
Dear Editor,
Jesus declared, “I am the Way, the Truth, and the Life; no one comes to the Father but through Me.” Those words should be the foundation of our faith. Yet today, many believers are left wondering, has the Church lost its way?
There was a time when the Church stood apart from the world, a refuge for the weary and a guide for the lost. But now, the line between sacred and secular seems to have vanished. Too often, we hear of pastors, church leaders and members caught in scandal, fraud, sexual misconduct, adultery, and hypocrisy. These are not just headlines or another news article, they are heartbreaks that shake the faith of those who once looked to the pulpit for truth.
We condemn our young people for drifting away, but can we really blame them when they feel judged, excluded, and disillusioned by those who are supposed to lead by example? Inside some churches, gossip replaces grace, and judgment overshadows love.
How, then, can we point others to “the Way, the Truth, and the Life” if those appointed to lead us are walking in darkness themselves?
We are quick to accuse politicians of misusing public funds, but are we just as vigilant about how our tithes are spent? Too many faithful members have watched their 10% of salary go toward luxury cars and personal indulgence, rather than ministry and community outreach.
It’s time for the Church to take a hard look in the mirror. If it mirrors the world, who will lead the lost back to God?
A Concerned Believer





Sometimes we all need reminders like this the Church must lead with integrity and compassion.
Not interested
Yea without sin cast the first stone, look to God and parents first, all the Christians that are sinning they are all wrong, reason we see ppl faces and not their hearts we all need to be an example at church, work, home and at play every pastor sin put as human beings we ask for forgiveness hopefully those criticizing the churches has a pure heart behind closed doors.
A powerful and timely message. The Church has become too comfortable trying to blend in instead of standing out. We can’t lead the lost if we’re walking the same path.