian nationalism has hijacked large swaths of evangelical Christianity, confusing patriotism for faith, political allegiance for orthodoxy, and the agenda of political leaders for the Way of Jesus.

The recent dedication of a gold statue of the President outside Mar-a-Lago, prayed over and blessed by evangelical leaders, should haunt us. Golden statues and religious blessings have a long biblical history. None of it ends well. When power, privilege, ego, and greed rule the day, the Spirit quietly departs.

Even more troubling is how figures like Doug Wilson, the so-called “pastor” of Pete Hegseth, have been platformed by prominent evangelical institutions such as Desiring God, The Gospel Coalition, Acts 29, and Ligonier Ministries. Many even within conservative evangelical circles have distanced themselves from Wilson’s theology and rhetoric, yet the damage has been done. 

At some point, the evangelical movement needs to own their role in the elevation of the Christian nationalist movement.  When churches amplify voices that traffic in division, hierarchy, and culture-war triumphalism, we should not be surprised when congregations begin to confuse aggression with boldness and cruelty with conviction.

Jesus was clear: a tree is known by its fruit. If those hailed as “God’s chosen” consistently display arrogance instead of gentleness, rage instead of patience, cruelty instead of kindness, self-indulgence instead of self-control, then something is wrong at the root.

The fruit of the Spirit is not a suggestion; it is evidence of a life rooted and grounded in Jesus.

It is more than unsettling to watch political leaders attempt to lecture the Pope about theology and Christian faith. The pride. The ego. The audacity. When politicians, platformed by ill-guided religious leaders, assume authority over centuries of theological reflection and pastoral care, we are not witnessing strength. We are witnessing spiritual shallowness.

Much of the outrage directed at the Pope and other Christian leaders who critique the current U.S. administration reveals a deeper issue: many simply do not know Scripture. The Pope hasn’t said anything that contradicts Scripture or the theological heritage of the Church. Those critiquing the Pope demonstrate that they have accepted partisan narratives as the Gospel. They have substituted cable news theology for the Sermon on the Mount. They defend “Christian values” while neglecting Christ.

It is painful to say, but it must be said: I fear many Christians do not know the Gospel. I fear some do not know Jesus.

It is also worth naming, plainly and honestly, that many who have been platformed and even idolized by the religious right seem to reflect less the fruit of the Spirit and more what Paul warns against just a few verses earlier. In Galatians 5:19–21, Paul speaks of “enmities, strife, jealousy, anger, quarrels, dissensions, factions, envy,” a sobering list that feels far too familiar in today’s religious and political rhetoric. When leaders consistently stir division, trade in outrage, and cling to power at all costs, we should not rush to defend them…we should discern them. The contrast Paul offers is not abstract; it is diagnostic. If the fruit is missing, or if entirely different fruit is being produced, then we must have the courage to question the root.

In a world addicted to outrage, the fruit of the Spirit is revolutionary. Love in a culture of contempt. Joy in a politics of grievance. Peace in an economy of fear. Patience in an age of instant reaction. Kindness where cruelty trends. Generosity in systems built on both scarcity and greed. Faithfulness when loyalty is transactional. Gentleness in the face of bluster. Self-control when rage is rewarded.

This is not weakness. This is resistance. The early Christians changed the world not by seizing Caesar’s throne but by embodying a different kingdom.

Fruit grows from proximity. If we want the fruit of the Spirit, we must stay close to the Spirit. Here are some ways to do that:

1. Study Scripture deeply and humbly. Not through partisan lenses. Not looking for proof texts to defend our agenda. But prayerfully, contextually, and in community. So many have embraced non-biblical narratives because they have not wrestled with the actual text. Read the Gospels slowly. Sit with the Sermon on the Mount. Let Jesus shape us.

2. Practice self-examination. Before critiquing the religious or political leaders, ask: Is love evident in me? Is gentleness? Is self-control? The fruit begins at home.

3. Commit to diverse Christian community. The Spirit often speaks through voices outside our echo chambers. Listen to believers from different cultures, traditions, and experiences.

4. Fast from outrage. Limit the media that feeds anger and fear. Replace it with prayer, silence, and acts of mercy. 

5. Embody love. Welcome the stranger. Defend the vulnerable. Refuse racist jokes. Speak truth to power. Love is not intended to be abstract. It is to be practiced.

