What is the church actually for? Not the building. Not the Sunday service. The real thing God had in mind when He first promised to build His church, and said the gates of hell would never prevail against it. In Living the Purpose of the Church, Bishop Osei Tweneboah Koduah returns readers to the blueprint the earliest believers left behind in the book of Acts: fellowship, discipleship, ministry, evangelism, and worship, five heartbeats of one living body, never meant to function as separate programs competing for a congregation's limited time.
Drawing on decades of pastoral ministry across two continents, Bishop Koduah walks through each purpose with the kind of honesty found only in years of shepherding real people through real seasons of joy and difficulty. Through the stories of ordinary believers like Deacon Yaw, Sister Comfort, and the Sarpong family, this book turns five biblical purposes into something readers can recognize in their own Home Cells, their own workplaces, and their own ordinary Tuesday afternoons.
Each chapter unpacks what Scripture actually says, how the early church lived it out, and what it looks like to practically apply it today, complete with reflection questions and a prayer activation to help individual readers, families, and Home Cells put every purpose into practice. Inside, you will discover? Why the early church's explosive growth had nothing to do with buildings, budgets, or platforms? How to move fellowship beyond handshakes and small talk into authentic, costly community? What separates a convert from a growing, maturing disciple, and how grace, not willpower, gets you there? Why every believer, not only pastors, is called to ministry, and how to serve from wholeness rather than woundedness? How to share your faith authentically, even without a title or seminary training? What it means to worship God with your whole life, not only your Sunday mornings? A simple health check to discover which purpose your own life or church may be neglecting "They are five heartbeats of one living Body."
What is the church actually for? Not the building. Not the Sunday service. The real thing God had in mind when He first promised to build His church, and said the gates of hell would never prevail against it. In Living the Purpose of the Church, Bishop Osei Tweneboah Koduah returns readers to the blueprint the earliest believers left behind in the book of Acts: fellowship, discipleship, ministry, evangelism, and worship, five heartbeats of one living body, never meant to function as separate programs competing for a congregation's limited time.
Drawing on decades of pastoral ministry across two continents, Bishop Koduah walks through each purpose with the kind of honesty found only in years of shepherding real people through real seasons of joy and difficulty. Through the stories of ordinary believers like Deacon Yaw, Sister Comfort, and the Sarpong family, this book turns five biblical purposes into something readers can recognize in their own Home Cells, their own workplaces, and their own ordinary Tuesday afternoons.
Each chapter unpacks what Scripture actually says, how the early church lived it out, and what it looks like to practically apply it today, complete with reflection questions and a prayer activation to help individual readers, families, and Home Cells put every purpose into practice. Inside, you will discover? Why the early church's explosive growth had nothing to do with buildings, budgets, or platforms? How to move fellowship beyond handshakes and small talk into authentic, costly community? What separates a convert from a growing, maturing disciple, and how grace, not willpower, gets you there? Why every believer, not only pastors, is called to ministry, and how to serve from wholeness rather than woundedness? How to share your faith authentically, even without a title or seminary training? What it means to worship God with your whole life, not only your Sunday mornings? A simple health check to discover which purpose your own life or church may be neglecting "They are five heartbeats of one living Body."