The Cost of Godly Living in a Lukewarm, Dying World
2 Timothy 3:12-13
"In fact, everyone who wants to live a godly life in Christ Jesus will be persecuted, while evildoers and impostors will go from bad to worse, deceiving and being deceived."
The Christian life is the life of purpose, the simply is what it is. The world merely exists. But does the world have a purpose? Is there an inherent reason for the world's existence?
In Scripture, when "the world" is contrasted with godly living (as in the 2 Timothy 3 passage), it almost always means the present evil system of ungodliness; the organized rebellion of fallen humanity against God, fueled by the lust of the flesh, the lust of the eyes, and the pride of life (1 John 2:15-17).
Just look at the rapid deprivation of our society. The rapid deterioration of our cultural norms. So much godlessness, we're drowning in our filth. Certainly the next major event is Revelation 4:1.
The decay is undeniable, and Scripture anticipated it. Paul prophesied that Christians will be persecuted, and they were and still are. "Perilous times", the rapid moral freefall, the normalization of what was once unthinkable. Paul prophesied that in the last days, the church itself will be marked by self-love, greed, arrogance, brutality, pleasure-seeking over God, and a form of godliness without power. It’s a progressive corruption that Paul says will intensify. It's a love grown cold, as Jesus put it.
This isn’t new. Every generation of believers has seen seasons of decline; but the speed and scope today feel unprecedented, enabled by technology, globalism, and the rejection of any transcendent divine standard. Today, the "world of ungodliness" is showing its true colors more brazenly.
One time they asked Jesus, "show us a sign", Jesus replied, "as it was in the days of Noah...".
Did the crowds say, "hey Jesus, man of God, do you really believe that story about the flood?"
What are we to believe?
Do we take Jesus at his word?
Do we have difficulty with the doctrines that Jesus spoke?
Do we feel they need supplementation, qualifications, adaptations?
Who is Jesus?
I ask that because, if we're going to adopt a doctrine diametrically opposed to what Jesus said, we might need to check what Lord we are truly committed too.
Today, many do monkey around with the scriptures. They soften, allegorize, or "re-interpret" the parts that clash with our modern sensibilities. Yet, it's plain to see, if Jesus affirmed the flood as a real historical judgment, then we have no right to treat it as legend. If He warned that the last days would mirror Noah’s days; rampant immorality, violence, mockery of God’s warnings, and sudden catastrophe, then the rapid moral freefall he prophesied is not coincidence. It is confirmation.
This is an expected trajectory, evildoers and impostors going from bad to worse, deceiving and being deceived. A form of godliness without power in the visible church. And boy oh boy do we see that. Lukewarm people, marketing weekly spiritualism with no real fruit for the kingdom of God to harvest.
Paul didn’t say the last days might be difficult, he said they will be. And if your spiritualism isn't? You're likely doing it wrong.
"…having a form of godliness but denying its power. Have nothing to do with such people."
Sermons that tickle ears, crowds gathering for inspiration, therapy, and spiritual entertainment. A community with little genuine conviction, repentance, or holiness.
WARNING ⚠️
Lukewarmness isn’t neutral; it’s nauseating to the Lord. He will literally vomit you out of his mouth.
Jesus said the world hates you because it hated Him first (John 15:18-19). So when "spiritualism" feels smooth, popular, entertaining, and never costly; when it draws applause from the very culture drowning in filth, something is wrong. That is not the narrow road. That is the broad way that leads to destruction, dressed up in Christian language.
Living a godly life in Christ Jesus today should cost you friends, comfort, freedom, and status. Living His righteousness should cost you opportunities, reputation, and safety. If your faith costs you nothing, it may be worth exactly what it costs.
Food for thought.
Are you hot?
On fire with love for Christ, zeal for holiness, boldness in a dark world?
Are you cold?
Openly opposed, at least honest in your rebellion?
Or are you lukewarm?
Going through motions, blending in, avoiding the cost of true discipleship?
"Those whom I love I rebuke and discipline. So be earnest and repent. Here I am! I stand at the door and knock." (Revelation 3:19-20)
He is knocking.
Right now.
The trajectory is clear.
Ask the Lord to search you.
Repent where needed.
Return to your first love.
Choose now. Hot or cold. But not lukewarm.