Gentle Pulpiting
Curtis Mort • November 16, 2025

Soft Parenting and Soft Pulpiteering: Two Orchards, One Root System

A tree is known by its fruit. That is how Christ tells us to judge a thing. Not by its mission statement. Not by its sentimental ideals. Not by how carefully its practitioners speak about it. Look at the fruit. Look at what it produces. That is the truth.


I’ve had ample opportunity to walk through the orchards of the modern home and the modern church, I find the same mushy harvest in both places. Soft people who expect authority to bend toward them. Congregations trained to wilt at the slightest moral demand. Humans shaped by softness who insist that softness is the highest virtue.  I myself have not been unscathed by the state of the orchards. I have ruined my supper more than once gorging on their rotten fruits. 


Let me show you what I mean.


Scene One: Aisle 7, Where Civilization Goes to Die

Imagine yourself in the grocery store. You turn a corner and stumble into the ritual of the gentle parent, which looks something like a hostage negotiation carried out in soft pastels.


A boy, no more than five, is screaming like a feral howler monkey over a bag of fluorescent sugar rocks. His mother crouches down as if approaching a wounded forest creature.


“Honey, use your words. Tell mommy how you feel right now.”


How does he feel? Judging by the kicks landing on her kneecaps, he feels like unleashing a coup.  Mom offers options, as gentle parents do. “Would you like this snack instead? Or this one? Or we can go home and talk it out?”


The boy responds by attempting to claw her face.


The problem here is not gentleness; it’s confusion. She is trying to apply grace to a moment that is begging for law. She’s using a diffuser where she needs a paddle. She’s whispering therapy into the void while her son reenacts the French Revolution.


And here is the crucial line: Kids raised this way grow into adults who expect every authority, including pastors, to cater to them exactly the same way. The home trains the palate. And we’ve trained a generation to prefer spiritual baby food.

Which brings us to the pulpit.


Scene Two: The Whispering Pulpit and the Cult of Holy Niceness

Many modern pulpits preach like that mother kneeling in aisle 7.  The pastor steps up with a tone softer than velvet and twice as flimsy. His sermon floats along like a dandelion puff: pretty, inoffensive, and entirely allergic to landing anywhere specific. No named sins. No pointed applications. No confronting the actual lives, of the actual people, in the actual community sitting right in front of him.


Instead, no matter the tightness of his exposition, no matter the number of hours he spent parsing out greek/hebrew sentences, he’s going to serve up the same five food groups of “gospel-centered” mush:


You need to love Jesus more.
You need to pray more.
You need to read your Bible more.
You need to feel God’s presence more.

You need to come/give to, and/or serve in his church more.


This is Christianity for people whose main spiritual battle is vague discouragement.

Meanwhile, their marriages are cracked, their sons are addicted, their daughters are drowning in self-hatred, and they’re all being discipled more by TikTok than by Titus.  But the gentle pulpit cannot call anything by its name. It prefers abstraction because abstraction never hits anyone between the eyes. And so congregations remain in a perpetual adolescence, enthusiastic about “my spiritual journey,” thin-skinned as butterfly wings, and allergic to anything resembling correction. Lewis called them “men without chests,”  upper brains full of theological trivia, lower guts full of religious emotion, and nothing in between to bind the two into courage.


These men are not rare. In fact, they flourish under gentle pulpiting like mold in a damp basement.  The next time you are in Louisville, take a stroll at Southern Seminary on a crisp fall morning. Drink in the spectacle. The campus is full of polite, high-achieving, chestless seminarians, growing like orchids in the meticulously climate-controlled greenhouse of evangelical gentility. Or as my favorite baptist Jerry Dorris puts it, the place is practically sustained by “seminary sugar mammas,” a pietistic welfare system that rewards soft-spoken fragility and punishes conviction with a raised eyebrow. I watched more than once, a man with a chest come under church discipline (in a church pastored by professors) for getting a little too outspoken about CRT, feminism, or reformed political theology.


The Fruit Never Lies

A tree is known by its fruit. Gentle parenting yields adults who don’t respect authority unless it whispers sweetly.
Gentle pulpiting yields Christians who don’t obey Scripture unless it arrives scented with lavender.  If the sermon dares to call out pornography, feminism, laziness, materialism, cowardice, bitterness, or gossip, specifically, concretely, it’s considered mean.  If a pastor applies the text to the headlines, he’s being “political.”  If he says anything sharper than a marshmallow, the email inbox fills up by Monday.


The fruit never lies.


Soft pulpits make soft saints.
Soft saints make soft churches.
Soft churches crumble into spiritual adolescence.


