Does the Church You Attend Show Indicators of a Cult-Like Shift?
How do you know whether a church is healthy or spiritually controlling? This article explores the warning signs of unhealthy church leadership, fear-based control, manipulation, leadership insulation, and indicators of a cult-like shift within church culture through a biblical lens rooted in discernment, accountability, and Christ-centered leadership.
Healthy vs Unhealthy Church Culture, Biblical Accountability, and Christ-Centered Leadership
Introduction
Many believers struggle to recognize the signs of a cult-like church because unhealthy church leadership and spiritually controlling church culture often develop gradually over time. Most churches that drift into unhealthy patterns do not begin with obvious corruption or blatant abuse. In many cases, the church may appear spiritually vibrant on the surface. The sermons may sound biblical. Worship may feel powerful. Attendance may be growing. Programs may be thriving. Yet underneath the surface, unhealthy leadership systems can slowly develop until the church begins functioning more like a controlled institution than the Body of Christ.
This is why biblical discernment matters.
Many sincere Christians have spent years in spiritually controlling churches without realizing it because unhealthy church culture became normalized to them. Over time, fear, manipulation, intimidation, and emotional dependency begin to feel like normal expressions of spiritual authority. Questioning leadership becomes labeled as rebellion. Loyalty to the institution becomes confused with loyalty to God. Protecting leadership becomes more important than protecting people. What begins as “strong leadership” slowly becomes authoritarian leadership.
This article is not written to attack the Church. It is written because many believers genuinely do not realize that what they are experiencing may not actually reflect healthy biblical church culture or Christ-centered leadership. The goal is not to encourage rebellion, cynicism, or church division. The goal is to help believers discern the difference between healthy church leadership and spiritually controlling church systems that have drifted away from the example Jesus established.
Jesus never manipulated people through fear. He never built systems designed to insulate himself from accountability. He never discouraged people from examining the truth. Instead, Christ consistently pointed people toward the Father, toward truth, toward freedom, and toward spiritual maturity. Healthy churches do the same.
The Apostle Paul instructed believers in 2 Timothy 2:15 to “study to show themselves approved unto God… rightly dividing the word of truth.” In context, Paul is emphasizing the importance of accurately handling Scripture. The phrase “rightly dividing” means to correctly interpret and properly handle truth. This matters because spiritually controlling churches often misuse Scripture by removing verses from context or practicing eisegesis, which is reading personal agendas into biblical texts rather than drawing out the intended meaning from the passage itself. A church can quote Scripture constantly and still misuse it. Satan himself quoted Scripture in the wilderness temptation of Jesus. The issue has never simply been whether Scripture is quoted, but whether it is rightly understood, rightly divided, and rightly applied.
Healthy vs Unhealthy Church Culture
One of the clearest distinctions between a healthy church and an unhealthy church culture is the way leadership authority is exercised. Scripture consistently presents church leadership as servant-oriented rather than authoritarian. Jesus directly addressed abusive leadership structures in Matthew 20:25–28 when He told His disciples, “The rulers of the Gentiles lord it over them… It shall not be so among you.” In context, Jesus was contrasting worldly leadership models built on domination and control with Kingdom leadership built on humility and servanthood. The phrase “lord it over” refers to oppressive authority structures where leaders exercise power for self-preservation and personal control. Jesus explicitly rejected this model for spiritual leadership within His Church.
Instead, Christ declared, “Whoever would be great among you must be your servant.”
This is important because many spiritually controlling churches function through the very leadership model Jesus condemned. Some pastors control every major decision within the church while simultaneously surrounding themselves with people whose primary role is protecting leadership rather than protecting the congregation.
I witnessed this firsthand during a church board nomination process. Before the congregational meeting where members would vote on board nominees, the pastoral staff was brought into a private meeting. During this meeting, names of potential nominees were discussed, and staff members were asked whether there were concerns about certain individuals. At first glance, the process appeared collaborative and spiritually responsible. However, the reality was very different. At the end of the process, the pastor himself retained final authority over which names would actually appear before the congregation for voting. While members believed they were participating in a meaningful process, the options had already been carefully filtered beforehand.
