A sobering prophetic warning rang out as Jenny Weaver shared a fiery message that confronted the spiritual condition of today’s church. “We are living in a time where people, I believe, are riding too close to the line,” she began. “My concern is that if we don’t come back to the place of true holiness and righteousness before the Lord, many people are slowly but surely becoming reprobates.”
While many pastors avoid such themes for fear of sounding like “doom and gloom,” her message insisted that warnings are not condemnation—they are mercy. “Anytime you get a warning from the Lord ahead of schedule, it is mercy and it is God’s love for His people,” she said.
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Turning to Romans, she pointed out that the apostle Paul had no hesitation in addressing the church with urgency. “When is the last time that you were in churches and you heard pastors warning you about becoming a reprobate?” she asked. “This is a topic that people are staying away from because they don’t want people to think this is a gloom and doom message.”
Her concern: believers who live in darkness while sitting in the sanctuary.
She outlined a progressive pattern that can lead believers toward reprobation. Stage one begins with compromise, stage two with division and strife, and stage three marks a point of no return. “Because of strife, you love to stir up strife. Because of slander, church division, backbiting, jealousy and sowing seeds of rebellion and discord, you’re slipping toward the reprobate,” Weaver said.
She warned that this can happen to anyone: “You can be in a pew, on a worship team, a pastor, apostle, prophet or leader—and still be slipping, slipping, slipping. That’s what I felt the Lord impressing upon me. This is going to scare people, but not in a fear-driven way—I want them to have the fear of the Lord.”
Weaver explained the transformative power of Godly fear: “The fear of the Lord changes everything. You no longer can just do whatever you want. The fear of the Lord comes when you love the Lord.”
Her message was clear: conviction is proof that God is still at work. “If you are beginning to repent right now, if the Holy Spirit is convicting you, you are not a reprobate,” she stressed. “A reprobate person would think this message is foolish and would never be concerned about it.”
Weaver referenced Hebrews 6:4-6, highlighting the danger of complete rejection: “A reprobate is someone who has tasted God’s goodness and the power of the Holy Spirit but chooses to walk away completely, saying, ‘There is no God.’ Only God can identify a reprobate, not us.”
Yet the message was not only a warning but also a message of hope. “If conviction exists, God’s door is still open. If you’re saying in your heart, ‘God, work in me, refine me,’ you are not a reprobate. God is still at work in your life,” Weaver said.
Her final charge was urgent: “We need to buckle down and get serious, church. Stop playing the games. Stop worrying about who gets the mic, who sings, who is chosen. It’s time to examine your heart and commit fully to holiness, righteousness, and the fear of the Lord.”
Weaver’s message serves as both a warning and a call to action: the line between compromise and reprobation may be closer than you think, but the grace and mercy of God remain, calling every believer back to repentance, reverence and wholehearted devotion.
Abby Trivett is a writer and editor for Charisma Media and has a passion for sharing the gospel through the written word. She holds two degrees from Regent University, a B.A. in Communication with a concentration in Journalism and a Master of Arts in Journalism. She is the author of the upcoming book, The Power of Suddenly: Discover How God Can Change Everything in a Moment.











