4 min 21 hrs

❤️📖 FROM THE HEART | 12.06.2026 | The Quiet Crisis | Pastor Erton Köhler


We are the most connected generation in human history. We have devices in our pockets that link us to eight billion people and thousands of friends on social media, and we are constantly notified, tagged, and messaged. Yet public health experts are sounding the alarm with a warning we cannot ignore: we are living through a global epidemic of loneliness.

We are drowning in information, but we are starving for connection. This is not just a feeling. It is a medical emergency. The Surgeon General of the United States recently released an advisory stating that chronic loneliness is as lethal as smoking 15 cigarettes a day. Think about that comparison. Being disconnected from people damages your heart and shortens your life just as much as a serious addiction to tobacco. The World Health Organization declared loneliness a “global public health priority.” It found that social isolation increases the risk of stroke by 30% and the risk of dementia by 50%.

The loneliest generation today is Generation Z. The very young people who are digital natives and spend hours scrolling through the lives of others report the highest levels of inner emptiness. They see the highlight reels of their friends’ lives and feel completely excluded.

God addressed this issue before sin even entered the world. In the book of Genesis, God looked at a perfect world—a world with no pain, no death, and no conflict—and made a single negative observation. He said, “…It is not good for man to be alone…” (Genesis 2:18, NKJV). If it was not good in Paradise, imagine how serious it is in a world of sin. We were designed for community. We are biologically and spiritually wired to belong.

Sociologists speak of the concept of the “third place.” Your first place is your home. Your second place is your work or school. But for a society to be healthy, people need a third place: a community where they are known by name, where they are missed when they are absent, and where they are loved unconditionally. For billions of people, the local church is the only possible third place left.

We need to move from being a friendly church to being a church of friends. Let us make our churches the warmest places on earth. “By this all will know that you are My disciples, if you have love for one another” (John 13:35, NKJV).


About the series

From the Heart is a weekly devotional series in which Pastor Köhler reflects on what it means to be rooted in the Word of the Bible and focused on mission, together and personally. Each episode is based on the four pillars of the strategic plan of the Seventh-day Adventist Church: fellowship with God, identity in Christ, unity through the Holy Spirit, and mission for all.

The series connects biblical faith with everyday life and shares brief reflections and insights into how God works through Adventists around the world.


Pastor Erton Köhler is president of the General Conference of the worldwide Seventh-day Adventist Church.

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