6p: How to Handle Theology with Balance in Christian Writing

Christian authors carry a beautiful but weighty responsibility. We do not merely write stories, testimonies, devotionals, sermons, reflections, or life lessons. We write words that can shape how readers understand God, themselves, suffering, sin, faith, healing, obedience, spiritual warfare, and hope.

This is especially important when an author writes from personal experience. A testimony may be born in tears, refined in prayer, and written with sincere faith. Yet sincerity alone does not make every interpretation theologically balanced. A person may have truly suffered. They may have genuinely encountered God. They may have been comforted, corrected, strengthened, or rescued by Him. However, when that experience is written for others to read, the author must handle the message carefully.

A private reflection becomes public teaching the moment it is published.

That does not mean Christian authors should write fearfully. It means we should write faithfully. Our calling is not to remove conviction from Christian writing, but to ensure that conviction is anchored in Scripture. Our task is not to water down truth, but to present truth with the compassion, wisdom, and balance of Christ.

Paul instructs believers to speak “the truth in love” in Ephesians 4:15. That phrase matters deeply for Christian writing. Truth without love can wound. Love without truth can mislead. Biblical writing must hold both together.

Theology Is Not Decoration

In Christian writing, theology is not an accessory added to make a book sound spiritual. Theology is the foundation beneath the message. Every statement about God teaches the reader something.

When an author writes, “God allowed this because…” the reader learns something about God’s purposes. When an author writes, “This happened because of sin…” the reader learns something about suffering and judgement. When an author writes, “God trusted me with more pain because I was strong…” the reader learns something about divine favour, suffering, and spiritual maturity.

This is why Christian authors must be careful. Readers often receive an author’s reflections not merely as personal opinion, but as spiritual guidance. A careless sentence may unintentionally burden someone who is already grieving. A strong claim without biblical support may create confusion. A personal interpretation may be mistaken for doctrine.

The goal is not to silence the author’s story. The goal is to strengthen it so that it serves the reader faithfully.

The Difference Between Testimony and Doctrine

One of the most important lessons for Christian authors is the difference between testimony and doctrine.

A testimony says, “This is what I experienced, and this is how I encountered God in it.”

Doctrine says, “This is what Scripture teaches, and this is true for all believers.”

Both are important, but they must not be confused.

An author may write, “In my suffering, I sensed God correcting my priorities.” That is a personal testimony. It is humble and honest. However, if the author writes, “Suffering comes when God wants to correct our priorities,” that becomes a broader theological claim. It may be partly true in some situations, but it is not true in every situation. Therefore, it must be carefully qualified and supported with Scripture.

Personal experience should not be turned into universal doctrine too quickly. What God taught one person through one season may not be the explanation for another person’s pain.

Job’s friends made this mistake. They saw Job’s suffering and assumed there must be hidden sin behind it. Their theology had some truth in it, but their application was wrong. They spoke about God, but not rightly about Job’s situation. At the end of the book, God rebuked them because they misrepresented Him in the way they interpreted another person’s suffering.

That should make every Christian author pause.

A Helpful Framework for Christian Authors

When writing theological reflections, especially from personal experience, authors should use this simple framework:

1. My Story or Claim

The author should first identify what they are saying. Is this a personal experience? Is it an interpretation? Is it a lesson? Is it a doctrine? Is it a warning? Is it a conclusion about God, suffering, sin, healing, or spiritual warfare?

For example:

“I went through a long season of illness, and during that time I wondered whether God was correcting me.”

That is a story. It is honest. It does not accuse the reader. It does not claim to explain everyone’s illness.

2. What Scripture Says to Support It

The next step is to examine whether Scripture supports the claim. The author should not merely attach a verse to an idea. The Scripture must truly teach, support, clarify, or balance what is being said.

For example, if an author is writing about God’s comfort in suffering, they may consider passages such as 2 Corinthians 1:3–4, Psalm 34:18, Romans 8:28, and 1 Peter 5:10. If writing about God’s discipline, Hebrews 12:5–11 may be relevant, but it should not be used to suggest that all suffering is discipline. If writing about sickness and sin, John 9:1–3 must be considered because Jesus clearly rejects the assumption that a man’s blindness was caused by his sin or his parents’ sin.