The pastor was not primarily searching for spiritually mature leaders who would help provide healthy accountability or make difficult decisions for the good of the church as a whole. He was searching for “yes men.” Men who would defend him. Men who would preserve his authority. Men who would avoid challenging leadership decisions. Men who would function more as insulation around the pastor than as shepherds for the congregation.
This is not healthy church leadership.
This is institutional self-protection.
And unfortunately, this pattern exists in far more churches than many believers realize.
A healthy church protects truth even when it is uncomfortable. An unhealthy church culture protects leadership image and institutional power at all costs. Healthy pastors understand that the Church belongs to Jesus Christ, not to themselves. Their role is to equip believers for spiritual maturity, not emotionally condition people into dependence upon leadership approval.
Paul writes in Ephesians 4:11–13 that church leaders exist “for the perfecting of the saints, for the work of ministry, for the edifying of the body of Christ.” The purpose of leadership is, therefore, equipping believers, not controlling them. Healthy churches ask, “How can we help people grow in Christ?” Spiritually controlling churches often function from a different question: “How can we preserve loyalty to leadership and the institution?”
Signs of Spiritually Controlling Churches
One of the clearest signs of spiritually controlling churches is the use of fear to maintain loyalty and compliance. In unhealthy churches, members may hear statements such as, “If you leave this church, your life will fall apart,” or “You are stepping outside God’s covering,” or “Questioning leadership opens the door to deception.” These statements create emotional and psychological dependence on the institution rather than on Christ.
Yet Scripture teaches something very different about the nature of God’s leadership. Paul writes in 2 Timothy 1:7, “For God hath not given us the spirit of fear; but of power, and of love, and of a sound mind.” In context, Paul is motivating Timothy to exhibit bravery and perseverance in the face of adversity. The biblical principle remains clear: fear is not the primary mechanism through which God leads His people.
Conviction is different from control. The Holy Spirit convicts believers toward repentance and freedom. Manipulative leadership uses fear to produce compliance and dependence. This distinction is essential because many emotionally controlling church cultures confuse intimidation with spiritual authority.
Another indicator of a cult-like shift in church culture is when questioning leadership becomes spiritually dangerous. In healthy churches, leaders may not always agree with criticism, but they remain accountable and open to examination. In unhealthy environments, however, disagreement is often labeled as rebellion, division, gossip, or spiritual attack. Over time, members become afraid to ask questions for fear of being labeled disloyal or spiritually immature.
Healthy churches encourage discernment. Spiritually controlling churches often fear it.
Biblical Accountability in Church Leadership
One of the most dangerous aspects of unhealthy church leadership is the misuse of Scripture to justify manipulation and silence accountability. One of the most common examples is the misuse of the phrase “touch not mine anointed”. In many spiritually controlling churches, this verse is used to discourage members from questioning leadership or addressing misconduct. However, this interpretation completely ignores the broader context of Scripture.
The New Testament repeatedly teaches that leaders are accountable before both God and the Church. In 1 Timothy 5:19–20, Paul instructs, “Against an elder receive not an accusation, but before two or three witnesses. Them that sin rebuke before all, that others also may fear.” This passage demonstrates balance. Leaders should not be falsely accused carelessly, but neither are they immune from correction or accountability.
Healthy leadership welcomes accountability because accountability protects both the church and the integrity of leadership itself. Controlling leadership fears accountability because accountability threatens control.
Leaders who operate through fear, manipulation, intimidation, coercion, or total control are fundamentally disqualified from leading God’s people in a Christlike manner. The pulpit was never intended to become a throne from which leaders build personal kingdoms or surround themselves with unquestioning loyalty. A shepherd leads people toward Christ. A controller leads people toward dependency.
Churches Without Accountability
This raises another deeply important question many hurting believers eventually ask: Where are the overseers? Where are the district leaders, denominational authorities, bishops, executive presbyters, and spiritual overseers who were entrusted to provide accountability for pastors and churches? Why are so many unhealthy leaders allowed to continue operating without meaningful correction?
