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Thank you for taking the time to write this challenging and thought-provoking article. I appreciate your passion for protecting the purity of the Gospel and your concern that believers remain directly connected to Jesus Christ through the leading of the Holy Spirit.
One of the strongest points in the article is the reminder that church leaders should never replace Christ as the Head of the Church. The warnings from Acts 20, Matthew 23, and Revelation concerning deception, false teaching, and spiritual pride deserve serious consideration by every believer and church leader. Your emphasis on the need for genuine fellowship (koinonia), simplicity, humility, and dependence on the Holy Spirit is refreshing and greatly needed in our generation.
I also appreciate the challenge to examine whether traditions, structures, and denominational loyalties have at times become more important than obedience to Christ. The call for believers to return to disciple-making, house-to-house fellowship, mutual care, and Spirit-led living echoes many aspects of the early church recorded in Acts.
At the same time, I believe this discussion should continue with humility and careful study of Scripture. While church history certainly shows examples of abuse of authority and unhealthy hierarchy, faithful leaders, elders, pastors, and teachers have also been gifts given by Christ for the building up of His church (Ephesians 4:11-12). Therefore, the issue may not simply be structure itself, but whether leaders serve as shepherds under Christ's authority or seek authority for themselves.
Overall, I am grateful for this article because it challenges believers to ask important questions: Are we following Christ or merely human traditions? Are we being led by the Holy Spirit? Are we making disciples of Jesus or followers of ourselves? These are questions the Church should never stop asking.
May we all continue seeking the truth in God's Word, walking in love, and exalting Jesus Christ alone as the Head of His Church.
Comment to The Devil The Deceiver