One Scripture may introduce an idea, but two or more Scriptures often help provide balance. Scripture interprets Scripture. A verse should not be lifted out of context and made to carry a meaning that the wider counsel of God’s Word does not support.

3. Application to the Reader

Finally, the author should ask: How should the reader respond?

This is where pastoral care becomes essential. The application should lead the reader towards Christ, not towards fear, shame, confusion, or condemnation. It should invite reflection, not force simplistic conclusions.

A balanced application may sound like this:

“If you are suffering, do not rush to condemn yourself. Bring your pain honestly before God. Ask Him to search your heart, strengthen your faith, comfort your soul, and guide you wisely. Sometimes suffering exposes areas that need surrender, but suffering is not always a sign of personal sin or spiritual failure. In every season, God remains near to the broken-hearted.”

That kind of application is truthful, biblical, and compassionate.

Where Authors Can Go to Extremes: Sickness, Sin, and Punishment

One area where Christian authors may go to extremes is in the interpretation of sickness and suffering. Some authors strongly imply that sickness is always connected to sin, punishment, disobedience, generational curses, lack of faith, or spiritual failure.

This can be dangerous.

Scripture does show that sin can have consequences. In some biblical cases, sickness, judgement, or hardship are connected to disobedience. We should not deny that. However, Scripture also shows that not all suffering is the result of personal sin.

In John 9:1–3, the disciples saw a man who had been blind from birth and asked Jesus, “Rabbi, who sinned, this man or his parents, that he was born blind?” Their question reveals a common human instinct: we want to explain suffering by finding blame. Jesus rejected that conclusion. He said it was not because the man sinned or his parents sinned.

This passage is crucial for Christian authors.

If a manuscript suggests that illness is always evidence of sin or punishment, it may wound readers who are already suffering. A mother who lost a child may wonder whether God was punishing her. A cancer patient may fear that their faith is defective. A grieving family may begin searching for hidden sin instead of receiving comfort from God.

A more balanced approach would say:

“Sometimes God uses suffering to search our hearts and draw us closer to Himself. Sometimes suffering reveals areas where we need repentance, surrender, or wisdom. Yet Scripture does not teach that every sickness is caused by personal sin or divine punishment. Jesus Himself warned against that assumption. Therefore, we must approach suffering with humility, prayer, compassion, and biblical balance.”

This allows the author to speak honestly about sin and repentance without turning every sickbed into a courtroom.

Where Authors Can Go to Extremes: Witchcraft and Spiritual Warfare

Another area where authors may go to extremes is in writing about witchcraft, curses, demons, and spiritual attacks. This is especially sensitive in African Christian writing because many authors come from communities where spiritual realities are taken seriously. We should not dismiss this. Scripture does teach that spiritual warfare is real. The Bible speaks of the enemy, deception, demonic oppression, and the believer’s need to stand firm in Christ.

However, Christian authors must avoid making strong spiritual claims that Scripture does not clearly support or that they cannot wisely substantiate.

For example, an author may write, “My sickness was caused by witchcraft.” That may reflect what the author believed, feared, suspected, or was told. However, once published, such a statement can create fear, suspicion, accusation, or confusion in readers.

A more careful way to write may be:

“At the time, I wondered whether there were spiritual forces at work. In my community, many people would have interpreted such suffering through the lens of witchcraft or spiritual attack. Yet as I grew in faith, I learnt not to build my confidence on identifying every hidden cause, but on trusting the authority of Christ, praying with wisdom, and standing on the Word of God.”

This version is honest, but it does not turn suspicion into doctrine. It does not deny spiritual warfare, but it also does not make fear the centre of the story.

The focus of Christian writing should not be the power of darkness, but the supremacy of Christ. Colossians 2:15 reminds us that Christ disarmed principalities and powers. Ephesians 6:10–18 teaches believers to put on the armour of God. James 4:7 tells believers to submit to God and resist the devil. These Scriptures give us a balanced foundation: spiritual warfare is real, but Christ is greater.

