A Call Back to Holiness
Shalom Friends, we live in a time when the loudest voices are not always the wisest. Hollywood, once a place of storytelling and shared humanity has become a stage where moral confusion is celebrated and biblical truth is mocked. The glitz and glamour blinds many to the spiritual decay beneath the surface.
Isaiah warned us: “Woe to those who call evil good and good evil, who put darkness for light and light for darkness…” {Isaish 5:20}. That warning echoes through our screens today. We see entertainment that glorifies rebellion, sexual immorality, pride, and violence—while righteousness is portrayed as outdated or oppressive.
This is not about politics. It’s about holiness.
Hollywood has not just drifted—it has run away from the fear of the Lord. The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom {Proverbs 9:10}, but where is wisdom when children are exposed to confusion instead of clarity, lust instead of love, rebellion instead of reverence.

Shalom Friends, we live in a time when the loudest voices are not always the wisest. Hollywood, once a place of storytelling and shared humanity has become a stage where moral confusion is celebrated and biblical truth is mocked. The glitz and glamour blinds many to the spiritual decay beneath the surface.
Isaiah warned us: “Woe to those who call evil good and good evil, who put darkness for light and light for darkness…” {Isaish 5:20}. That warning echoes through our screens today. We see entertainment that glorifies rebellion, sexual immorality, pride, and violence—while righteousness is portrayed as outdated or oppressive.
This is not about politics. It’s about holiness.
Hollywood has not just drifted—it has run away from the fear of the Lord. The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom {Proverbs 9:10}, but where is wisdom when children are exposed to confusion instead of clarity, lust instead of love, rebellion instead of reverence.

We must not be passive consumers. We are called to be salt and light {Matthew 5:13-16}, not silent spectators. The Apostle Paul wrote, “Have nothing to do with the fruitless deeds of darkness, but rather expose them” {Ephesians 5:11}. That doesn’t mean we hate –it means we speak truth in love. It means we pray for repentance, not ratings.
Let us not envy the fame of the godless, for Psalm 73 reminds us their end is destruction unless they turn. Instead, let us raise up a generation of creators who fear God more than man, who tell stories that heal, not corrupt. Let us support artists who honor truth, beauty, and holiness.


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