What stops it in the current institutional model? You could argue the institutional model, by concentrating power and influence in a few under a sense of human hierarchy has done more to fragment and divide the universal organic body of Christ. When the overall body of Christ is passive, not cognizant of the priesthood of all believers and further not sensible of the headship of Christ, then the model that elevate clergy over laity empowers false teachers and divisive teaching and the result in the protestant movement in any case is over 33,000 different denominations today. Where's the accountability in that?ageofknowledge wrote:Where is the accountability in that model? What stops cult leaders and false teachers from arising and leading many astray within the body? I'm not seeing it.
We're all accountable to God through Christ. The Bible never assigns accountability to humans in this regard.
Matt 12:36 - But I tell you that men will have to give account on the day of judgment for every careless word they have spoken. (Accountable to God)
Matt 18:23 - Therefore, the kingdom of heaven is like a king who wanted to settle accounts with his servants. (The king is God)
Luke 16:2 - So he called him in and asked him, 'What is this I hear about you? Give an account of your management, because you cannot be manager any longer.' (Parable again speaking of God as the one to whom account is given)
Rom 3:19 - Now we know that whatever the law says, it says to those who are under the law, so that every mouth may be silenced and the whole world held accountable to God. (pretty clear there)
Rom 14:12 - So then, each of us will give an account of himself to God. (pretty clear there)
I Cor 4:5 - Therefore judge nothing before the appointed time; wait till the Lord comes. He will bring to light what is hidden in darkness and will expose the motives of men's hearts. At that time each will receive his praise from God. (Only God there)
Heb 4:13 - Nothing in all creation is hidden from God's sight. Everything is uncovered and laid bare before the eyes of him to whom we must give account. (I don't see any church leadership and human accountability chain there, do you?)
Heb 13:17 - Obey your leaders and submit to their authority. They keep watch over you as men who must give an account. Obey them so that their work will be a joy, not a burden, for that would be of no advantage to you. (We can talk more about this and what it meant to those at the time it was written and whom it was written to. It was definitely not written with the view of a hierarchical church organization, with several layers descending as it were from God and through several human layers then to those. The only word of accountability in this passage is of those construed as leaders and they are the ones who are accountable to God in that context, not others accountable to them.
I Pet 4:5 - But they will have to give account to him who is ready to judge the living and the dead.
Accountability is given to God and God alone. The minute to begin to add layers of human hierarchy and authority then you deny the priesthood of all believers and you create an ultimate authority in that chain, whether it's a denomination head, a pope, even a board and they are no longer accountable to anyone. The claim is that they're accountable to God. You just have to take their word for it and even if they are sincere and humble in that charge, in the end, you have made the body of Christ in that regard, passive, submissive and out of the loop of discernment. Look at the Council of Jerusalem in Acts 15. The decisions were not deferred to the apostles (and who would be closer to the authority of Christ in that day and age?)> The assembly made the decision as the body of Christ with Christ as the head.
It's amazingly ironic to me to hear churches in the protestant tradition today making the argument for hierarchy and human layers of authority. That's precisely one of the strong arguments made by the Catholic Church at the time as to why Protestants should not leave the church because they would lose that accountability and covering, and if you look at it now, they were right at least in terms of the divisions, factions, schisms created, but the irony is that so many of them have those elements of "accountability" and "leadership" and again, we have 33,000 denominations with so many doctrines and beliefs spread across the spectrum. It hasn't worked all that well has it? That's what happens, in my opinion, when we emasculate (and yes I'm using that word) the majority of those within the body of Christ and rely upon human structures without the moving and working of the Spirit within the body as a whole. Hierarchy is more efficient. Hierarchy is more orderly, humanly speaking. It operates and can continue operating however long after the last vestige of any real presence and work of the Holy Spirit is gone. The power of Christ to demonstrate Love, Unity (not always unanimity) and patience working through things, even when it is messy (and it can be) (see the Jerusalem Council again and the church at Corinth) is displayed when the body works as a whole in a manner counter to human wisdom. If you want sterile order and shallow relationships, you can get that at the Kiwanis Club, but that's not the picture painted in scriptures of all of us as members of the body, functioning together, under the headship of Christ.
I'm not being facetious with this next statement. If we want covering, hierarchy and authority then we should simply leave Protestantism and return to the Catholic Church. Many, even prominent protestant theologians have done just that. The man who taught me the most in my undergraduate education at Oral Roberts University did that as well and there's been a strong movement that way from those who look at what the protestant church as a whole has become and frankly, if I were convinced that the reason the protestant movement as a whole has become what it is now in many regards I would do the same. The reality is that that structure is still present in most protestant churches; there are just different people in similar positions within Human hierarchy.
We can discuss this more and speak about what I think a NT picture of leadership and submission looked like in the first 300 years of the Church before it took on a different model.
blessings,
bart (and merry christmas!)