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Why Are Christians So Divided ? Recovering Jesus in a Church at War with Itself

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When the Body Breaks Apart

Jesus’ prayer in John 17 echoes through the centuries with haunting beauty and urgency:

“That they may all be one… so that the world may believe that you sent me.”

Yet here we are—divided, fractured, and often at war with each other.

We split over doctrine.
We argue over politics.
We cancel over opinions.
We shame, silo, and separate.

And the watching world wonders:
“If Christians can’t even love each other, how can their message be true?”

This book is born from a burden: the pain of seeing Christ’s Body torn apart by infighting, pride, and misunderstanding—and the conviction that unity is not a sentimental dream but a sacred calling. The goal isn’t to erase our differences. Diversity in background, culture, and even theology is a gift. But somewhere along the way, we’ve lost the plot. We’ve confused being right with being righteous, and we’ve traded Christlike love for tribal loyalty.

The result?
Disillusionment.
Disengagement.
Deconstruction.

But it doesn’t have to end this way.

Why Are Christians So Divided? is not a finger-pointing manifesto. It’s a call back to the heart of Jesus—a heart that longs for His people to reflect His love in how we treat one another, even when we disagree.

In these pages, we’ll explore:

  • Why division has become so common in the Church

  • The theological, cultural, and personal roots of our fractures

  • How the early church navigated difference

  • Practical steps toward healing and unity

  • What it means to major on the majors, and extend grace on the rest

The Church doesn’t need another controversy. It needs Christ. And it needs a generation of believers willing to love well, listen deeply, and live as one.

This is not a book about being nicer. It’s a book about being truer—truer to the gospel, truer to our calling, and truer to the Savior who died not just for our sins, but for our unity.

Let’s begin the hard, beautiful work of healing what’s been torn.