Scripture clearly establishes the importance of oversight within the Church. In Titus 1:5, Paul instructs Titus to appoint elders and establish order within the churches. Throughout the New Testament, leadership was never intended to function independently without accountability. There were systems of correction, doctrinal examination, mutual submission, and shared oversight.
Yet in many modern church structures, oversight has become passive, political, or performative. In some cases, overseers avoid confrontation because the church is financially successful, numerically growing, or influential within the denomination. In other situations, leaders protect one another because exposing serious problems could damage reputations, ministries, giving structures, or organizational stability. Sometimes relationships between leaders become so intertwined that accountability becomes almost impossible.
The result is devastating. Hurting members are often ignored. Whistleblowers are labeled divisive. Concerns are minimized. Manipulation is excused as a personality issue. Control is rebranded as “strong leadership.” Meanwhile, the people suffering underneath these systems are left spiritually confused, emotionally wounded, and questioning whether anyone actually sees what is happening.
Oversight without courage is not true oversight. Accountability that only exists on paper is not biblical.
What Does a Healthy Biblical Church Look Like?
A healthy biblical church equips believers to stand firmly upon Scripture and grow in discernment. The goal of discipleship is not to create emotional dependence upon pastors or organizations, but to help believers become rooted in Christ. The Bereans in Acts 17:10-12 provides an important example. Scripture says they “searched the scriptures daily, whether those things were so.” The Bereans were praised because they examined Paul’s teaching against Scripture itself. Paul did not condemn their discernment as rebellion. Their willingness to examine truth carefully was considered spiritually noble.
Healthy leaders encourage this type of discernment. Spiritually controlling churches often fear it.
One of the clearest indicators of an unhealthy church culture is whether members become increasingly incapable of functioning spiritually outside the institution itself. If believers feel unable to trust God, interpret Scripture, make decisions, or maintain relationships without leadership approval, discipleship has likely been replaced with dependency.
Healthy churches produce believers who are humble, loving, biblically grounded, emotionally healthy, spiritually mature, and increasingly dependent upon Christ. Spiritually controlling churches often produce people who are fearful, defensive, emotionally exhausted, dependent upon leadership approval, afraid to ask questions, and suspicious of outsiders.
In Matthew 7:16, Jesus taught His disciples, along with the surrounding crowd, during the Sermon on the Mount, “You will know them by their fruits.” The fruit always reveals the root.
Conclusion
The Church was never intended to become a system of spiritual control built around personalities, institutional loyalty, or authoritarian leadership structures. Jesus Christ established His Church to be a community where believers grow in truth, freedom, humility, accountability, discernment, and dependence on God.
Therefore, churches that consistently operate through fear-based leadership, manipulation, suppression of questions, emotional dependency, leadership insulation, and unaccountable authority display clear indicators of a cult-like shift away from healthy biblical Christianity.
This issue is not about promoting rebellion against leadership. It is about defending the biblical model of leadership that Jesus Himself established.
Healthy churches point people toward Christ. Controlling churches slowly trains people to depend upon leadership and the institution instead.
And only one of those reflects the heart of God.
Sources & Recommended Reading
When Leadership Changes… But Nothing Else Does
Leadership transitions often promise change, but what happens when the same problems keep showing up? This post explores why swapping leaders doesn’t always lead to new outcomes and what it really takes to break the cycle.
Why We Keep Getting the Same Results
There’s a common saying that gets repeated often: "Insanity is doing the same thing over and over while expecting different results." I’m not sure if Albert Einstein actually originated this phrase, but its core message strikes a chord, particularly in the realm of leadership. If we take a moment to reflect honestly, we might uncover something quite troubling: Many organizations, including churches, aren’t necessarily facing a shortage of leadership changes. They are grappling with a lack of authentic transformation. Leaders come and go. Titles change hands. New individuals take on old responsibilities. Yet, somehow, the results remain hauntingly similar.
