“Give your testimony and glorifying God!”

Is Snichin Biblical?


Turning a Dirty Word
into Holy Praise.



You hear snitch and your brain goes straight to betrayal. Backstabbing. Rat. The kid who told on you in school, the guy who sold out his crew for a lighter sentence. It’s got teeth—cold, sharp, and ugly. And honestly? That’s fair.

Two of Jesus' believers in centuries past gathering to do as the Word says in the gathering of the brethren.
Newly formed church brethren sharing the Word. & Snichin on_God



In the streets, in the headlines, snitching means you’re loyal to nobody but yourself. You trade trust for safety, or worse, for cash. Nobody celebrates a snitch. They get shunned. They get jumped. They get forgotten. But here’s where it gets wild: what if snitching wasn’t about selling out… but about shouting out? What if the same word—yeah, the one everybody hates—could flip on its head and become a weapon for worship? That’s what we’re doing here.

Snichin.com/on_God isn’t about ratting on God. It’s about ratting to the world about Him. About spilling every good thing He’s done today—like He’s your homie who just came through clutch—and letting everybody else hear it so they can cheer too. No shade. No secrets. Just straight-up glory.

Now, let’s get real: the Bible doesn’t use snitch. But it sure talks about telling on people—and on God. And guess what? It ain’t black-and-white. There’s bad snitching, and there’s good snitching. Depends on why you’re doing it, who you’re protecting, and who ends up looking bigger. The Bad Side: When Snitching Turns Poison Take Judas. Dude straight-up snitched on Jesus—kissed Him in the garden, sold Him out for thirty pieces of silver. That wasn’t justice. That was greed. Or the Ziphites in 1 Samuel—they ratted David to Saul because they were scared, or maybe jealous. Either way, it was betrayal dressed up as loyalty. The Pharisees did it too: tried to trap Jesus with the woman caught in adultery, not to save her, but to dunk on Him. Motive matters. When you’re snitching to look good, get revenge, or cash out? That’s the kind the Bible calls wicked. Proverbs 11:13 says a gossip betrays a confidence—but a trustworthy person keeps a secret. Flip side: if you’re spilling dirt just to hurt somebody, you’re not testifying. You’re sinning.

The Good Side: When Telling Becomes Testimony But rewind—because Scripture’s full of people who snitched and got praised. Mordecai overhears a plot to kill the king, tells Esther, and boom—lives saved, evil exposed, God’s people protected. That’s not snitching; that’s stewardship. Leviticus 5:1 lays it out: if you witness sin and stay quiet when you’re supposed to speak, you’re guilty too. So sometimes, telling isn’t betrayal—it’s obedience. It’s protecting the innocent. It’s keeping truth alive. And here’s the kicker: when you’re snitching on God? Not betraying Him—bragging on Him. Psalm 107 keeps saying, Let them give thanks to the Lord for His unfailing love and His wonderful deeds. That’s testimony. Revelation 12:11? They triumphed over him by the blood of the Lamb and by the word of their testimony. 

Your story—how God hooked you up with rent money, healed your kid, gave you peace when everything was falling apart—that’s not gossip. That’s ammo. That’s how we fight darkness: by loud, proud, unashamed praise. Why This Flip Works The word snitch hurts because it’s tied to fear and shame. But what if we took it back? What if we said, Yeah, I’m snichin’—but I’m snichin’ on God’s goodness? Not because He’s done something wrong—because He’s done everything right. And the more we talk about it, the more people see: He’s real. He’s close. He’s generous. Like David dancing before the Ark—wild, embarrassing, unstoppable joy. Or Paul in prison, writing letters about how God’s grace was bigger than chains. They weren’t hiding. They were hyping.

Your Turn Next time somebody says, Don’t snitch, smile and say, Too late—I’m snichin’ on God. Want in? Drop your testimony. Let somebody else praise Him with you. Because here’s the truth: the only snitch worth being is one who makes God look good. And honestly? He deserves it. [Share this flip: I’m snichin’ on God—He’s been too good not to brag. Join me? snichin.com/on_God #SnichinOnGod] 

So that’s us. Snichin.com/on_God isn’t about betrayal. It’s about broadcast. We’re not ratting God out—we’re ratting in. Telling the world He’s faithful, He’s kind, He’s still moving. And yeah, we might look weird saying it. But that’s the point. We are a peculiar people. Faith ain’t supposed to be quiet. It’s supposed to echo.