When writing about witchcraft or spiritual attacks, authors should ask:

Am I creating fear or strengthening faith?
Am I making accusations or pointing people to Christ?
Am I speculating, or am I standing on Scripture?
Am I giving the enemy more attention than the victory of Jesus?

A Christian book should not leave readers terrified of darkness. It should leave them more confident in the light of Christ.

Where Authors Can Go to Extremes: Suffering as Proof of Special Favour

A third area where authors may go to extremes is in presenting suffering as proof that God favours, trusts, or specially chooses certain people for heavier burdens.

This usually comes from a sincere place. An author may have suffered deeply and later seen how God used that pain to mature them, strengthen them, humble them, or prepare them for ministry. That is a valid testimony. Romans 5:3–5 speaks of suffering producing perseverance, character, and hope. James 1:2–4 teaches that trials can produce maturity. God can indeed bring beauty out of pain.

However, the danger comes when suffering is presented as if it is a badge of superiority.

Statements such as “God gives the hardest battles to His strongest soldiers” may sound encouraging, but they can create theological confusion. They may make suffering people feel that they must always be strong. They may suggest that those with greater pain are more favoured by God. They may also imply that God deliberately measures love by the weight of suffering He assigns.

A more balanced Christian statement would be:

“God met me in suffering and gave me grace I did not know I needed.”

This keeps the focus on grace, not spiritual status. It honours God without romanticising pain.

The Bible does not teach that suffering automatically proves a person is more spiritual or more loved by God. Jesus was called “a man of sorrows” in Isaiah 53:3, and His suffering was redemptive in a unique way. Paul suffered greatly in ministry, yet he did not boast in pain as personal superiority. He boasted in weakness because it revealed the sufficiency of God’s grace.

In 2 Corinthians 12:9, the Lord told Paul, “My grace is sufficient for you, for My strength is made perfect in weakness.” The emphasis is not that Paul was impressive because he suffered. The emphasis is that Christ’s grace was sufficient in Paul’s weakness.

Christian authors should therefore be careful not to glorify suffering itself. We glorify God, who sustains, comforts, redeems, and restores.

Exegesis: Letting Scripture Speak

One of the greatest safeguards in Christian writing is proper exegesis.

Exegesis means drawing meaning out of the biblical text. It asks, “What does this passage actually say? What did it mean in its original context? How does it fit within the chapter, the book, and the whole message of Scripture?”

This is different from eisegesis.

Eisegesis means reading our own ideas into the text. It happens when an author already has a conclusion, then looks for a Bible verse to decorate or defend it. The verse may sound related, but the author may be using it in a way the passage never intended.

For example, an author may go through a painful season and then quote a verse about God’s discipline to prove that all suffering is correction. That may be eisegesis if the verse is removed from its context and applied too broadly.

Good exegesis asks careful questions:

Who wrote this passage?
Who was the original audience?
What problem or situation was being addressed?
What does the passage say before and after the verse?
Is this verse a command, promise, warning, proverb, prophecy, narrative, lament, or personal testimony?
Does the New Testament clarify how this theme should be understood?
How does this passage agree with the wider teaching of Scripture?

Christian authors do not need to become academic theologians before writing. However, they must become humble students of Scripture. The Bible is not a box of inspirational phrases to attach to our opinions. It is the Word of God, and it must be handled with reverence.

Second Timothy 2:15 urges the worker to rightly handle the word of truth. That instruction applies not only to preachers, but also to Christian authors, editors, devotional writers, bloggers, and publishers.

Scripture Interprets Scripture

A balanced Christian manuscript should not build major claims on one isolated verse. Scripture interprets Scripture. This means that unclear, difficult, or specific passages should be understood in light of clearer and broader biblical teaching.

For example, if an author writes about suffering, they should not only quote verses about discipline. They should also consider Job, John 9, Romans 8, 2 Corinthians 1, 1 Peter 4, James 1, Psalm 34, and the suffering of Christ. Together, these passages give a fuller picture.

If an author writes about spiritual warfare, they should not only focus on demons, curses, and attacks. They should also include Scriptures about Christ’s victory, the believer’s authority in Christ, the armour of God, prayer, discernment, submission to God, and peace.

