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If you want to support this mission Please visit: https://subsplash.com/u/-RNB46X/give?... ___________________________________________________________________________ Bill Johnson says he is sorry — but he is not. In his so-called apology, he makes one thing unmistakably clear: he has no intention of going anywhere. Rather than owning the weight of the harm done, Johnson centers himself, reassures his position, and frames the moment as something to move past rather than something requiring real repentance. This video carefully analyzes Bill Johnson’s apology and exposes why it fails every biblical test of godly sorrow. Scripture teaches that repentance is not measured by emotional language, but by humility, accountability, and fruit. Yet what we see instead is damage control — an attempt to quiet critics while preserving power, influence, and platform. When spiritual leaders cause widespread confusion and harm, the path forward is not self-preservation but self-denial. The only way Bill Johnson could begin to make this right is by stepping down and resigning from leadership. Anything less communicates that the institution matters more than truth, and the platform matters more than the people affected. This analysis is not driven by personal animosity, but by a concern for biblical integrity, the protection of the flock, and the seriousness with which God treats leadership. True repentance costs something. And until there is real consequence, there is no reason to believe this apology represents anything more than words.