THEOLOGICAL MALPRACTICE.

I’ve noticed something interesting—most books I’ve read that have close to 0% doctrinal error tend to be written by believers who were or are in their 70s and 80s. You know, people who’ve actually had enough time to marinate in scripture and let the Word beat their opinions into shape.  


The more I study scripture, the more I get why this is the case. Understanding the full depth of the text TAKES TIME. It’s a process, not an overnight revelation. Honestly, I keep finding errors in my own past understanding. I look at some of the things I once thought were profound, and I want to sue myself for THEOLOGICAL MALPRACTICE.  


That’s why, if you’re about to pick up a religious book, I have some advice: check the author’s spiritual mileage. If they have less than 50 years in the faith, PROCEED WITH CAUTION. A lot of these books are just denominational cheerleading, emotional hype, or sneaky ways to fatten pockets. The “hot takes” fade; the truth doesn’t.


Young folks? Write fiction. Write poetry. Write all the things. But declaring yourself a BIBLICAL AUTHORITY when you’re barely a decade into the faith with intentional study of scriptures, that’s a joke—and not even the funny kind.


This is exactly why I hesitate to write and publish books. I’m still in the kitchen, learning the recipe. Because the last thing the world needs is another half-baked gospel served on a silver platter of emotions.




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