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== Bishops and Overseers == | == Bishops and Overseers == | ||
The word ''[[overseer]]'' is translated from the same word we see as ''bishop''<Ref>{{1985}} </Ref> in the New Testament. | The word ''[[overseer]]'' is translated from the same word we see as ''[[bishop]]''<Ref>{{1985}} </Ref> in the New Testament. | ||
These terms like "[[bishop]]" and "[[overseer]]" are used regularly in today's [[modern Church]], but what did they mean at the time of the [[early Church|first-century Church]] by those [[early Christians]]? | These terms like "[[bishop]]" and "[[overseer]]" are used regularly in today's [[modern Church]], but what did they mean at the time of the [[early Church|first-century Church]] by those [[early Christians]]? |
Revision as of 08:55, 13 October 2024
Bishops and Overseers
The word overseer is translated from the same word we see as bishop[2] in the New Testament.
These terms like "bishop" and "overseer" are used regularly in today's modern Church, but what did they mean at the time of the first-century Church by those early Christians?
- "Bishops, presbyters(Elder) and deacons occupy in the church the same positions as those which were occupied by Aaron, his sons, and the Levites in the temple." Jerome, Ep. 146
Does the modern church do what the first-century church did?
Do "bishops" and "overseers" fulfill the same role and duties we see being done in those early days when James explained "pure Religion"?
Do Modern Christians depend on the Church for its Daily ministration of free bread - rightly divided from house to house like by the first-century Church, which was called the Eucharist?
Modern Christians often think it is okay to go to men in government who "exercise authority"[3] but that is the covetous practices condemned by Moses and doctrine of Jesus, and of course by Paul and Peter warned the people that such covetousness was idolatry[4] and would make them merchandise.
The early bishops and deacons provided a righteous system of social welfare through the tables of charity and the voluntary network of of love through the Church appointed by Christ.
Are modern bishops fulfilling the same purpose as the original bishops or overseers of the early Church in the practice of pure Religion, or do modern Christians pray to the government benefactors of the world who exercise authority one over the other?[3]
It does not appear they are in the harlot churches that ride the beast. They do not appear to teach the pure religion that is unspotted by the world. While the teach a reductionist gospel they deliver the people back in the yoke of bondage through the welfare system that Psalms, Proverbs, and Paul call a snare and trap.
And are their apostles among these men?
And are they Apostles of Christ or someone else?
Titular ministers
The Church is defined as one form of government. For any government to function, there must be participation by the people in the supply and demand of services within and to participants of society.
The titular leaders of a free government cannot be given power to exercise authority over how much or when the people entrust their ministers with their freewill offering. Christ commanded that His appointed ministers not “exercise authority”.
When people lose their daily right to choose, they are made subjects of those who have a right to choose for them.
Servants of sacrifice
What is given to a minister or bishop of the Church is given freely and completely, like a burnt offering or bread cast upon the water, but the free will choice to give must remain with the people. The choice and manner of service provided by that gift must remain entirely with the minister, who is a servant of God.
In essence, this form of sacred purpose trust, with the minister as the steward (a kind of trustee), is at the foundation of His Church and the Daily ministration of Pure Religion.
It has been customary that another group oversees the ministers in a network of service. But again, not as rulers one over the other.
Of course, in truth, the actual overseer of the Church is the Holy Spirit or what is sometimes called the Comforter.[5]
The Apostles met the requirements laid down by Christ. They were prepared to represent the Holy Spirit, and when they had received the power to do so from that Spirit, they were able to go out and preach the Kingdom as the physical representatives of that Comforter. They exercised no authority by their own hand over the people but relied entirely upon the power of that Holy Spirit.
The definition of overseership today might be called "the office or status of an overseer."
Since a deacon was a minister to groups of Tens in a network of Christians. A Bishop was a minister of ten ministers. He might be called an Archdeacon or Archbishop, not because he ruled over the minister but over the responsibility of an office of service. While, these terms are still used today they originally came down to us from the early Church which provided all social welfare for Christians through Pure Religion dependent on a daily ministration of charity.
