Physical Address: Jamil King Ministries
8745 Gary Burns Dr. Suite 160 #352, Frisco TX 75034
Physical Address: Jamil King Ministries
8745 Gary Burns Dr. Suite 160 #352, Frisco TX 75034
Why Authenticity Is the New Loyalty
In today’s culture, the pulpit isn’t the only platform—and authority alone doesn’t guarantee influence.
We are living in a time when younger generations—especially Millennials and Gen Z—are not impressed by titles, stages, or who “lays hands” on who.
They’re asking one question louder than ever:
“Are you real?”
Not polished. Not powerful. Not perfect.
Real.
Because if you:
A young adult group invited a guest pastor to speak—someone well-known, eloquent, and experienced. The room was packed, but the energy was cautious. Everyone expected the usual: three points, a Bible verse, and a high note to close.
But instead, the pastor opened with this:
“Before I share anything, I want to tell you that two years ago, I almost quit ministry. I was depressed, angry, and felt like God had gone silent. I kept preaching, but I was dying inside. And I didn’t tell anyone until it almost cost me everything.”
The room shifted.
Phones went down.
Walls came down.
Hearts opened up.
That night, he didn’t win them over with Greek words or clever quotes. He won them with honesty.
Because sometimes the most powerful word is:
“Me too.”
Older generations were taught:
Younger generations were raised in a world that rewards transparency:
This doesn’t mean one generation is better than the other.
It means the definition of loyalty has changed.
People don’t leave churches and leaders because of flaws.
They leave when those flaws are:
In John 20:27, the resurrected Jesus appears to Thomas and says:
“Put your finger here; see My hands. Reach out your hand and put it into My side.”
He didn’t hide His scars.
He used them to build trust.
Even after resurrection, Jesus understood:
Realness builds relationship.
He didn’t say, “Believe because I said so.”
He said, “Come close. See for yourself.”
That’s the model.
That’s what this generation is looking for.
In leadership, realness is more powerful than rhetoric.
Because:
People want to know:
Don’t just preach.
Be real.
Because your story, your scars, your surrender—that’s what builds bridges.
Not hype. Not image. Not perfection.
Truth.
When you lead from a place of truth,
you won’t just gain followers—
you’ll birth transformation.