When I discuss my recent memoir, Where the Light Fell, often I use the phrase toxic church to describe the extreme form of Southern fundamentalism I grew up under. I joke that I’ve been “in recovery,” a process of detoxing, ever since.
“Tell me,” asked one podcast interviewer, “What makes a church toxic?” Three characteristics immediately came to mind.
FEAR. Memories of church from my youth summon up feelings of fear and shame. It was hard to hear the gospel as good news when most sermons centered on sin and hell. Over the decades, churches have played on many fears: a Catholic president (JFK), Armageddon, communism, the Great Tribulation, Y2K, AIDS, secular humanism, homosexuals, socialism, the New World Order, COVID-19. Some of these fears have proved legitimate, but others border on conspiracy theories.
“Perfect love drives out fear,” says 1 John 4:18. A healthy church does not use scare tactics to manipulate emotions. Nor does it deny that we will face frightening situations. Rather, it directs fearful people toward a trustworthy God. The Psalms and the Prophets demonstrate the pattern clearly: again and again, a people facing catastrophe are reminded of a God who is not anxious. “Be still and know that I am God,” Psalm 46 advises, even when nations are in uproar and mountains are quaking.
Yes, we should battle injustice and respond to tragedy, but from a position of calm compassion. The world is still reeling from a pandemic that has affected nearly everyone on the planet. I have talked to pastors who describe congregations torn apart by anger and fear over vaccines and masks. Is this the best we can do in representing the One whom the apostle Paul describes as “the God of all comfort, the Father of compassion”?
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EXCLUSION. My boyhood church in Atlanta stationed deacons at the door to turn away as “troublemakers” any people of color who tried to attend. Thank God, our society has moved beyond that kind of overt, legalized racism—and yet bias persists in other forms.
The apostle Paul, once a Pharisee who would not deign to touch a Gentile, slave, or woman, laid down this firm principle after his conversion: “There is neither Jew nor Gentile, neither slave nor free, nor is there male and female, for you are all one in Christ Jesus.” In one fell swoop, he dismantled the walls separating race, class, and gender. Nonetheless, the church has never stopped struggling with these very issues.
“If you want to grow in love, the way to do it is not likely going to be by attending more Bible studies or prayer meetings; it will happen by getting close to people who are not like you,” writes the Canadian pastor Lee Beach. Grace gets tested when we find ourselves confronted with people who are different from us. Do we welcome them? I think of the people attracted to—and received by—Jesus: “heretics” (Samaritan women), foreigners (a Roman officer), outcasts (prostitutes, tax collectors, the disabled, those with leprosy).
I know of no churches who would actively exclude someone of a different race or social class, but I know many churches that just “happen” to comprise people of the same class, race, and political persuasion. What kind of welcome would a homeless person or immigrant receive in such a congregation? Perhaps in reaction to my racist upbringing, now when I walk into a new church, the more its members resemble each other, and resemble me, the more uncomfortable I feel.
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RIGIDITY. Church rigidity can take many forms. In extreme cases, an authoritarian pastor can create a near-cultic atmosphere. A series of popular podcasts produced by Christianity Today traces the rise and fall of Mars Hill Church in Seattle, which Mark Driscoll led to explosive growth, only to see it implode under his abusive style. A psychologist friend of mine who has studied pastors estimates that 80 percent of them have strong narcissistic tendencies. Why not? We elevate them, literally, on platforms, and assign them the lofty task of telling us what to believe and how to behave.
All too often, narcissistic leaders focus on minor points of doctrine and miss the main message, of God’s boundless love for estranged human beings. John’s gospel describes Jesus as “full of grace and truth.” Rigid churches tilt heavily toward the “truth” side of that balance scale, often piling on rules of behavior that the Bible never mentions.
Once again, the apostle Paul shows a more flexible style. “It is for freedom that Christ has set us free,” he declared to the Galatians, vehemently opposing those who insisted that Jesus-followers undergo the Jewish practice of circumcision. Yet he voluntarily took a strict ritual vow (Acts 18, 21) in order to identify with Jewish believers. Similarly, depending on the spiritual maturity of the church he was addressing, he modified his counsel on such issues as pagan holidays and eating meat that had been offered to idols.
Paul summarized his approach: “I have become all things to all people so that by all possible means I might save some.” He knew which theological and ethical issues to emphasize and which ones to minimize. Rigidity over minor disagreements, he viewed as a serious threat to church unity. The existence of some 54,000 denominations in the world indicates that not everyone has followed Paul’s style.
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A Healthy Church…
In the last full night with his disciples, Jesus set out a formula for healthy church leadership (John 13-17). First, he got up from the meal and washed their feet, much to their discomfort. He demonstrated that good leaders don’t cling to privilege narcissistically. Quite the opposite: they serve the very ones they lead.
Next, Jesus gave a paramount command that overcomes exclusion: “By this everyone will know that you are my disciples, if you love one another.”
Finally, he prayed for unity—not only for the disciples but for everyone in history who would follow him. Nothing would bear a more powerful witness to his message. In his prayer, Jesus said, “Then the world will know that you sent me and have loved them even as you have loved me.”