"An Archdeacon pre-eminently a priest with pastoral gifts and spiritual maturity, able to relate to, encourage and support both clergy and laity in the archdeaconry in their fulfillment of the church's mission". THE DIOCESE OF NEWCASTLE
Preaching the gospel of the kingdom does not isolate congregations under an exclusive pastoral leader or divide the "body of Christ" by denominations. The common denominator for all Christians is Christ who said we were not to be like the governments of the Gentiles who call themselves benefactors but exercise authority one over the other, nor pray to the Fathers of the earth who provide benefits like free bread or the Corban of the Pharisees.
The overseership of the Church established by Jesus does not divide people into isolated groups but is desiring to connect all families in a network of charity and love.
Christ preached the kingdom of God at hand and if we repent and seek it and the righteousness of God it will lead us away from despotism[6] and back to liberty under God.
The modern Church is often making the word of God to none effect like the Pharisees with their state run Corban because it fails to teach the people The Way of Pure Religion and depend heavily on what was called public religion and the covetous practices of the world. These two systems were at the core of the Christian conflict.
- ↑ Matthew 13:47 Again, the kingdom of heaven is like unto a net, that was cast into the sea, and gathered of every kind:
- ↑ 1985 ~ἐπίσκοπος~ episkopos \@ep-is’-kop-os\@ from 1909 and 4649 (in the sense of 1983); n m AV-bishop 6, overseer 1; 7
- 1) an overseer
- 1a) a man charged with the duty of seeing that things to be done by others are done rightly, any curator, guardian or superintendent
- 1b) the superintendent, elder, pastor, or overseer of a Christian church; the NT uses the term bishop, overseers, 1985 pastors, 4166 elders, and presbyters 4245 interchangeably { Acts 20:17,28; Ephesian 4:11; Titus 1:5,7; 1 Peter 5:1-4 etc.}
- 1) an overseer
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 Not exercise authority
- Matthew 20:25 "But Jesus called them unto him, and said, Ye know that the princes of the Gentiles exercise dominion over them, and they that are great exercise authority upon them. But it shall not be so among you:..."
- Mark 10:42 "But Jesus called them to him, and saith unto them, Ye know that they which are accounted to rule over the Gentiles exercise lordship over them; and their great ones exercise authority upon them. But so shall it not be among you:..."
- Luke 22:25 "And he said unto them, The kings of the Gentiles exercise lordship over them; and they that exercise authority upon them are called benefactors. But ye [shall] not [be] so:..."
- ↑ Covetousness is idolatry
- Colossians 3:5 "Mortify therefore your members which are upon the earth; fornication, uncleanness, inordinate affection, evil concupiscence, and covetousness, which is idolatry: 6 For which things’ sake the wrath of God cometh on the children of disobedience:"
- Ephesians 5:5 "For this ye know, that no whoremonger, nor unclean person, nor covetous man, who is an idolater, hath any inheritance in the kingdom of Christ and of God."
- 1 Corinthians 5:10 "Yet not altogether with the fornicators of this world, or with the covetous, or extortioners, or with idolaters; for then must ye needs go out of the world. 11 But now I have written unto you not to keep company, if any man that is called a brother be a fornicator, or covetous, or an idolater, or a railer, or a drunkard, or an extortioner; with such an one no not to eat."
- For it is written that the tables of dainties provided by rulers of the world are a snare because they cause the masses to bite one another through government systems of legal charity which are covetous practices which are a form of fornication or adultery where the people are devoured as merchandise, curse children and are "entangled again in the yoke of bondage" with the aid of the false religion of the whore who rides the beast.
- ↑ Parakletos translated comforter 4, advocate 1. 1) summoned, called to one’s side, esp. called to one’s aid. 1a) one who pleads another’s cause before a judge, a pleader, counsel for defense, legal assistant, an advocate.
- ↑ : “Despotism, suspicious by its very nature, views the separation of men as the best guarantee of its own permanence and usually does all it can to keep them in isolation. No defect of the human heart suits it better than egoism; a tyrant is relaxed enough to forgive his subjects for failing to love him, provided they do not love one another. He does not ask them to help him to govern the state; it is enough that they have no intention of managing it themselves. He calls those who claim to unite their efforts to create general prosperity “turbulent and restless spirits” and, twisting the normally accepted meaning of the words, he gives the name of “good citizens” to those who retreat into themselves.”
- “Thus the vices fostered by tyranny are exactly those supported by equality. These two things are complementary and mutually supportive, with fatal results.” Democracy in America: And Two Essays on America, by Alexis de Tocqueville