There is something disturbing happening in our world almost every moment of the day. But that disturbance is also a summons. A summons to return to Jesus. A summons to reject idolatry. A summons to disentangle faith from nationalism. A summons to bear fruit.

The world does not need louder Christians. It needs Christians who look like Christ.

The Spirit is still producing fruit. The question is whether we will allow our lives to become the orchard.

The Short Answer Is…”Because I Follow in the Way of Jesus”

News of the low-barrier, 24/7 homelessness resource center planned for downtown Fort Wayne has been circulating throughout our fine city. The stories, questions, and concerns have recently increased as a city councilman voiced some concerns. When Downtown Fort Wayne released their concerns inviting the city to pump the brakes, more rumors, questions and concerns have risen.

As the most direct neighbor to the proposed location, I have been able to meet with officials from the city on multiple occassions to hear about the proposal, ask questions, and have my concerns addressed. After these meetings, I am lending my support to this project.

Some expressing concern have implied that this proposed center is inviting a “problem” into the area. I would invite those folks to come spend just 45-minutes with me at 300 E. Wayne Street as they will quickly see that this is actually a response to an existing issue, not the creation of a new one. Also, let us remember that this “problem” is someone’s son, daughter, brother, sister, friend, our neighbor.

I would also like to remind folks who are saying this location will prevent development that it is right across the street from the Rescue Mission. It’s not like they are proposing to put this next to the development near the riverfront. It’s across the street from existing homeless services and less than a block from a low to no income healthcare facility (Matthew 25).

If we wait for the ideal location, we will never make progress. There will never be a “perfect” location for this type of facility. But, placing it in an area that is already serving this population makes sense.

With this blog, I’m including two statements I prepared to express my support this cause. For those who don’t want to read through the message, here’s the short answer. I’m supporting this project because I am committed to following in the way of Jesus (you know, the One who made time and space for the hungry, sick, thirsty, isolated, lonely, disturbed, unsheltered, outcasts, marginalized and vulnerable).

Here’s a letter of support I wrote:

To Whom It May Concern,

As the Lead Pastor of First Wayne Street United Methodist Church in downtown Fort Wayne, I write to offer my support for the proposed low-barrier, 24/7 resource center for our unhoused neighbors.

For years, our congregation has been deeply engaged in ministry alongside individuals experiencing homelessness, poverty, and addiction. We regularly encounter neighbors who, for one reason or another, are unable to access existing shelters or service agencies. Some are turned away due to capacity limits. Others do not meet intake requirements. Still others struggle with mental health or substance use challenges that make participation in structured programs difficult.

At present, we have no consistent place to refer these individuals, especially outside of standard business hours. A 24/7, low-barrier facility would provide an essential referral option, ensuring that when someone shows up at our doors, we are not left with no safe alternative to offer. The ability to connect people to care immediately would be a tremendous asset to both churches and community partners.

We also recognize that a facility of this nature may draw individuals who are actively struggling with addiction or untreated mental health challenges. As a downtown congregation with children, youth, and elderly adults regularly participating in worship services, recovery groups, and community programming, we take safety concerns seriously. Increased presence and security are important considerations, and we are grateful that the proposed plan includes monitoring and oversight of the property. Knowing that the facility will have structured supervision, clear policies, and coordination with community partners helps alleviate many of our primary concerns as a direct neighbor.

At the same time, we must be honest: the need for this center outweighs the concerns.

Every day, we see the human cost of inadequate access to shelter and resources. We see neighbors sleeping in unsafe places. We see people cycling through emergency rooms, jails, and temporary solutions. We see the exhaustion of those trying to navigate a system that often feels inaccessible or overwhelming. A 24/7 resource center represents a practical and compassionate step toward stability, coordination, and dignity.

As a congregation rooted in the Wesleyan tradition, responding to the needs of our marginalized and vulnerable neighbors is not optional. It is central to our calling. While we will be direct neighbors, sharing the same city block, taking a “not in my backyard” approach is not consistent with our faith or our mission. We believe that communities are strengthened when we invest in thoughtful, well-managed solutions that care for those on the margins.

This proposed center is not a cure-all. But it is a hopeful step forward. It signals that our city is willing to acknowledge the growing need and respond with intentionality and compassion. With clear collaboration, responsible oversight, and ongoing communication, we believe this facility can become a stabilizing presence that benefits both its participants and the broader downtown community.

Thank you for your leadership and for your willingness to address complex challenges with courage and vision. First Wayne Street United Methodist Church stands ready to continue partnering in efforts that reflect the best of who we are as a city…compassionate, collaborative, and committed to the dignity of every person.