If an author writes about repentance, they should also write about grace. If they write about judgement, they should also write about mercy. If they write about brokenness, they should also write about restoration. If they write about obedience, they should also write about the empowering work of the Holy Spirit.

This does not mean every chapter must become a Bible school textbook. It means the author must avoid making one truth carry the whole message alone. Biblical truth is often like a choir. One voice may be beautiful, but harmony gives fullness.

A helpful editorial rule is this: when making a strong theological claim, support it with at least two or more relevant Scriptures, especially where the subject is sensitive. Those Scriptures should not merely repeat the same word. They should help interpret, balance, and clarify the claim.

For example:

Claim: “God comforts His people in suffering.”

Possible supporting Scriptures:
2 Corinthians 1:3–4 shows God as the Father of mercies and God of all comfort.
Psalm 34:18 shows that the Lord is near to the broken-hearted.
Romans 8:38–39 shows that suffering cannot separate believers from the love of God in Christ.

These Scriptures work together. They do not flatten suffering. They reveal God’s nearness, comfort, and faithful love.

The Editor’s Role in Theological Balance

When an editor asks an author to refine theological reflections, it is not an attack on the author’s faith. It is part of responsible Christian publishing.

Some authors feel deeply protective of their words because those words came from painful seasons. They may think, “But this is exactly how I felt,” or “This is what I believe God showed me.” That may be true. However, editing does not deny the experience. It helps clarify the message.

The editor’s role is to ask:

Is this biblically sound?
Is this pastorally careful?
Is this claim supported by Scripture?
Could this harm a vulnerable reader?
Does this sentence need qualification?
Is the author presenting experience as doctrine?
Is the application full of grace and truth?

A good editor does not remove the fire from the testimony. A good editor helps place that fire on a lampstand instead of leaving it near dry grass.

Writing with  Truth

Christian writing should comfort without flattering, convict without crushing, and teach without presumption. It should leave room for mystery where Scripture leaves room for mystery. It should not offer simple answers where the Bible gives a deeper, more complex picture.

When writing about suffering, authors should be tender.
When writing about sin, authors should be truthful.
When writing about spiritual warfare, authors should be Christ-centred.
When writing about healing, authors should be hopeful without being careless.
When writing about unanswered prayer, authors should be honest without accusing God.
When writing about personal victory, authors should point to grace, not personal greatness.

The reader should not close a Christian book feeling blamed for every wound, afraid of every shadow, or ashamed of every unanswered question. The reader should be led towards the God who is holy, loving, sovereign, merciful, near, wise, and faithful.

A Practical Checklist for Authors

Before publishing a theological reflection, ask the following questions:

  1. What exactly am I claiming?
  2. Is this my personal story, or am I teaching a doctrine?
  3. Have I supported this claim with Scripture?
  4. Have I used at least two relevant Scriptures where the claim is strong or sensitive?
  5. Have I read the Scriptures in context?
  6. Am I drawing meaning from the text, or reading my experience into the text?
  7. Could this statement make a sick, grieving, wounded, or struggling reader feel blamed?
  8. Have I balanced sin with grace, suffering with comfort, spiritual warfare with Christ’s victory, and conviction with hope?
  9. Have I allowed room for mystery where Scripture does not give a direct explanation?
  10. Does the application lead the reader towards Christ?
  11. Would a mature pastor, theologian, or Christian editor agree with how I have framed this?
  12. Does the final message reflect both truth and love?

Conclusion

Christian authors must write with courage, but also with care. Our testimonies matter. Our pain matters. Our encounters with God matter. Yet every claim about God must be brought under the authority of Scripture.

The strongest Christian writing does not merely say, “This is what happened to me.” It goes further and asks, “What does Scripture say, and how can this help the reader see Christ more clearly?”

That is the path of biblical balance.

We begin with the story.
We submit the claim to Scripture.
We apply the truth with pastoral care.

When Christian authors write this way, their books become more than personal reflections. They become trustworthy resources that carry truth with tenderness, conviction with humility, and hope with wisdom.

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