Standing Firm in a Shifting Moral Landscape

An open Bible sits on a dark surface illuminated by warm light against a dark city skyline silhouette. Centered above the Bible is the title ‘Standing Firm in a Shifting Moral Culture’ in gold and white text. At the bottom, small text reads ‘Contending for the Word Q&A | Dave Jenkins

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Contending for the Word Q&A

Date: December 18

Standing Firm in a Shifting Moral Landscape

Q: How should Christians think biblically about cultural ethics?

We live in a culture where moral standards shift constantly. What is celebrated today may be condemned tomorrow, and what Scripture calls sin is often rebranded as freedom, authenticity, or self expression. In such a world, Christians must think clearly, biblically, and faithfully about ethics, not shaped by the culture around us but by the God who speaks in His Word.

So how do believers think biblically about cultural ethics?

1. Start with God’s authority, not cultural opinion

Every ethical system rests on a foundation. For the world, that foundation is human desire, popular consensus, or personal autonomy. For Christians, the foundation is the unchanging character and revealed will of God.

Psalm 119:89 declares, “Your word, O LORD, is firmly fixed in the heavens.” Culture shifts. God’s Word does not. Ethics begin with God’s authority over all creation.

2. Recognize that God’s moral law reflects His character

God’s commands are not arbitrary rules. They flow from who He is, holy, righteous, just, loving, wise, and true.

When Scripture calls something good, it is because God Himself is good. When Scripture calls something evil, it is because it contradicts His nature. Ethics is ultimately about becoming more like Christ, not merely avoiding wrongdoing.

3. Understand that cultural ethics often redefine sin

Our society describes sin as brokenness, imperfection, personal limitation, lack of self love, or psychological imbalance, rarely as rebellion against God.

Biblical ethics restore the right definition of sin, an offense against a holy God, and therefore the right remedy, repentance and faith.

4. Filter every issue through the lens of Scripture

Whether the topic is sexuality, gender, marriage, justice, life, money, or speech, believers must ask, “What has God said about this?”

Second Timothy 3:16–17 teaches that Scripture equips us “for every good work.” There is no ethical issue too complex for the wisdom of God. Christians are not reactionary, we are rooted.

5. Apply truth with both conviction and compassion

Jesus came “full of grace and truth” (John 1:14). Christians must never sacrifice one for the other.

Conviction without compassion becomes harsh. Compassion without conviction becomes compromise. Biblical ethics call us to speak the truth in love (Ephesians 4:15), clear, firm, and gentle.

6. Remember that holiness is countercultural

Romans 12:2 warns, “Do not be conformed to this world.” Biblical obedience will often place us at odds with culture. This is not a failure, it is faithfulness.

God’s people are called to be distinct, not blended into the world’s values.

7. Trust that God’s design leads to human flourishing

God’s commands are not burdens, they are blessings. Every boundary God gives is for our good, our joy, and His glory.

When we live according to God’s design for marriage, sexuality, justice, work, and community, we experience the beauty of His wisdom.

Final Encouragement

Friend, cultural ethics are always shifting, but God’s truth stands forever. Think biblically. Stand courageously. Love compassionately. And let your life point others to the One whose righteousness never changes.

For more from Contending for the Word Q&A please visit our page at Servants of Grace or at our YouTube

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