Here’s a brief statement I wrote for a local news outlet:

This is a defining moment for Fort Wayne and we need to be honest about what’s at stake.

Right now, people in our community are suffering in plain sight. They are sleeping outside, being turned away from shelters, cycling through systems that were never designed to truly help them and too often, we’ve learned to look the other way. That is not just unfortunate. It is unacceptable.

Let’s be clear: the real crisis is not this facility. The real crisis is our willingness to tolerate human beings living and dying without dignity.

A 24/7, low-barrier resource center is not some extreme idea. It is the bare minimum of what compassion requires. If we find ourselves more concerned about inconvenience than we are about human life, then we have lost our moral compass.

As a church, we reject the idea that faith means staying comfortable while others suffer. That is not the way of Jesus. We are called to show up, to stand with those on the margins, and to build a community where no one is disposable.

So yes, there are concerns, but there is also a deeper question: who are we going to be?

This is our moment to choose courage over fear, compassion over apathy, and dignity over neglect. And we should not hesitate.

Graceful Departure: Blessing Those Who Leave

A quick note: This isn’t written with any one person, group, or moment in mind. It grows out of 28 years in ministry and the lessons learned through experience, shaped by the wisdom of others, and held together by the boundaries that help ministry endure.

There’s a quiet tension many pastors and church leaders carry but don’t often name out loud: what do we do when people leave?

We’re trained (formally and informally) to see departure as failure. If someone walks away, we replay conversations, revisit decisions, and wonder what we could have done differently. Sometimes, that reflection is faithful and necessary. If harm was done, if someone was ignored, if we failed to love well, then we must own it, repent, and seek reconciliation. 

But not every departure is a failure. Sometimes, it’s clarity. It’s health. It’s exactly what the church needs.

The local church is not a social club built around preferences. It is a community shaped by a shared mission and vision, rooted in the way of Jesus. That mission should form everything: how we love, who we include, what we prioritize, and how we live together.

When someone no longer embraces that mission, tension is inevitable. Not the healthy kind that sharpens and deepens, but the kind that clogs, distracts, and slowly drains the life out of a community. Energy gets diverted. Conversations stall. Leaders become reactive instead of proactive. The work of the church begins to revolve around managing dissatisfaction instead of participating in God’s movement.

At some point, we have to tell the truth: not everyone is called to every church. And that’s okay. Yes, we proclaim (and should practice) that all are welcome in our church. But, if we’re being honest, our church will not be everyone’s cup of tea.

There’s a subtle but powerful myth in church culture that faithfulness means keeping everyone happy and present. Jesus never operated that way.

People walked away from Him. Some couldn’t accept his teachings. Others were threatened by his inclusive spirit. Some simply wanted a different kind of Messiah, one who aligned more closely with their expectations, their power structures, or their politics.

Jesus didn’t chase them down to renegotiate the mission. He stayed rooted in it.

There are moments when people leave not because of personal hurt, but because of theological and missional divergence.

When people want a church that excludes, they have already drifted from the expansive love at the heart of the Gospel.

When people elevate political ideology to the level of faithfulness (and confuse it with orthodoxy), they are no longer being shaped by Jesus, but by something else entirely.

When people resist efforts toward justice, inclusion, or compassion for the vulnerable, they are not pushing back against a trend, they are resisting a core thread of Scripture.

To go back a few years ago to the pandemic…when something like masks or social distancing becomes a breaking point, it is rarely just about that. Those moments often reveal deeper convictions about humility, community responsibility, and what it means to “consider others better than ourselves.”

At some point, divergence becomes too wide to ignore.

Here’s the part we don’t say enough: there can be a kind of holy relief when misalignment leaves the room. Not because we stop loving those who go, but because the constant friction, negativity, and, at times, immature pettiness goes with them. The air feels lighter. The focus becomes clearer. The community can move forward without being anchored to resistance.

This isn’t about celebrating loss. It’s about recognizing that unity is not the same as uniform attendance. It’s shared direction. When that shared direction is restored, something opens up.

Let me be clear, we still love people who leave. We bless them. We pray for them. We leave the door open for their return. 

But we don’t chase after the disgruntled to win them back, especially when their departure is rooted in a rejection of the mission itself. Chasing can sometimes communicate that the mission is negotiable, that the loudest dissatisfaction gets to set the agenda.

