E358 – Did The Church Fail America? & Why The Answer Is “No”
Did the church fail America?
It’s a question often asked with frustration, sarcasm, or blame—but rarely examined honestly. In this episode, we step back from easy accusations and take a careful look at history, Scripture, and the Christian witness of the last century. Using Paul Harvey’s famous “If I Were the Devil” as a jumping-off point, we explore whether America’s spiritual decline can truly be laid at the feet of a silent or disengaged church. The answer may surprise you.
We examine the decades when many of today’s cultural battles first erupted—the removal of prayer and Bible reading from public schools, the rise of secular humanism, the legalization of abortion, and growing hostility toward biblical morality. These were not quiet years for Christianity. Churches were full, revival meetings were massive, soul-winning conferences were common, and Christian voices were loud in the public square. By outward appearances, the church was active, organized, and deeply engaged.
So how do we explain where we are now? If the church was preaching, evangelizing, and fighting cultural battles, why did the spiritual trajectory of the nation still shift so dramatically? In this episode, we challenge some easy assumptions, confront uncomfortable questions, and lay the groundwork for a deeper conversation—one that moves beyond headlines and history and presses us to examine where faith is truly formed, preserved, and passed on.

