Idolatry didn’t disappear... it rebranded.
Today’s most powerful idol doesn’t look rebellious.
It looks responsible.
Safe.
Balanced.
It’s comfort.
Comfort doesn’t demand worship out loud.
It simply demands that obedience never costs too much.
Comfort rarely triggers conviction because it doesn’t look sinful.
It attends church.
Reads Scripture selectively.
Avoids extremes.
Keeps faith private.
But Scripture never treats comfort as neutral.
It treats it as dangerous.
When comfort becomes the goal, obedience becomes optional.
Comfortable Christianity redefines faithfulness as attendance instead of obedience.
It teaches believers to admire sacrifice without practicing it.
To celebrate boldness without exercising it.
To talk about mission without moving toward it.
The result isn’t atheism. It’s inactivity.
The world isn’t confused by what Christians believe.
They’re confused by how little those beliefs seem to matter.
When Christians speak boldly but live safely, the Gospel looks hollow.
Comfort doesn’t silence the Church.
It softens it.
The answer isn’t trying harder.
It’s surrendering deeper.
God isn’t calling believers to abandon wisdom. He’s calling them to abandon excuses.
Comfort makes a great accessory.
It makes a terrible master.
And until the Church dethrones comfort, it will continue to wonder why its influence keeps shrinking.