Yes, There’s a Ditch on the Other Side

Some pastors overcorrect and turn the pulpit into a partisan teleprompter. Every sermon becomes a State of the Union. Every text gets dragged into the outrage of the week.  This too is folly.  But at least it has testosterone.  Still, it cannot form mature Christians because it replaces discipleship with adrenaline.  It gets cheap amens in middle America because it testifies that the real problem with the world is "out there."  Rather than avoiding the individual and household sins of a congregation, this approach shifts the blame altogether.  The end-result is the same: no one repents.


This sort of blame shifting produces Nick Fuentes types.  Men who look anywhere and everywhere for answers to why their life sucks, rather than just checking the most obvious place: the mirror.  If it's everyone else's responsibility, it can't be mine.  Yet, responsibilty is exactly what a boy must take on to become a man. 


What Shepherds and Fathers Must Learn

Paul told Timothy that a man must prove himself in his home before he proves himself in the church. Why? Because the home is where a man learns the sacred dance of law and gospel. 


A father must discipline and delight.
Correct and comfort.
Command and embrace.
Say “no” with authority and “yes” with generosity.


Pastors must do the same. Not the soft, whispering vacillation of gentle pulpiting. Not the feverish bark of political pulpiteering.

But the steady, straight-backed, warm-blooded authority of a shepherd who knows who he is, knows what the Word says, and knows how to apply it to the real world his people wake up to every morning.  For those searching for a new "third-way" here it is, long-cut.  Get yourself a big pinch, pack it in tight, and make sure you inhale.


Soft Parenting Makes Soft Churches


Because both are allergic to the same thing: authority.


Gentle parenting treats authority as a suggestion.
Gentle pulpiting treats Scripture as a sentiment.


Both raise people who believe all power must come with a padded surface and a soothing tone.

But Christ is not a therapist with a Galilean counseling license.


Christ is King.
King over children.
King over households.
King over pulpits.
King over headlines.
King over nations.

Soft pulpits collapse in soft times.


We are not living in soft times.


It’s time for pastors to command and guide like fathers.
It’s time for Christians to obey like disciples.
It’s time for households to raise oaks, not orchids.

And it’s time for the gentle pulpits of our age to give way to the full-throated, steel-spined, grace-and-law proclamation of the risen King.


