
Church Culture Under the Spotlight
Grammy-winning artist Lecrae is not laughing at comedian Druski’s viral megachurch satire — he’s nodding in painful recognition. Lecrae says the sketch “mirrors real church problems,” pointing to “wolves in the pulpits,” theatricalism for applause and influence, and leaders manipulating God’s name for personal gain.(Christian post)
Spectacle Over Substance
Lecrae’s critique is blunt: “there’s theatrics for attention and money and influence” instead of authentic encounters with Christ.(christian post)
As a believer, I agree — people are desperate, and they are done being entertained. They don’t want a show; they want substance. Smoke machines, staged drama, and performance-driven worship can create emotion, but they cannot replicate the life-changing power of a true encounter with Jesus Christ.
The Bible warns against hollow worship: “These people honor me with their lips, but their hearts are far from me” (Matthew 15:8). And Jesus Himself cleansed the temple when commerce corrupted worship — a prophetic act of righteous anger, turning the Court of the Gentiles back to prayer (see Matthew 21:12–13). That ancient zeal for holiness speaks straight into our modern moment. Jesus didn’t change — we changed Jesus to fit our narrative, and He’s not going to let it continue anymore.
Accountability, Not Outrage
Lecrae also urges discernment over outrage, saying believers should allow the church to self-correct rather than abandon it. “There needs to be more leaders and teachers warning people about false leaders and false teachers.”
That lines up with Scripture: Paul admonishes the church in 1 Timothy 4:1–2 not to be swayed by deceptive teachers, but to cling to sound doctrine.
A Hunger for Truth
We are living in a moment where the headline should not be a joke gone viral, but a Church being weighed in the balance. Jesus sees past the lights, the language, and the platforms — He knows the intent of every heart, and nothing is hidden from Him. We get away with nothing. The Word of God exposes what performance tries to cover (Hebrews 4:12).
This is not a call to abandon the Church — it is a call to repent. To turn from spectacle, from pride, from profit-driven pulpits, and return to the fear of the Lord. God is not interested in being impressed; He is looking for obedience, humility, and truth. The hour for games is over. People are desperate for life-changing truth, and the Church must once again be a house of prayer, not a stage.
If we want revival, it will not come through better production — it will come through repentance.
“If my people, who are called by my name, will humble themselves and pray and seek my face and turn from their wicked ways, then I will hear from heaven, and I will forgive their sin and will heal their land.”
— 2 Chronicles 7:14