Service, love, unity—Jesus named these as primary marks of his followers. Have you ever asked a stranger, “When I say the word Christian or evangelical, what’s the first thing that comes to mind?” I have, and not once, not once, have I heard anyone answer with one of those three words.

A few times I have visited a megachurch in a tiered auditorium. As I look at the spotlighted stage below, I feel as if I’m at an NBA game, with 10,000 spectators cheering ten professionals on the court. It strikes me, that’s the opposite of a biblical view of church. Worshipers gather together not as spectators to be entertained, but as active participants. While toxins work their way into the church seemingly without effort, a healthy church will require the vigilance of all its members.
Meanwhile, the real audience sits outside, waiting to see if we truly represent Jesus through our acts of service, love, and unity.

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Thanks Yancey for your forthright views. In my pursuit for the treasure I did struggle with lot of dirt that covered the treasure. However the treasure is more than the expectations. The Anabaptist convictions helped me to connect the dots. We are Christians because Jesus was Both God and Man and He is the centre of our relationship with God and not any human led church. Jesus model of leadership is sacrificial love that empowers the disciples to do greater things than what He did. He also warned against the yeast of hypocrisy of the Sadducees and the Pharisees. No human is worthy of the pedestal because other than Jesus we are all flawed and can only be treated as a brother transitioning to friend to each other while encouraging us to follow Jesus modelling among us. If you love God with all then God will lead you to the truth and the truth will set you free. Truth from Jesus will never leave you thirsty again. But as Jesus said “it is not that truth did not come into the world but the world loved evil is the problem. The lazy Sheep are the source of the problem who still want a king to bottle feed them without wanting to meet God in person and be subject to transformation by God.
David, thank you so much for taking the time to craft a response, especially when it comes from a place of such pain and sorrow. I am so very sorry this has been the reaction to you and your family.
I want you to know your book, Wounded in Spirit – Advent Art and Meditations, has been THE most influential resource outside of the Bible to provide healing to my soul. It was released a couple of months after the death of my oldest child, just in time for the first Advent season without him. I bought it at the newsletter recommendation of Philip Yancey (whose forward to the book is therapeutic in its own right).
All of the other resources recommended to me proved to be fluff and dribble — kindly intended, but missing the mark. Your book is different, and I attribute that to the path of pain you have also hobbled along. To quote the first quote from your book:
The celebration of Advent is possible only to those who are troubled in soul, who know themselves to be poor and imperfect, and who look forward to something greater to come. He is, and always will be now, with us in our sin, in our suffering, and at our death. We are no longer alone. God is with us and we are no longer homeless.
–Dietrich Bonhoeffer, Advent Sunday, December 2, 1928
I think Mr. Bonhoeffer would agree that last word — homeless — could just as easily be the word ‘churchless’.
That being said, I am deeply sorry the response from the churches you have attended has been less than Christlike. This is tragically typical of the type of response so many of us receive. Your comment helps provide validation to so many who are themselves churchless/homeless.
This will be my fourth December to settle in each day with the beauty and wisdom of your book. Your hurts are ministering to my wounds. Thank you for not keeping them hidden away, which would also have been understandable.
“Service, love, unity—Jesus named these as primary marks of his followers. Have you ever asked a stranger, “When I say the word Christian or evangelical, what’s the first thing that comes to mind?” I have, and not once, not once, have I heard anyone answer with one of those three words.”
This is absolutely tragic — and so very true.
It breaks my heart. Thank you for proving over and over again throughout the years that someone else out there notices and cares. Your words matter. They minister. They help mend.
Thank you.
i’ve read that you mentioned Mars Hill podcast. there have really been more and more narcissistic pastors for the last couple of years and that we often notice that because we can sense it that something’s off with somebody yet that isn’t for us to judge but God.
also, one toxic trait you also forgot to mention was the presence of codependency within a church. codependency is not good because it always violates personal boundaries of people. maybe you mentioned it earlier by way of saying “having a cult atmosphere.” and yes that’s how codependent pastors and churches appear. they become like practicing cults. God bless.
Reading your new book aloud to my family has generated many tearful memories. Today’s post just really sums it up.
I somehow escaped my Holiness upbringing, only to end up in a huge and powerful California Baptist Church.
The brilliant senior pastor had grown the church from 300 to 4000
The success was hugely admired.
The mantra of leadership was that any negative comment condemned you to having a “Critical Spirit” The unwritten creed of the church.
Two volunteer youth leaders ended up in prison for molesting little boys
Then many years later it was disclosed that two top young graduates of the intern program had regularly slept with numerous teen age girls in their programs (And my daughters were contemporaries, but apparently unharmed by these monsters) It was further disclosed that the top leadership had counseled the girls to “Just let it go, don’t ruin these guys lives” Perhaps a paraphrase of Mark 8:36 is in order, “For what shall it profit a church, if it win the entire community, and lose its own soul?”
Phil, many years ago your book on Grace basically got me back on track and has been a guidepost for me over the years. I have given away literally dozens of copies.