A Call To The Remnant

Scottish Warriors for Christ- http://www.facebook.com/acalltotheremnant

Posts Tagged ‘Apostolic leadership’

Are We Doing It All Wrong?

Posted by appolus on April 14, 2026

Are we doing it all wrong?

In 1 Corinthians 14:23, the wording really matters, and we need to read it exactly as it is written:

“Therefore if the whole church comes together in one place, and all speak with tongues, and there come in those who are uninformed or unbelievers, will they not say that you are out of your mind?”

The weight of this verse rests on two words, “if” and “whole.”

The word “if” comes from the Greek “ean.” It is a conditional word. It is not describing what normally happens. Paul is not saying when the church comes together. He is saying if a certain situation takes place. That is very important. He is presenting a scenario, not defining the regular pattern of church life.

Then he says, “the whole church.”
That comes from the Greek “holē hē ekklēsia,” which means the entire assembly, the complete body, nothing missing.

That raises an obvious question. Why say “whole church” unless, for the most part, the whole church is not together?

This confirms what we already know from other scriptures, that the early church met in multiple house gatherings. They were not all meeting together all the time. So when Paul says “the whole church,” he is talking about something different from those normal, smaller gatherings.

So now read it again slowly.

“If the whole church comes together in one place…”

This is not a house meeting. This is the entire body, all those smaller gatherings, coming together as one in a single location.

And that explains what follows.

“…and there come in those who are uninformed or unbelievers…”

That only really makes sense in a setting that is accessible, visible, and large enough for others to enter and observe. This is not a closed, private setting. This is something that can be witnessed and would be open to the public.

And to strengthen this point even further, we know historically that the early believers met behind closed doors in homes. These gatherings were not openly accessible to the general public. Because of that, it gave rise to rumors and misunderstanding among outsiders.

There were accusations of things like cannibalism and the drinking of blood, clearly a distortion of the Lord’s Supper, but it shows how little was understood by those on the outside looking in.

So when Paul speaks about unbelievers and the uninformed coming in, he is describing a different kind of setting, one where access is possible, where what is happening can be seen and heard.

So what we are seeing here is very clear.

The early church met in houses, in smaller gatherings.But there were also occasions when the whole church came together in one place.

And when that happened, what took place in that gathering mattered, because it was being seen by those outside, the uninformed and the unbelieving.

And so this leads to an important conclusion.

The regular gatherings of the early church were not public in the way gatherings are today. They were not open meetings in the modern sense. They were primarily within homes, more contained, and not freely accessible to the general public.

Public visibility appears in this passage as something connected to a specific condition, when the whole church comes together.

So the argument from this passage is not just about order in a meeting. It also points to a pattern.

The normal life of the church was in smaller, more private gatherings.
The larger, more public setting was the exception, not the rule.

And that raises a question for us now.

Have we reversed what was normal and what was occasional?

Because Paul’s words suggest that when the whole church comes together, something distinct is happening. And if that is the case, then not every gathering was meant to function in that same open, public way.

That is the force of the passage.

Posted in Babylon, bible, Charismatic, Christian, christian blog, christian living, Christianity, Church history, churches, controlling churches, Daily devotional, Devotions, end times, Jesus, prophecy, religion, remnant church, testimony, the crucified life, the deeper life, the gospel, the persectuted church, The presence of God, the remnant, The State of the Chuch and Manifest presence, the state of the church | Tagged: , , , , , , , | 1 Comment »

EXALTING THE MOST EMINENT APOSTLES

Posted by appolus on April 4, 2026

EXALTING THE MOST EMINENT APOSTLES

When Paul spoke of the “most eminent apostles,” he was not honoring them. He was exposing them. His words were edged with holy sarcasm. He was tearing down men who had exalted themselves, men who drew disciples after their own name, men who clothed pride in the language of Christ.

So ask yourself plainly:Who would Paul call “super apostles” today? (hyperlian apostolon) 2 Cor 11:5

Who, in our own time, has taken to themselves titles of authority, power, and spiritual supremacy? Who has stood before multitudes and presented themselves not merely as servants of Christ, but as the voice to be obeyed, the authority not to be questioned?

These are not outsiders.
Not pagans.
Not those who openly reject Christ.

These are men who speak His name.
Men who preach in His name.
Men who build vast followings under His banner.

And yet, like those in Corinth, they exalt themselves.

They boast in power.
They boast in revelation.
They boast in influence, in miracles, in numbers.
They draw attention to themselves, and in doing so, they rob Jesus of His preeminence and take that preeminence for themselves. You will never hear them boasting of their infirmities. They wouldn’t do it and their audience dont want to hear that.

Paul would not be impressed.

For he said, “Though we walk in the flesh, we do not war according to the flesh.”
His weapons were not carnal. They were not built on personality, persuasion, or platform. They were mighty in God, for pulling down strongholds.

And what were those strongholds?

Arguments.
Prideful reasonings.
Every high thing that exalts itself against the knowledge of God.

These men, then and now, construct systems of thought and authority that rise up, not against religion in general, but against the true knowledge of Christ. They speak of Him, yet elevate themselves. His name is invoked only so their own name can be elevated.

This is why Paul says:
“Bringing every thought into captivity to the obedience of Christ.”

Not to a man.
Not to a movement.
Not to a personality.

To Christ.

These leaders exercise enormous influence. Hundreds of thousands, even millions, sit under them. Their words shape thinking, their authority directs lives.

But we are without excuse.

We have the Spirit of God.
We have the Word of God.

And we are commanded to take every thought captive.

Every sermon.
Every claim.
Every display of power.
Every declaration of authority.

All must be brought under Christ.

Paul refused to compete with these men on their terms.
He would not boast in greatness.

Instead, he says, “I will boast in the things which concern my infirmities.”

Weakness.
Suffering.
Dependence on God.

That is the mark of a true servant.

So the question is not merely who these men are.

The question is this:

Will we recognize the difference?

Will we discern between those who exalt Christ, and those who exalt themselves in His name?

And will we take every thought captive,

or will we ourselves be taken captive?

Posted in Charismatic, Christian, Christianity, Daily devotional, Devotions, Jesus, remnant church, the crucified life, the deeper life, the gospel, the remnant, The State of the Chuch and Manifest presence, the state of the church, theology | Tagged: , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment »

Leading by the Spirit

Posted by appolus on February 27, 2015

2Co 1:24 Not that we have dominion over your faith, but are fellow workers for your joy; for by faith you stand.

Oh brothers and sisters, where is the Apostolic leadership of our day? Where is the wisdom of God? Where can we find such leadership that would proclaim that they do not have dominion over ones faith but are actually fellow workers for the joy of the saints? If one of the chief purposes of gathering together is for the edifying of the saints, for the equipping of the saints, for the feeding of the sheep, then where is the servant leadership today? In our day we produce leaders, yet all though the Bible leaders were called of God by His Spirit. When Christendom is reduced to an industry, then the industry itself finds, promotes and trains its leaders. The land is in desperate need of men that are called by God and who reject all titles and privileges. All too often and in too many places the saints have been reduced to dumb spectators whose tithes and offerings are for the equipping of the salaried staff. We have it backwards, may the Lord forgive us.

Posted in Christian, christian living, Christianity, church of scotland, Daily devotional, Devotions, end times, Jesus, pentecostal, revival, the remnant, the state of the church, theology, Uncategorized | Tagged: , | 6 Comments »