The same cycles repeat. The same conflicts arise again. The same challenges that once sparked change seem to resurface quietly. At some point, we must ask ourselves: Are we genuinely seeking transformation, or are we merely managing appearances? Because there is a distinction. It’s entirely feasible to change leadership without altering the course. To replace an individual without addressing the underlying patterns. To make a move that appears significant, without it truly being impactful. And often, that’s precisely what occurs. We tend to believe that a new leader will automatically yield new outcomes.
However, leadership does not function in isolation. It exists within systems, cultures, expectations, and unspoken rules that have been established long before any individual assumes the position. So if those elements remain unchanged, why would we anticipate anything different? This is where the real tension lies. Because true change is seldom as straightforward as merely replacing a leader. Real change demands that we confront what has become normalized, challenge what has been safeguarded, and reconsider what has been taken for granted. And if we’re truthful, that’s not always the route we opt for. More frequently, we select what feels familiar. What seems manageable. What appears safe. But safety doesn’t always equate to transformation. Sometimes, it simply brings us back to where we began, only with a different name on the door. It's not that leadership changes occur; it's that these changes happen without any real underlying shifts taking place at all.
The Illusion of Progress
When a leader resigns, a new one takes their place. There’s a wave of fresh language, renewed energy, and possibly a new vision statement. For a brief period, it seems like change is in the air. However, the same choices are repeatedly made, the same issues come back, and the same frustrations subtly reappear. People begin to wonder, sometimes voicing it, but often keeping it to themselves, "Why does this seem so familiar?" Because it is.
A New Face Doesn’t Equal a New Direction
One of the most frequent errors during leadership transitions is the belief that simply changing the individual will automatically lead to different results. It’s a straightforward assumption: if things aren’t going well, replace the leader and anticipate improvements. However, leadership does not function in a vacuum. It operates within a system influenced by culture, expectations, history, and established patterns. Therefore, if the system remains unchanged, the outcomes will likely remain the same.
Research consistently backs this notion. Sources like Harvard Business Review have indicated that most organizational change initiatives fail, not due to a lack of effort or intention from leaders, but because the behaviors, culture, and foundational systems do not genuinely transform. Often, new leaders take on pre-existing expectations. They enter environments where the established ways of doing things have already been defined, reinforced, and safeguarded over time. Unless these fundamental dynamics are addressed, even the most skilled leaders will either adapt to them or be limited by them.
This is where the gap exists. We anticipate different results without being willing to investigate what is causing the current ones. We seek transformation at a superficial level while neglecting the underlying foundation. However, true change does not occur through mere substitution; it requires deliberate, often uncomfortable, shifts beneath the surface.
In essence, you can change leaders as often as you like, but if nothing shifts beneath them, you’re not crafting a new narrative; you’re merely recounting the same story with a different tone.
The “Easy Move” vs. The Right Move
The simplest approach during a leadership transition is to select someone who already aligns with the current culture, minimizes disruption, and understands how things have traditionally been done. While this isn’t necessarily a bad choice, familiarity can foster stability, particularly in uncertain times. However, it becomes problematic when familiarity overshadows discernment, shifting the focus from what is right to merely maintaining the status quo.
What seems safe in the present can subtly undermine the future. Opting for comfort instead of clarity might sidestep conflict in the short run, but it frequently extends the very challenges that need resolution. The easier choice tends to uphold existing habits, whereas the right choice often demands the bravery to question them. More often than we care to acknowledge, these two paths do not coincide.
When Systems Shape Leaders More Than Leaders Shape Systems
Here’s a topic we often overlook: leaders don’t always fail due to a lack of ability; sometimes, they falter because the system they enter is more powerful than they are. Even the most competent leaders can end up succumbing to unhealthy expectations, shying away from essential conflicts, and perpetuating dysfunctional patterns just to get by. Gradually, rather than changing the culture, the culture changes them. That’s when you begin to notice it: a different leader, yet the same results.
