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Office of Elder in the Church (The Church)
Description
This section contends that the biblical office of elder has been hollowed out reduced from an active, pastoral arm of Christ’s kingship into a largely passive, managerial, or judicial role whereas in Scripture and the early church elders functioned as extensions of the pastor/bishop, advancing the gospel, caring for souls, and governing Christ’s people under His authority. Drawing on Ignatius, Polycarp, Irenaeus, and later Reformed standards, the argument shows that early bishops were essentially missionary pastors, presbyters were local ruling shepherds, and deacons served under them, all within a monarchic (not democratic) church order where authority flows from Christ the King, not from popular vote. Elders were never meant to be mere voters, building supervisors, or standing judges of pastors, but ruling servants who visit the sick, restore wanderers, teach, plant congregations, arbitrate disputes when necessary, and actively extend Christ’s reign into homes, education, mercy, and mission. Judicial discipline is real but secondary; the church is fundamentally a ministry of grace, not a court of law. True reform therefore requires reviving eldership as a functioning, outward-moving, pastoral office men bearing up the arms of their pastors, advancing Christ’s lordship in every sphere so that the church may again act as a living instrument of the Kingdom rather than a stalled institution.
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