The only time we pursue intentionally is when we have caused harm. In those moments, we go not to reclaim attendance, but to seek reconciliation.

Otherwise, we release people with grace.

Every church has limited energy, attention, and capacity. When those resources are consumed by managing ongoing resistance, there is little left for forming disciples, serving the community, or embodying the Gospel in meaningful ways.

But when that resistance departs, space is created. Space for new voices. Space for deeper alignment. Space for people who are ready to live into the mission with joy, courage, and humility.

This is not about building an echo chamber. It’s about cultivating a community that is genuinely committed to the way of Jesus, even when that way challenges comfort, power, and personal preference.

If you’re a leader carrying the weight of people leaving, hear this…Not every goodbye is a loss. Sometimes it’s pruning. Sometimes it’s clarity. Sometimes it’s the Spirit making room for something new.

Even when those exits feel personal, we must stay rooted in the mission. Love without clinging. Lead without fear. Trust that the church Jesus is calling you to be will be shaped not by who you manage to keep, but by who is willing to walk that road with you.

Boundaries That Give Life

Over the last several years, I’ve seen a number of clergy colleagues walk away from ministry. For some, it was the political tensions. For others, it was denominational disappointment. For many, it was burnout. I wrote this blog while reflecting on some of my former colleagues that I miss and often wonder what we could have done differently.

We are living in a world that does not know how to stop. Notifications don’t stop. Emails don’t stop. Expectations don’t stop. The news cycle doesn’t stop. If we’re not careful, we don’t stop either.

Somewhere along the way, we began to believe that constant availability is a virtue. That exhaustion is a sign of faithfulness. That saying “yes” to everything is what it means to be a good worker, a good friend, even a good Christian.

But let’s be clear: a life without boundaries is not holy. It’s unsustainable. It’s a quiet form of surrender to systems and expectations that do not have our wellness in mind.

If anyone could justify constant availability, it was Jesus. Yet, He regularly walked away from the noise. In the first chapter of Mark’s Gospel, Jesus leaves the pressing needs behind to pray in solitude. In other moments, He withdraws from the crowds, even when they are searching for Him.

That’s not neglect. That’s clarity. Jesus understood that we cannot live a life rooted in God if we are constantly at the mercy of every demand around us. Yet, many of us are.

We carry devices that have erased the natural boundaries of time and space. Work follows us home. Stress follows us into the night. If we haven’t put that device on “silence,” rest is interrupted by the quiet buzz of a notification.

In Genesis 2, God rests. Not because God is weary, but because rest is woven into the fabric of creation. To ignore rest is not just unhealthy, it is a rejection of something sacred.

When we refuse to set boundaries around our time, our technology, and our labor, we are not simply “staying productive.” We are participating in a system that quietly erodes our humanity. The Church should have something to say about that.

Before the church speaks to the world, it must tell the truth about itself. Too often, pastors are not just poor examples of healthy boundaries, we are active participants in unhealthy, even harmful, patterns. To be clear, the culture of pastoral overwork is not faithfulness. It is dysfunction dressed up as devotion.

There is a strain of ministry culture that treats exhaustion like a spiritual gift. Clergy “humble brag” about never being off the clock. They announce, often with prideful arrogance, that they are available 24/7/365.

That is not something to celebrate. It is a quiet confession that we do not trust God enough to rest. It is an admission that we are willing to ignore the command of Sabbath altogether. It is a confession of sin. 

In Genesis 2, God rests. In Exodus 20, God commands rest. If we claim to lead people in faith while refusing to practice one of the most basic rhythms God established, then we are not modeling discipleship, we are undermining it.

Beneath that overwork, there is often something we don’t want to confront…pride. We arrogantly and mistakenly believe that everything depends on me. We have convinced ourselves that if we step away, things will fall apart. We’ve embraced the lie that no one else can do what I do.

Let’s be honest…that is not humility. That is ego. A fragile ego at best.

The truth is, the church does not belong to the pastor. It doesn’t even belong to the people. It belongs to God. If the church cannot function without one person constantly sacrificing their health, their family, and their soul, then something is deeply broken.

Now, continuing with the theme of honesty, pastors are not alone in this. Churches often reward and reinforce this behavior. We celebrate the pastor who never takes a day off. We admire the one who “came in anyway” on their Sabbath. We speak fondly of the commitment of the pastor who never said “no.”