Real-World Patterns We Can’t Ignore
This isn’t merely a theory; it manifests in various places. For instance, look at Kodak. Kodak was a pioneer in digital camera technology from the start, yet the leadership persisted in focusing on film because it had historically been successful. The established system and past achievements kept leading to the same choices. What was the outcome? They kept repeating what had once led to success, until it completely failed. Now, think about Yahoo. Although leadership changed and strategies appeared to evolve, the underlying cultural and structural problems stayed the same, resulting in similar outcomes and the same old patterns.
The Cycle That Keeps Repeating
If we’re not cautious, leadership transitions can easily fall into a familiar and often frustrating cycle. When something isn’t functioning properly, leadership is altered. However, the system remains unchanged. Since the system doesn’t evolve, neither do the outcomes. Frustration starts to accumulate, momentum begins to wane, and soon enough, the organization finds itself back at square one, albeit with a new leader. Then, inevitably, the cycle starts all over again.
Over time, this recurring pattern does more than just impede progress; it influences perceptions. Individuals begin to lose faith, not only in leadership but also in the potential for genuine change. Enthusiasm diminishes. Engagement declines. Discussions transition from optimism to doubt. It’s crucial to grasp this clearly: this isn’t always based on cynicism or negativity. More frequently, it stems from past experiences. People aren’t opposing change; they’re reacting to a history of changes that never truly resulted in anything different.
When this cycle remains unaddressed, it subtly fosters a culture of low expectations. People cease to inquire, “What could be?” and begin to accept “What has always been.” That’s when organizations become stagnant, not due to a lack of vision, but because they’ve lost faith that anything different is genuinely achievable.
So What Actually Needs to Change?
For leadership transitions to result in different outcomes, they must delve deeper than mere titles and roles. Genuine change isn't achieved by simply appointing a new leader; it requires addressing the underlying issues. It starts with a sincere assessment, avoiding superficial solutions or hasty fixes, and embracing the courage to ask tough questions like, What’s truly broken here? And what recurring patterns do we see? Without this level of understanding, organizations risk merely treating symptoms while neglecting the core problems.
From this point, authentic change necessitates cultural transformations. Culture inherently influences behavior more than any strategy can. You may articulate a vision, execute plans, and launch new initiatives, but if the foundational culture remains intact, those efforts will struggle to take root. What is celebrated, accepted, and normalized within the culture will ultimately dictate what endures and what diminishes.
In addition to culture, there must be alignment in structure. Systems, expectations, and accountability must mirror the changes being communicated. It’s insufficient to merely state that things need to change; there must be clear, concrete modifications in decision-making processes, in the development of individuals, and in how accountability is assessed. Otherwise, the existing structure will continue to perpetuate the same results, no matter the intentions behind them.
Lastly, all of this hinges on courageous leadership. Not just leaders who blend into the existing framework, but those who are prepared to confront what isn’t functioning, even when it’s uncomfortable. Courageous leadership doesn’t shy away from tension; it embraces it for the sake of progress. Ultimately, meaningful change is not a passive endeavor; it is intentional, disruptively positive when necessary, and driven by individuals who prioritize what is right over what is easy.
More Than a New Face
Leadership transitions can be incredibly impactful. When executed effectively, they open up opportunities for renewal, provide clarity in times of confusion, and establish a new path for the future. A new leader has the potential to redefine vision, restore trust, and assist an organization in reconnecting with its core purpose. However, such a significant impact only occurs when the transition transcends mere symbolism, going beyond just a change in title or role.
The reality is that a change in leadership alone does not ensure transformation. If the same assumptions remain unchallenged, if the same patterns are ignored, and if the same systems continue to function beneath the surface, the results will likely mirror the past. It might appear fresh for a brief period. It may seem different in the initial phases. But eventually, the familiar will reemerge.
True transformation necessitates more than just a new voice; it requires a new trajectory. It demands deliberate changes in culture, structure, and accountability. It calls for leaders who are not only capable of assuming a role but are also committed to leading in a manner that genuinely propels progress.
Ultimately, a new leader without a new direction is not transformation; it is merely a repetition of the past.