Let the fireworks begin! You’ll either love The Permanent Revolution or you’ll hate it.
Hirsch and Catchim have opened a huge can of worms that has been rotting for centuries. What can am I referring to? The Apostolic can.
The authors declare that it is impossible for the church to reach maturity or unity without rediscovering the five-fold ministry in Eph. 4 – Apostle, Prophet, Evangelist, Pastor, and Teacher (APEST) because APEST is the genetic code of the ecclesia. But Western Christianity has diluted the genetic code by putting all ministry in the roles of pastor and teacher. They declare that rediscovering APEST has the power to awaken a dormant, irrelevant church.
But wait; there’s more. This five-fold ministry is given to all Christians, not just the clergy. The authors go on to say that without an active present day apostolic form of ministry there is no hope for Christianity. According to the authors only Apostles can drive a permanent revolution.
But that’s not all. The authors take their challenge to the church to another level – when we relegate our definition of ministry to pastor and teacher we are diluting the Gospel to fit our inadequate paradigm of ministry. In essence when we do this we extricate Jesus from our fellowship because Jesus embodied all of the five-fold ministries.
Listen to these words of the authors “By effectively exiling the Apostolic, Prophetic, and Evangelistic ministries, we have meddled with the very mechanism Jesus intended for us to be a fully functioning ecclesia. The result is that all ministry has been forced to fit into the predetermined formats of shepherd, and teacher and pastor and theologian, and nothing else has legitimacy.”
Need a lid for this can!
The problem is, the authors are correct in their reading of the New Testament. Most Christians have totally misread Eph. 4 and have eliminated the Apostolic, Prophetic, and Evangelistic ministry of the text, fitting it into our preconceived notions about ecclesia. And as a result of our failure to include the A in APEST denominations have
· Declined and become irrelevant to society
· Not matured as Jesus intended
· A fractured unity
· Become ingrown
· Relegated ministry to the professionals
Hirsch and Catchim have given us a wonderful treatment of one of the lost gems of our faith and all of us will be indebted to them for a long time to come. They haven’t just made these claims – they have extensively documented their conclusions, using just about every known discipline, including the Scriptures.
This could be the first postmodern apologetic some of us have been waiting for. It will remain on my desk for some time to come. But be ready for 325 tough pages.
Hirsch, The Permanent Revolution
Let the fireworks begin! You’ll either love The Permanent Revolution or you’ll hate it.
Hirsch and Catchim have opened a huge can of worms that has been rotting for centuries. What can am I referring to? The Apostolic can.
The authors declare that it is impossible for the church to reach maturity or unity without rediscovering the five-fold ministry in Eph. 4 – Apostle, Prophet, Evangelist, Pastor, and Teacher (APEST) because APEST is the genetic code of the ecclesia. But Western Christianity has diluted the genetic code by putting all ministry in the roles of pastor and teacher. They declare that rediscovering APEST has the power to awaken a dormant, irrelevant church.
But wait; there’s more. This five-fold ministry is given to all Christians, not just the clergy. The authors go on to say that without an active present day apostolic form of ministry there is no hope for Christianity. According to the authors only Apostles can drive a permanent revolution.
But that’s not all. The authors take their challenge to the church to another level – when we relegate our definition of ministry to pastor and teacher we are diluting the Gospel to fit our inadequate paradigm of ministry. In essence when we do this we extricate Jesus from our fellowship because Jesus embodied all of the five-fold ministries.
Listen to these words of the authors “By effectively exiling the Apostolic, Prophetic, and Evangelistic ministries, we have meddled with the very mechanism Jesus intended for us to be a fully functioning ecclesia. The result is that all ministry has been forced to fit into the predetermined formats of shepherd, and teacher and pastor and theologian, and nothing else has legitimacy.”
Need a lid for this can!
The problem is, the authors are correct in their reading of the New Testament. Most Christians have totally misread Eph. 4 and have eliminated the Apostolic, Prophetic, and Evangelistic ministry of the text, fitting it into our preconceived notions about ecclesia. And as a result of our failure to include the A in APEST denominations have
Hirsch and Catchim have given us a wonderful treatment of one of the lost gems of our faith and all of us will be indebted to them for a long time to come. They haven’t just made these claims – they have extensively documented their conclusions, using just about every known discipline, including the Scriptures.
This could be the first postmodern apologetic some of us have been waiting for. It will remain on my desk for some time to come. But be ready for 325 tough pages.
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