They smile with that glossy church grin, tilt their head, and drop the line like it’s some divine mic drop: “Jesus loves you.” As if the Son of Man walked around Galilee doing emotional altar calls, hugging strangers and whispering sweet nothings to crowds. Stop the nonsense. Jesus never once said “I love you” to the multitudes. Not to the five thousand He fed. Not to the crowds that followed Him for miracles. Not even to His own disciples in those private moments. He never preached the soft, sentimental, feel-good gospel that modern Christians perform every Sunday. He never ran a love crusade. He spoke truth like fire. He flipped tables. He called people vipers, hypocrites, and children of the devil. He demanded repentance, obedience, and radical change. He said “Follow me,” “Deny yourself,” “Take up your cross,” and “Keep my commandments.” He showed love through action — healing the sick, feeding the hungry, confronting power, and ultimately laying down His life. But the cute little phrase “Jesus loves you” that Haitians in Quebec churches love to spray everywhere? That’s a modern invention. A performance. A cheap emotional shortcut. And here’s the deeper truth they choke on: Jesus was not a Christian. The word “Christian” did not exist when He walked the earth. It was invented later in Antioch as a label outsiders gave to His followers (Acts 11:26). Jesus was a Jew who preached to Jews, in Jewish lands, fulfilling Jewish prophecy. He preached in specific places — synagogues, hillsides, the Temple — not in some universal performance tour for every culture and continent. He did not start a new religion called Christianity. That came afterwards, packaged, Romanized, Europeanized, and turned into the perfect tool for control. Yet today the Fallen Haitians in Quebec stand in those cold Catholic and evangelical churches, repeating the same scripted lines: “Jesus loves you… God has a plan… Just believe.” They perform the same emotional theater their ancestors were taught on the plantations. Soft words to keep the spirit docile. Sentimental slogans instead of raw encounter with the Creator. The real God doesn’t need your marketing slogan. The Creator does not express love through cheap phrases and Sunday performances. He creates. He commands. He corrects. He burns away falsehood with truth. Jesus never needed to say “I love you” to prove anything. His life, His death, and His words were the proof. Modern Christians turned it into a jingle. A feel-good drug. A way to avoid the hard demands of actual obedience. So the next time one of them smiles and says “Jesus loves you” while living compromised, sleeping with the master’s religion, and performing European piety in Quebec, remember this: Jesus didn’t preach performance. He didn’t preach slogans. He didn’t even call His way “Christianity.” He preached the Kingdom. He preached repentance. He preached creation-level obedience to the Father. Everything else is noise. Everything else is theater. Everything else is what keeps the Fallen ones comfortable in their chains — still singing, still smiling, still saying “Jesus loves you” while refusing to live like He actually commanded.