by Julie Telgenhoff
The social media feed scrolls by like a slot machine now. Headlines screaming collapse, prophecy, secret plans, and divine warnings—each one written to spike the pulse before a person has even read the first paragraph.
Recently I noticed a certain publication that presents itself as Christian news. It’s only one example among many pushing the same emotional bait used by every other outrage-driven media outlet. Fear sells. Panic spreads. Truth becomes secondary to engagement.
But the click-bait machine isn’t limited to one corner of the internet. Mainstream media does it. Alternative media does it. Political pages do it. Sensational headlines have become the currency of the modern information economy. Fear spreads faster than facts, and outrage keeps people scrolling.
When a publication claims a Christian identity while using the same tactics, however, the problem takes on another layer. Faith carries an expectation of honesty, humility, and accountability. When those values are replaced with dramatic headlines designed to trigger emotion and drive traffic, it feels less like journalism and more like exploitation.There was a time when the alternative media space existed because people sensed something was wrong with the corporate narrative. The idea was simple: question authority, verify claims, and think independently.
Somewhere along the way, a large part of that movement became the very thing it once criticized. Sensational headlines. Zero verification. Anonymous “sources.” Prophecy stretched to fit the news cycle.
It isn’t discernment anymore.
It’s theater.
The tragedy is that attaching the word Christian to this kind of content drags faith into the mud. Christianity was never meant to be a marketing category. Scripture repeatedly warns about false teachers who manipulate fear and curiosity for influence. When a website slaps a Bible verse next to a headline designed purely for clicks, that is not ministry.
That is branding.
The more uncomfortable truth, however, sits with the audience.
Clickbait only works because people share it.
A headline flashes across the screen: Global Event Imminent. Thousands hit the share button within seconds. Few pause to ask the most basic questions.
Who wrote this?
Where did the claim originate?
Is there primary evidence?
Does another source confirm it?
Discernment used to mean testing information before spreading it. Now many treat information like a viral chain letter. If it feels dramatic enough, it must be important.
It isn’t wisdom.
It’s intellectual laziness.
The internet has given humanity access to more information than any generation in history. Verifying a claim often takes five minutes. Yet many refuse to do even that. Rumors, speculation, and half-truths are pushed through the same pipeline where facts are supposed to travel.
Eventually the signal gets buried under the noise.
And the loudest voices win.
The real damage shows up quietly. When every week brings a new “end-of-the-world” headline that turns out to be nonsense, people stop taking serious warnings seriously. When every political rumor becomes “breaking news,” credibility evaporates. Truth seekers end up looking like caricatures because too many people refused to do the basic work of thinking.
Discernment is not just about spotting deception from governments or corporations.
It is also about recognizing manipulation inside communities that claim to be fighting deception.
Real truth doesn’t need theatrical headlines.
It survives scrutiny.
It welcomes verification.
It stands even when the emotional drama is removed.
So the next time a headline demands an immediate reaction, the most radical act might simply be to pause.
Read.
Investigate.
And ask yourself who benefits from the story being shared.
Because clickbait and sensationalism were never meant to travel at the speed of a share button. They don’t just mislead the person reading the headline—they damage the trust others place in the person sharing it.
And that means discernment and wisdom should come before we click that share button.






