Truth has not changed. But in many churches, the courage to say what is true has.
We are living in a confused age where many still want the language of Christianity, but no longer want the authority of Christ. They want mercy without repentance. Community without holiness. Inspiration without submission. A Jesus who comforts, but not a Lord who commands.
And in that kind of world, truth does not merely become unpopular.
Truth becomes problematic.
In When the Truth Became Problematic, Johnathan Stephen Sexton calls ordinary Christians back to biblical clarity, spiritual discernment, and courageous faithfulness in a time when false teaching often comes dressed in compassionate language, polished platforms, and familiar Christian words.
This book confronts a growing problem inside the visible church: many believers can recognize cultural confusion, but struggle to identify doctrinal drift. False teaching does not always announce itself with open denial. Often, it works by softening hard truths, redefining biblical words, removing repentance, lowering the authority of Scripture, and presenting “another Jesus” who fits the preferences of the age.
But Scripture has not left the church guessing.
This book will help readers:
Recognize the patterns of modern false teaching
Learn how error often enters through selective Bible use, emotional pressure, vague language, and the removal of repentance.
Recover confidence in the authority of Scripture
Return to the Word of God as the final standard for truth, doctrine, morality, and Christian living.
Understand the difference between disagreement and deception
Not every doctrinal disagreement is false teaching, but Scripture clearly warns that wolves do exist and must be recognized.
Stand firm without becoming proud or harsh
Learn how to confront error with courage, humility, love, and biblical seriousness.
Rebuild discernment in everyday Christian life
Use practical questions, reflection prompts, prayers, Scripture references, and a 30-day discernment reset to move from awareness to action.
This is not a book written to create fear, cynicism, or outrage. It is a call to faithfulness.
It is a call for Christians to love truth more than comfort, Christ more than applause, and Scripture more than the shifting approval of the age.
Inside, readers will find chapters on false teachers, sound doctrine, cheap grace, the infiltrated church, the role of shepherds and watchmen, the home as the first front line, the cost of saying what is true, and examples of men who would not bend. The book also includes A 30-Day Discernment Reset, A Discernment Grid for Testing Teachers, and Scriptures for Standing Firm. These practical tools are built directly into the book’s structure and reinforce its purpose: helping believers recognize error, love truth, and stand firm with humility and courage .
The age may call truth problematic.
The church must learn to call it glorious.
If you are tired of vague Christianity, weakened doctrine, and soft words that leave people unguarded, this book will help you recover clarity.
If you have sensed that something is wrong but have struggled to name it biblically, this book will give you language, Scripture, and a path forward.
And if you want to stand firm in a confused age without becoming arrogant, bitter, or reactive, this book was written for you.
Recover discernment.
Defend sound doctrine.
Stand firm in the truth of Christ.