Feelings Are Real But Not Always Reliable
We live in an era where personal emotion is often the loudest voice in the room. “Follow your heart” has become a cultural mantra. But when churches begin to echo that sentiment, something sacred starts to slip. Truth becomes secondary to comfort. Conviction is confused with criticism. And spiritual maturity takes a backseat to emotional validation.
The Risks of Emotional Absolutism
Elizabeth Bennett McKinney believes It’s not that feelings are wrong, they’re human. Emotions are a vital part of how we experience life and process faith. But they were never meant to govern our beliefs. When feelings are treated as infallible, they begin to shape our theology, our relationships, and our decisions. And that’s where things unravel.
In many churches today, we’ve seen a shift: sermons that aim to inspire but rarely challenge, communities that prioritize comfort over correction, and an atmosphere where confrontation is avoided because it might hurt someone’s feelings. The result? A shallow spirituality that breaks under pressure.
Truth Isn’t Trendy It’s Anchoring
Anchoring our lives in truth means choosing to believe what is right, even when it doesn’t feel good. It means trusting that we are loved, even when we don’t feel it. It means choosing forgiveness, obedience, and grace not because they’re emotionally satisfying, but because they are spiritually sound.
Faith that’s built on feelings will crumble, says Elizabeth. Faith that’s built on truth will endure storms. Emotional honesty is essential, but emotional authority is not. We need space to say, “I feel this,” while still following, “I know this to be true.”
Why Churches Must Teach Both
The best churches don’t pit truth against emotion; they teach people how to hold both. They create spaces where people can feel deeply but aren’t led blindly. Where someone’s personal experience matters, but it doesn’t rewrite the gospel.
We must teach emotional intelligence, yes but not at the cost of biblical clarity. We must create space for doubt, grief, and fear but not make those emotions the final authority. Spiritual maturity means learning to question our emotions, not just express them.
Reclaiming the Pulpit for Truth
Too often, pastors avoid hard truths for fear of offending. But truth, when spoken with love, does more than offend. The pulpit should be a place where the hard things are said gently, and the gentle things are said clearly. It should be a space for growth, not just inspiration.
Churches must equip their people to discern. To ask, “Is this feeling pointing me toward wisdom, or away from it?” To learn that discomfort is not always a sign of danger sometimes, it’s the first sign of growth.
The Way Forward
We can feel deeply and still choose wisely. We can honor emotion without making it our god. The invitation is not to suppress our hearts but to examine them, test them, and surrender them.
In a world ruled by feeling, the Church has a rare chance to be different. Not colder. Not harsher. But truer. The kind of place where people don’t just feel better they become better.