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First person: The greatest danger facing today’s church

The greatest danger facing today’s church is not persecution, political pressure or cultural hostility. It is something far more subtle – and far more familiar. The greatest danger is apathy.
  • April 7, 2026
  • Baptist and Reflector
  • First person, Latest News
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First person: The greatest danger facing today’s church

The greatest danger facing today’s church is not persecution, political pressure or cultural hostility. It is something far more subtle — and far more familiar.

The greatest danger is apathy.

Jesus warned the church in Laodicea about this condition with sobering clarity: “Because you are lukewarm — neither hot nor cold — I am about to spit you out of my mouth” (Revelation 3:16). The problem was not false doctrine or open rebellion. It was indifference. The church believed it was healthy and secure, yet Christ saw a people who were spiritually poor, blind and naked.

Check out more first-person articles on faith and culture. 

Apathy is especially dangerous because it does not arrive loudly.

It slips quietly into churches that still gather, still sing, still preach — but no longer burn with urgency for Christ and His mission.

Over time, passion cools, witness weakens and the church drifts into spiritual sleep. For Baptists who care deeply about evangelism, missions and biblical faithfulness, this reality should concern us.

In recent decades, many Baptist churches have experienced declining membership and baptisms.

Statistics alone never tell the whole story, but they do prompt an important question:

Are we facing not just cultural resistance — but spiritual indifference within our own walls?

When faith loses its fire

At its core, apathy is indifference toward God and His purposes. It is not rejection of the gospel, but a loss of urgency about it. The Laodicean church believed it “needed nothing,” yet Jesus declared it desperately in need of renewal (Revelation 3:17). Modern apathy often looks respectable.

Sanctuaries may still be filled, but prayer is thin. People attend worship yet rarely share their faith. Service is left to a faithful few, while many remain spectators. Christianity becomes a routine rather than a relationship — a habit rather than a heartfelt devotion. History reminds us that this is not a new struggle.

Before the Great Awakening of the eighteenth century, many churches in colonial America had grown spiritually cold. Attendance was faithful, but hearts were disengaged.

God then raised up voices like Jonathan Edwards and George Whitefield, whose preaching reignited biblical conviction and spiritual zeal. What followed was not mere emotionalism, but repentance, transformed lives and renewed commitment to Christ’s mission.

Why churches grow indifferent

Apathy rarely has a single cause.

More often, it grows from a combination of distraction, comfort and spiritual neglect. Jesus warned that “the cares of the world and the deceitfulness of riches choke the word” (Matthew 13:22). Comfort can dull dependence on God. Prosperity can quietly replace prayer. Over time, believers may lose the joy of their “first love” for Christ (Revelation 2:4). Routine also plays a role.

When worship becomes predictable but not passionate — when Scripture is heard but not obeyed — spiritual vitality fades. Dietrich Bonhoeffer warned of this danger when he spoke of “cheap grace,” faith without discipleship and belief without obedience.

When the cost of following Christ is forgotten, spiritual fire diminishes.

The consequences of apathy

The consequences of indifference are serious.

A church that loses its zeal loses its witness. Jesus said that salt which loses its flavor is no longer useful (Matthew 5:13). When believers no longer live distinctly for Christ, the church’s influence fades.

Apathy also affects the next generation.

Scripture warns of a time when children grew up without knowing the works of the Lord because the faith was not passed on (Judges 2:10). Many churches today feel this reality as younger generations disengage, unconvinced by a faith that appears lifeless or optional.

Over time, apathy leads to stagnation.

The writer of Hebrews rebuked believers who should have been mature teachers but remained spiritually immature (Hebrews 5:12). Churches stop growing — not only numerically, but spiritually. In parts of Europe, once-thriving churches now stand largely empty, preserved as historical monuments rather than centers of faith.

They serve as a sobering reminder of where long-term spiritual indifference can lead.

More than empty pew concerns

Apathy shows itself in practical ways as well.

The same small group carries the work of the church year after year. Evangelistic urgency fades. Churches resist new methods to reach changing communities. Children and youth ministries weaken, discouragement grows, and vision narrows. People sense when a church has lost momentum — and they respond accordingly.

Christ’s invitation to renewal

Yet the message of Scripture is not despair, but hope.

Jesus did not abandon the church in Laodicea. He called it to repentance and renewed zeal. “Those whom I love, I reprove and discipline. So be zealous and repent” (Revelation 3:19). Renewal begins with honest self-examination and repentance. Paul urged believers to be “fervent in spirit, serving the Lord” (Romans 12:11).

Prayer, Scripture, fellowship and obedience are not outdated disciplines; they are God’s appointed means of spiritual renewal.

For Baptists, the mission remains clear. The church exists to make disciples.

The Great Commission is not a slogan — it is our calling (Matthew 28:19–20). History affirms this truth. In the 20th century, prayer movements in Korea sparked powerful revival and global missionary impact. Renewal did not come through strategy alone, but through hearts awakened to God.

Apathy is not overcome by guilt, but by renewed love for Christ.

Personal devotion, shared accountability, sacrificial service and wholehearted worship all help rekindle spiritual passion.

Paul’s words speak urgently to the church today: “The hour has come for you to wake from sleep” (Romans 13:11). The question before us is simple but profound: Will we remain lukewarm — or will we awaken to the Spirit’s call? The future vitality of our churches depends on the answer.


EDITOR’S NOTE — This story was written by Bill Stripling and originally published by the Baptist and Reflector.

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