A Brutal Reminder: No Christian Leader Is Temptation-Proofhttps://pjmedia.com/chris-queen/2026/01/12/a-brutal-reminder-no-christian-leader-is-temptation-proof-n4948170... Philip Yancey has been a Christian writer longer than I’ve been alive. I didn’t follow his career as closely as others, but he contributed heavily to the teen study Bible that was instrumental in my spiritual growth in high school.
His classic book What’s So Amazing About Grace? has sold over 15 million copies, and he wrote for Christianity Today for nearly half a century. Yancey’s presence has loomed large over evangelical thought.
That’s what made Yancey’s admission land hard. Last week, he sent a statement to Christianity Today that detailed a years-long extramarital affair:
To my great shame, I confess that for eight years I willfully engaged in a sinful affair with a married woman.
My conduct defied everything that I believe about marriage. It was also totally inconsistent with my faith and my writings and caused deep pain for her husband and both of our families. I will not share further details out of respect for the other family.
I have confessed my sin before God and my wife, and have committed myself to a professional counseling and accountability program. I have failed morally and spiritually, and I grieve over the devastation I have caused. I realize that my actions will disillusion readers who have previously trusted in my writing. Worst of all, my sin has brought dishonor to God. I am filled with remorse and repentance, and I have nothing to stand on except God’s mercy and grace.
I am now focused on rebuilding trust and restoring my marriage of 55 years. Having disqualified myself from Christian ministry, I am therefore retiring from writing, speaking, and social media. Instead, I need to spend my remaining years living up to the words I have already written. I pray for God’s grace and forgiveness—as well as yours—and for healing in the lives of those I’ve wounded.
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There’s a twist to this story. Yancey faced a diagnosis of Parkinson’s disease in 2023, and the woman who has committed herself to his care is his wife, Janet. She issued her own statement:
I, Janet Yancey, am speaking from a place of trauma and devastation that only people who have lived through betrayal can understand. Yet I made a sacred and binding marriage vow 55½ years ago, and I will not break that promise. I accept and understand that God through Jesus has paid for and forgiven the sins of the world, including Philip’s. God grant me the grace to forgive also, despite my unfathomable trauma. Please pray for us.
Other than, possibly, third-hand, I have not been influenced by Yancey's writings, but that he has been much respected in Evangelical circles is true. His failure does not make untrue any true things he wrote, but his credibility is affected. As this article points out, his history shows that personal vigilance against temptation needs to be lifelong, for leaders and for believers generally. Yancey's confession is as far from weasel-worded as words can get. His wife Janet's statement is remarkable.