Instructions must be obeyed, but the story has to be trusted.
The modern church is incredibly good at keeping itself running.
Week after week, the gears turn. Services happen. Scriptures are listed. Programs are maintained. Everything works—efficiently, faithfully, predictably.
But what if that efficiency is the problem?
In this episode, we explore how the church can slowly drift into becoming a machine—one that only needs power to keep spinning—while missing the deeper invitation of the story God is telling in the world.
We talk about how Scripture is often reduced to instructions to follow rather than a narrative to trust, and how obedience—while good—can quietly replace participation. When faith becomes about keeping the system going, we may find ourselves running hard on a wheel that never actually moves us forward.
This conversation isn’t about rebellion or abandoning the church. It’s about posture. About trust. About stepping off the wheel long enough to ask whether we’re maintaining something God never asked us to preserve, while overlooking the work He’s actively doing to put the world back together.
Because a machine only needs power.
A story needs trust.
The modern church is incredibly good at keeping itself running.
Week after week, the gears turn. Services happen. Scriptures are listed. Programs are maintained. Everything works—efficiently, faithfully, predictably.
But what if that efficiency is the problem?
In this episode, we explore how the church can slowly drift into becoming a machine—one that only needs power to keep spinning—while missing the deeper invitation of the story God is telling in the world.
We talk about how Scripture is often reduced to instructions to follow rather than a narrative to trust, and how obedience—while good—can quietly replace participation. When faith becomes about keeping the system going, we may find ourselves running hard on a wheel that never actually moves us forward.
This conversation isn’t about rebellion or abandoning the church. It’s about posture. About trust. About stepping off the wheel long enough to ask whether we’re maintaining something God never asked us to preserve, while overlooking the work He’s actively doing to put the world back together.
Because a machine only needs power.
A story needs trust.