It’s often said—especially in a version of Christianity built on a faulty image of Christ as “Mr. Nice Guy”—that believers should avoid confrontation. This has left many Christians afraid to speak truth, trapped in false identity and performative piety.
They become comfortable only among their own kind—within familiar affiliations, denominations, or people who look and sound like them. But sadly that’s not the reflection of Christ. That’s Churchianity.
Please be advised that this message is not to condemn but to reach the heart. —It is meant to soften us with conviction so that we all seek to be like Christ—treating one another fairly, speaking the hard truths that lead souls to Him, not to our pastors, our denominations, or the performative gospel or prosperity jive that is leading many sheep astray.
The Holy Spirit is speaking, and now is the time for change. The times demand it. —We have never been closer to a one-world order system, the rise of global deception, the revealing of the antichrist, mass delusion, and the return of Christ—not as the Lamb, but as the Lion of Judah.
Meanwhile, have you noticed that true followers of Christ, true prophets, believers and the apostolic are often labeled “too much,” unkind, or even people‑haters—usually by those clinging to their own worldly power, and titles unable to control the Holy Spirit led while trying to convince their congregations that their lukewarm criticism is holiness, and that what is actually on fire for Christ is somehow out of order.
It is a lie.
Our faith and boldness is often twisted and misunderstood, yet it doesn’t have to stay that way.
For every true servant of Christ, the deepest desire is simple: that all of us grow stronger in our relationship with Jesus Christ, and that true peace and unity—rooted in the genuine Gospel and the Holy Spirit—be the bond that ties us together.
Salvation echoes in all we do.
The truth—our truth, in Christ is the opposite of what the world claims. Our boldness does not come from arrogance or anger. —It comes from love—real love, the kind that refuses to lie to someone’s soul.
True disciples reflect the heart of God. Not a “Mr. Nice Guy” god invented by religious culture, but the God of Scripture—merciful and convicting, loving and just, full of grace yet rich in wisdom and truth.
He is compassionate, and straightforward, not mean; firm, and just, but not performative.
Yeshua does not tiptoe to save face, and neither does anyone who has been alone taught by Christ.
Sure, Yeshua is compassionately straightforward—but speaks authoritatively to save what belongs to Him—to souls. Not egos.
Yet like Christ, His followers also feel deeply. We get angry—just look at Peter.
We grow sorrowful over the world’s sin and injustice.
We shed tears without shame.
We rejoice in all of it because, after a lifetime of suffering—especially for the Gospel—we can finally feel again in a healthy, holy way.
It’s all because of Yeshua.
And we experience His peace, even in chaos, through the messes of transformation as He teaches us to set boundaries with holy wisdom to protect the heart, just like scripture instructs.
Meanwhile, God’s people do not lord over anyone. We do not cling to titles or positions. Our testimony and fruit speaks for us, and the fruit reveals the root—and the root is Christ alone.
This is the Jesus of Scripture, not the softened ‘Mr. Nice guy’ version many have been taught.
Meanwhile, seek scripture. Jesus is kind, not a push over and neither are His followers.
Psalm 145:8
“The Lord is gracious and compassionate, slow to anger and rich in love.”
It doesn’t say never angry but slow and patient to anger.
And revelation is clear that those whom He loves He rebukes and disciplines.
So how many have judged the refining fire process wrongly while living unaccountable yourselves?
It’s a necessary question—one only you and God can answer.
Always go back to Scripture for the truth. And while we study the Word and talk about the men and women in the Bible—and how their lives apply to ours—too many people in today’s lukewarm idea of faith are living off the testimonies of the disciples before us.
They love to talk about what those before us endured, yet have never lived it themselves. —And then, from a place of pew comfort, they condemn the very ones the Lord sends who have walked through the fire.
I have walked through the fire. Have you? —This is not boasting—nor comparison or competition.
It is testimony, proven by Christ in real time. —Yeshua receives the glory.
No titles needed.
I am not educated by the world’s standards. —I am a product of Jesus Christ’s mercy.
And everything that has taken place—every trial, every refining flame, every season of extreme suffering—was not just for me.
It was for you as well.
What some of us endured was so that others could awaken, repent, return, and be strengthened. The refining fire was never meant to destroy us—it was meant to reveal Christ in us.
Scripture agrees.
“The testing of your faith produces perseverance.” — James 1:3
“I have refined you, but not as silver; I have tested you in the furnace of affliction.” — Isaiah 48:10
“They overcame by the blood of the Lamb and the word of their testimony.” — Revelation 12:11
My testimony is not a pedestal. It is a witness to God’s power. A living reminder that God still rescues, still restores, still refines, and still sends His servants for the sake of others.
The fire I walked through was not wasted.
I am no longer a drug‑addicted, foul‑mouthed, broken, wounded, sexually promiscuous woman or child.
I am no longer full of rage, anger, or resentment. I no longer curse or use my hands to protect myself but Spiritual weapons, in Christ.
I am no longer a people‑pleaser trying to prove I am worthy of love.
I am no longer a thief, a tyrant, or a troublemaker in the worldly sense.
But being a troublemaker—that part was always God‑ordained.
Only now, it is righteous.
Now I cause trouble for the enemy’s camp—not for anyone’s destruction, but so Satan’s gimmicks and tactics are exposed. —And yes, that exposure includes many of today’s spiritual leaders.
This was written into my story before I was born— set apart for the exaltation of Christ.
Paul said it…
“If anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation; the old has passed away.” — 2 Corinthians 5:17
“Before I formed you in the womb, I knew you; before you were born, I set you apart.” — Jeremiah 1:5
“You meant evil against me, but God meant it for good.” — Genesis 50:20
What I survived was not random.
What I endured was not wasted, and everything and everyone who tried to kill me became the very testimony God now uses to free others.
I am living proof
It was preparation—for me, and for those who would hear.
Of course the fire of Christ is going to look and sound different from the manufactured fire of churchianity. One is holy. One is human-made. One refines.
The other performs.
And again—this message is not meant to offend, though it will. If offense rises, take that offense into prayer.
Turn it into repentance.
Let conviction overturn what the enemy has been using to block what the Holy Spirit is trying to do in your life.
“He who has ears to hear, let him hear.” — Matthew 11:15
“Sanctify them in the truth; Your word is truth.” — John 17:17
The Father knows we will not bend or compromise. The good fight is for the Gospel, and the battles are not ours—they belong to Jesus.
Much love, and peace in Christ,
Sister Christine 🛡️
Christine Brejcha (Now Beach) ©️
Dated: February 21, 2023

