False Prophets and Christian Leadership Discernment

Matthew 7:15–29

There are many voices asking for allegiance.

Some are theological.
Some are political.
Some are cultural.

Jesus anticipated this.

In Matthew 7:15–29, He gives explicit criteria for identifying false prophets and discerning true spiritual leadership.

He begins with a warning:

β€œBeware of false prophets, who come to you in sheep’s clothing but inwardly are ravenous wolves.” (Matthew 7:15)

False prophets do not announce themselves.
They appear trustworthy. Familiar. Religious.

Jesus does not tell us to panic.
He tells us to evaluate.


Jesus’ Criteria for Identifying False Prophets

1. Examine the Fruit

β€œYou will know them by their fruits.” (Matthew 7:16)
β€œThus you will know them by their fruits.” (Matthew 7:20)

Not by:

  • Confidence
  • Platform size
  • Charisma
  • Religious vocabulary
  • Miraculous claims

But fruit.

What consistently grows around their leadership?

Does it produce:

  • Love?
  • Humility?
  • Integrity?
  • Obedience to God?
  • Love of neighbor?

Or does it produce:

  • Fear?
  • Division?
  • Manipulation?
  • Arrogance?
  • Lawlessness?

Fruit is observable over time. It cannot be manufactured indefinitely.


2. Words Are Not Proof of Authenticity

Jesus continues:

β€œNot everyone who says to me, β€˜Lord, Lord,’ will enter the kingdom of heaven, but only the one who does the will of my Father in heaven.” (Matthew 7:21)

Spiritual language is not spiritual life.

He goes further:

β€œMany will say to me on that day, β€˜Lord, Lord, did we not prophesy in your name…?’ … Then I will declare to them, β€˜I never knew you.’” (Matthew 7:22–23)

Religious activity does not equal relational obedience.

This is critical for Christian leadership discernment.
Impressive ministry outcomes do not automatically validate spiritual integrity.


3. Obedience Is the Foundation Test

Jesus closes with the parable of two builders:

β€œEveryone who hears these words of mine and acts on them will be like a wise man who built his house on rock.” (Matthew 7:24)

And the contrast:

β€œEveryone who hears these words of mine and does not act on them will be like a foolish man who built his house on sand.” (Matthew 7:26)

Both heard.
Only one obeyed.

The storm revealed the foundation.

Christian leadership discernment ultimately asks:

Is this leadership built on obedience to Christ’s words β€” or on something else?


Discernment Is Not Judgment

It is important to distinguish discernment from condemnation.

Earlier in Matthew 7, Jesus warns against hypocritical judgment. Yet here He commands evaluation.

Discernment is:

  • Observing fruit
  • Testing consistency
  • Evaluating alignment with Scripture
  • Watching long-term outcomes

It is not pronouncing final judgment on souls.

Christian leadership requires this maturity.


The Influence Responsibility

If you are a pastor, teacher, writer, or public Christian voice, this teaching applies in two directions:

  1. Whose fruit are you endorsing?
  2. What fruit is growing in your own leadership?

Who you platform, quote, and promote shapes who others will follow.

And Jesus’ warning about false prophets remains urgent.


Related Reflections & Platforms

πŸ“– Full Bible Chat study (extended reflection + study guide):
https://open.substack.com/pub/tomsims/p/by-their-fruits-you-shall-know-them

πŸ’Ό Pastoral Excellence (LinkedIn article for clergy leaders):
https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/fruits-you-shall-know-them-tom-sims-wyxmc

πŸŽ₯ 90-Second Leadership Reflection (YouTube):
[Insert YouTube Link]

🌐 More resources and connections:
https://linktr.ee/tomsims


Final Question

In a world of loud religious voices:

What fruit is growing?

And what foundation are we building on?

β€œBy their fruits you shall know them.”

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