"You're right to be angry. Here are some things to be righteously angry about. Become my follower, and I will keep on affirming your anger!"
There are not a few people on Twitter/X whose approach to so-called "ministry" could be summarised by the above 3 sentences. I'm not thinking of any one person in particular; it's a pervasive pattern. Possibly it has always been so - perhaps there was a would-be guru/rabbi/politician/etc. in every town's market-place whose soap-box speeches amounted to no more than this.
It might not be quite as unsubtle as the above 3 sentences. But remember: the reason why this approach works is not ultimately because of the huckster trying it. It's the suckers ready to buy the deal offered who ultimately make it a profitable business to be in. If nobody was buying, then there wouldn't be any sellers.
In the Scriptures, seeing sin, decline, decay, burning down of one's own house over one's head, is common. The prophets decry it often. The key difference is that their register when doing so is not that of the person gathering followers for himself. It's not "look at those evil clowns; follow me and let us condemn them together!" Rather, it's lament. The Biblical prophet is cut to the heart to see people wilfully ruining themselves, and longs for them to turn back to God. It's Jesus weeping over Jerusalem, or Paul being overcome by continual sorrow because his fellow-countrymen who persecuted him were not saved. It's combined with a re-consecration of one's self to the task of trying to persuade and win over those who are hurtling to destruction. It's not joyfully lampooning those clowns on the other side of the cultural divide: it's becoming all things to them so that by any means we might save some. May God help us.

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