By Curtis Mort December 29, 2025
Christmas Is Over Too Fast And That Exposes What We Really Worship
By Curtis Mort December 9, 2025
Not long ago I pulled out our wedding album. I had not looked at it in years. My younger son, Spurgeon, was asking questions about the day, so I sat at the kitchen table and flipped through the pages, pointing out faces, retelling stories, laughing at how young we looked. Then I came to the photo of my groomsmen. Eight men stood there shoulder to shoulder with me, all of us young, confident, and certain we would walk through life together. These were the brothers I thought I would grow old with. These were the men I could not imagine losing touch with. But as I stared at that photo, the realization settled on me with surprising heaviness. Out of the eight, I only maintain meaningful contact with one of them today. One. The rest have faded into the background of my life like landmarks. Some conflict, but not a great deal. Mostly miles added, convictions deepened, seasons changed, kids grown, jobs shifted, and proximity dissolved. The men who once stood beside me at one of the most significant moments of my life had quietly drifted into other circles, other priorities, other worlds. I have drifted too. It is strange how a single picture can tell the truth you never stopped to consider. Back then I mistook proximity for loyalty, constant fun for constancy, and shared youth for shared conviction. We were in the same season, so we believed we would stay in the same story forever. But middle age knows better. It reveals that many friendships from youth were built on the scaffolding of convenience. When life moved on, the scaffolding fell away, and so did the friendship. As I stared at those faces in the photo, I felt a tug of sadness. But alongside that sadness came clarity. Those men were not impostors. They were not disappointments. They were simply fellow travelers for a particular stretch of road. Our lives had overlapped, not intertwined. We had stood in each other’s weddings, but we had not forged the kind of friendship Proverbs describes. We had never built the long-term habits of candor, prayer, and counsel. We loved each other, but we did not really sharpen each other. The fact that only one remained was not a failure of affection. It was a revelation of depth. When you grow up in modern America, friendship is simply assumed. You inherit it. You do not choose it. Public schooling creates an artificial ecosystem where proximity does most of the heavy lifting. Your friends are simply the other kids who live in your zip code and ride your bus. You bond over superficial commonalities because you all share the same cafeteria, the same geometry homework, the same Friday night lights. Friendship in youth is built on convenience and context. Nothing becomes very different in early adulthood. You enter the survival years. You get married. You bear children. You work long hours. You fall asleep during movies. You lock arms with whoever is also drowning in diapers and debt and exhaustion. The similarities are comforting. They feel like solidarity. But very often it is not friendship in the biblical sense. It is trauma bonding. It is the camaraderie of fellow soldiers ducking their heads in the same trench. You do not have the time, energy, or maturity to ask the deeper questions. You do not stop to consider whether these people actually share your loves, your convictions, your vision of the good life. You are simply busy. You gravitate toward the people who are in your season because proximity and survival make the choices for you. Then something changes. There are some challenges no one warns you about when you are young. Middle-aged friendship is one of them. No one tells you that this will be one of the quiet crises of your late thirties and forties. You drift into it the same way you drift into adulthood itself: slowly, unconsciously, and without a plan. Middle-aged friendship usually does not die with a bang. It dies with a full calendar. With one more rescheduled dinner. One more “we should get together soon.” One more group text that never quite lands on a date. Your children grow. They become more independent. Your career stabilizes or shifts. The fog lifts. One day you wake up at 40 and realize most of the people who know your stories do not actually know your soul. They were simply there when you happened to be young. You are surrounded by people you have known for years and yet you do not truly know them. Worse, you realize you are not deeply known. In many cases the glaze of youthful ignorance dissolves and you see plainly what you did not have the margin or maturity to see earlier. Some of the people you once considered "close as a brother" are not aligned with you in the things that matter most. The political trivialities, the moral divergences, the theological differences, the lifestyle misalignments, the work ethic gaps, the seriousness about life, marriage, holiness, and responsibility, all become unavoidable fault lines. The people you once considered to be like family are busy or drifting in directions you never intended to go. You are left holding a quiet, unsettling realization: I do not know how to build the kind of friendships I actually need. And then the deeper ache comes. You begin to understand that your time is not elastic. Your soul is not bottomless. Friendship is a limited stewardship. And you do not have unlimited space to carry one-sided friendships, low-commitment acquaintances, or people who do not choose you back. Middle-aged friendship forces you to see something you could not see before. True friendship is not defined by who has been around you the longest, but by who is willing to walk with you with constancy, candor, and counsel. The book of Proverbs becomes painfully practical in this stage of life. “A friend loves at all times.”
Proverbs 17:17 “A friend sticks closer than a brother.”
Proverbs 18:24 (second half) “A friend wounds faithfully.”
Proverbs 27:6
(“Faithful are the wounds of a friend…”) “A friend gives earnest counsel.”
Proverbs 27:9
(“…the sweetness of a friend comes from his earnest counsel.”) “A friend sharpens you.”
Proverbs 27:17
(“Iron sharpens iron, and one man sharpens another.”) This is not proximity. This is intentionality. It is effort. It is choosing. Mel Robbins helpfully frames the "three pillars of friendship" as proximity, timing, and energy. These help explain why young friendships form so easily and why midlife friendships break so suddenly. Proximity fades as families move, schedules tighten, and obligations multiply. Timing diverges as some raise toddlers and others launch teens or start over in their careers. Energy shifts when beliefs sharpen, habits change, or one person grows while another stays still. In youth, you assume friendship. In middle age, you discover its real cost. I think it would be more accurate to call Mel's formula the "three pillars of companionship." Scripture pushes the definition of friendship deeper. You cannot have many true friends. Companions are plentiful. Friends are rare. Friendship requires discovery and forging. Discovery is the foundation. It is the moment when two people say, “You too? I thought I was the only one.” Forging is the lifelong work of commitment, vulnerability, rebuke, availability, and shared counsel. The three biblical pillars are affinity, intentionality, and sacrifice. This is where midlife friendship becomes spiritually dangerous. It's easy to become bitter. Easy to resent people who do not reciprocate. Easy to hold on to relationships that should be allowed to die a natural death. Easy to become cynical and self-protective. But, when you see the biblical vision of friendship, you feel two things at once: longing and crushing inadequacy. Longing, because true biblical friendship must be fought for and is hard to come by.