I once served a congregation that regularly spoke of a previous pastor who was “always at the church.” Laity let me know that “even on his day off” this pastor was at the church doing this or that. The way they celebrated this pastor, one would think this would have been a time of rapid, explosive growth. However, it was a season where they church experienced it’s sharpest decline in all the areas we regularly measure. Gee, I wonder if those things are related?

While we often celebrate overly busy church staff, we grow uneasy with leaders who protect their time, who take their vacation, who say “no.” We question their work ethic. We wonder if they are lazy. 

We often ask pastors and church staff how much they accomplished. We track attendance, participation, and productivity. But rarely do we ask if our leaders are resting. We rarely ask how our leaders are tending to their souls? When was the last time we asked our leaders if they have space to worship without leading? Have we asked our leaders if they are becoming who God has called them to be?

A church that expects constant availability from its leaders is not cultivating faithfulness; it is cultivating burnout. It is encouraging pastors and staff to willfully ignore a commandment. A pastor who embraces that expectation is not being heroic. They are being formed by something other than the way of Jesus.

If we are serious about being the church, this must change. We cannot preach Sabbath and then reward its violation. We cannot call people to abundant life while modeling exhaustion. We cannot claim to trust God and then live as if everything depends on us.

Healthy boundaries in ministry are not optional. They are essential. Not just for the sake of pastors and staff, but for the sake of the witness of the church itself. When leaders live with integrity…when they rest, when they step away, when they trust God enough to not be constantly available, they show the world something different. They show that the gospel is not about endless striving. It is about trust. It is about freedom. It is about life.

Boundaries are not about building walls. They are about telling the truth about what matters. Boundaries communicate that our worth is not determined by our output. Our presence is more valuable than our productivity. Our relationships deserve our attention, not our leftovers.

In Ephesians 5:15–16, we are called to live wisely by “making the most of every opportunity.” Wisdom, in this case, might look like logging off. It might look like saying no. It might look like protecting time that the world would gladly consume.

Healthy relationships require more than good intentions. They require shared commitments and clear boundaries. We cannot say we value our families, our friendships, or our communities if we consistently allow other things to take priority over them.

However, this is exactly what our culture encourages: more work, more noise, more distraction. Boundaries push back against that. They protect what is sacred from what is seemingly urgent.

There is a harder truth within this idea of boundaries. It’s one the church has not always named clearly enough: Abuse has no place in a life shaped by the love of God. Physical abuse, emotional manipulation, control, coercion, intimidation and fear are not Christian tools for health and vitality. These are not “relationship struggles.” They are violations of dignity, of trust, and of covenant.

In 1 Corinthians 13, we are taught that love is patient and kind. It does not harm. It does not dominate. It does not diminish. We need to say this plainly: enduring abuse is not a spiritual virtue. It is not what God asks of anyone.

In fact, abuse is a breaking of covenant no less serious than infidelity. Just as unfaithfulness violates the promises of a relationship, so does harm. To wound someone (physically or emotionally) is to betray the very vows meant to protect and honor them.

Sometimes, the most faithful boundary a person can set is this: You do not get access to me if you continue to harm me.

That is not bitterness. That is truth. That is not failure. That is courage.

For too long, parts of the church have encouraged people (especially women) to endure what God never intended them to bear. Silence has been mistaken for faithfulness. Endurance has been confused with holiness. This must change.

A church that follows Jesus cannot be a place where harm is hidden, minimized, or excused. It must be a place where boundaries are honored, where dignity is protected, and where people are empowered to step away from what is destroying them. Anything less is not the gospel.

At their core, boundaries are about making space for God, for others, and for the life we are called to live. Without boundaries, our lives become crowded with things that feel urgent but are not ultimately life-giving. When that happens, worship becomes an afterthought. Discipleship becomes optional. Service becomes something we’ll get to “when things slow down” (which they never do). 

Perhaps boundaries are more than personal decisions. Perhaps they are acts of resistance. Resistance against a culture that commodifies our time. Resistance against systems that reward burnout. Resistance against unhealthy expectations, even within the church.

At the same time, they are acts of faith. Faith that believes rest matters. Faith that knows we are more than what we produce. Faith that God might meet us in the chaos, but more often meets us in the quiet spaces we choose to protect.

Where is God inviting you to draw a line? Not out of fear, but out of faith. Not to push the world away, but to make room for what is sacred.

A life with healthy boundaries is not a smaller life. It is a fuller one. A freer one. A more faithful one.