| Forum Home > General Discussion > Are Denominations Biblical? They seem to continously be the one thing that separates the Church but are they in the Bible anywhere? and If they aren't why do we have them? | ||
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ManofValor Member Posts: 2 |
There seems to be at least two major problems with denominationalism. First, nowhere in Scripture is there a mandate for denominationalism; to the contrary the mandate is for union and connectivity. Thus, the second problem is that history tells us that denominationalism is the result of, or caused by, conflict and confrontation which leads to division and separation. Jesus told us that a house divided against itself cannot stand. This general principle can and should be applied to the church. We find an example of this in the Corinthian church which was struggling with issues of division and separation. There were those who thought that they should follow Paul and those who thought they should follow the teaching of Apollos, 1 Corinthians 1:12, "What I am saying is this: each of you says, “I’m with Paul,” or “I’m with Apollos,” or “I’m with Cephas,” or “I’m with Christ.” This alone should tell you what Paul thought of denominations or anything else that separates and divides the body. But let’s look further; in verse 13, Paul asks very pointed questions, "Is Christ divided? Was it Paul who was crucified for you? Or were you baptized in Paul’s name?” This makes clear how Paul feels, he (Paul) is not the Christ, he is not the one crucified and his message has never been one that divides the church or would lead someone to worship Paul instead of Christ. Obviously, according to Paul, there is only one church and one body of believers and anything that is different weakens and destroys the church (see verse 17). He makes this point stronger in 3:4 by saying that anyone who says they are of Paul or of Apollos is carnal.
Can anyone else give more input on this ... ? | |
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K-Mor Member Posts: 4 |
Well said my brother. There are many man-made idealisms taking presence in the Christian community and although we are aware of these ideals, only a select few are willing to conscientiously make changes. It goes back to that saying, "when you know better, you ought to do better". | |
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-- A fool is not a person who makes mistakes, a fool is a person who doesn't learn from them. a K-Mor quote
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