 Inadequacy, because we recognize we have not been the friend we long to have. This is why the gospel matters for friendship. Jesus Christ is the friend Proverbs points to. The friend who always lets you in and never lets you down. The friend whose wounds heal rather than harm.
 The friend who cleaves to you at infinite cost.
 The friend who faced hell rather than lose you.
 The friend who does not flatter you, but sanctifies you. The friend who knows you fully and loves you still. His friendship frees you.
 It frees you from needing other people to carry the weight of your identity.
 It frees you from being paralyzed by rejection.
 It frees you to love without fear.
 It frees you to choose friends wisely and release friendships graciously.
 It frees you to become the kind of friend you have always needed but rarely been. Middle-aged friendship is difficult because it is the first time in your life that you must build friendships deliberately rather than inherit them by accident. It is the stage where you must confront yourself, your habits, your selfishness, and your relational immaturity. It is the place where Christ’s friendship becomes not a doctrine to be recited, but a lifeline to be held. And it is also the place where the church becomes radiant. Christian friendship is where two people share the deepest affinity possible, the love of Christ, and yet can be gloriously unlike each other in almost every other way. Christ opens up friendship across age, personality, income, ethnicity, background, and temperament. This friendship is engineered by a sovereign Host who chooses the guests for His feast. You have not chosen one another.
He has chosen you for one another. Oddly enough, the ache of that wedding photo has become a gift to me. It has cleared space in my soul. It has reminded me that losing proximity is not the same thing as losing love. It has reminded me that Christ is still writing the story, bringing into my life men who share not only my past circumstances but my present convictions and future hopes. Middle age strips away illusions. It shows you that convenience was never covenant. Proximity was never loyalty. Shared circumstances were never shared convictions. It is painful, but it is also purifying. Because now you can choose.
 Now you can love with intention rather than accident.
 Now you can build friendships not from survival but from wisdom and joy. If you feel the ache of friendships that have faded, do not mistake it for failure. It is the Spirit clearing space. It is maturity arriving. It is the Master Gardener pruning so that true fruit can grow. To my middle-aged brothers and sisters…step into this season with courage that flows from your faith.
 Choose well.
 Love deeply.
 Speak truthfully.
 Invest in the few who invest in you. And remember this: Before you ever forged a single friendship on earth, Heaven forged one for you.
 The Son of God walked into Gethsemane and up the hill of Calvary so that you could sort out mere companionship from covenant friendship. Let these four words come straight out of heaven and sink deep into your soul: You are not alone. And because of that, you are free to become the friend your future friends will thank God for.
By Curtis Mort November 7, 2025
How 9Marxists Learned to Fence Out Kids and Vote In Pagans
By Curtis Mort November 1, 2025
The Latin phrase alma mater means “nourishing mother.” It’s a beautiful and sobering thought. It implies that our educational institutions are not mere dispensers of facts, but mothers in the truest sense: they feed, nurture, and form the minds and hearts of our children. A child will always become, in large measure, what he is nourished by. The content of that nourishment, the ideas, values, and worldview imparted, becomes the substance of the soul. This is why Martin Luther, the reformer, famously said, “I would advise no one to send his child where the Holy Scriptures are not supreme.” He understood that education is discipleship, and that to entrust a child’s formation to an institution that cannot distinguish light from darkness is to hand them to a mother who nurses them on poison. Mt. Vernon’s Confusion The Mt. Vernon School Board recently reaffirmed its decision to allow an LGBTQ+ student club to meet on campus, defending the move as a matter of fairness and legality. In their statement, they equated the LGBTQ+ and Friends club with groups like Boys of Faith, Girls of Grace, and PAWS Wrestling, as if all were morally and educationally equivalent. This reveals something much deeper than a policy decision. It shows that those entrusted with shaping the next generation cannot tell the moral difference between a group dedicated to physical discipline or spiritual formation and a group centered on adolescent discussions of sexual identity and preference, often without the guiding influence of mature adults. This is not neutrality. It is moral blindness. When those who claim to “nourish” our children cannot distinguish between food and poison, the community must take notice. Christians, You Are Responsible Parents, particularly Christian parents, cannot shrug at this. You are responsible for what nourishes your children, body, mind, and soul. To send them into an environment that celebrates confusion and calls it compassion is to surrender your God-given duty to disciple them in truth. You are not powerless. You are called to shepherd your children’s education toward truth, goodness, and beauty. Given recent events, here is the hard truth staring you in the face: You can’t depend on the “nourishing mother” of the public school to feed them rightly. Education that was once rooted in shared moral foundations, has become a mission field, or worse, the battlegrounds for the moral imagination of the young citizens of our community. The issue before us is not merely the existence of a club. It is the philosophy of education that now animates my alma mater , a mother who feeds, but no longer nourishes. Christians, it is time to remember that neutrality in moral formation does not exist. There are only two tables: the Lord’s, and the world’s. Your children will be nourished at one of them.
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SNAP, TANF, and the Death of the Christian Household
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For generations, our communities flourished because faith, family, and shared moral conviction formed the soil beneath them. But as we try to enjoy the fruit without the tree — kindness without Christ, virtue without God — the center begins to wobble, and the only way forward is to replant our roots in Him.
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