Looking for the New Testament Church Today. December 8 Spiritual Liberation Series, #61
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- FormatePub
- ISBN8230920298
- EAN9798230920298
- Date de parution25/07/2025
- Protection num.pas de protection
- Infos supplémentairesepub
- ÉditeurIndependently Published
Résumé
"Looking for the New Testament Church Today" is a bold, heartfelt call to rediscover the original essence of the church as seen in the Book of Acts. With deep reflection and scriptural insight, Kwame Y Ampofo traces the historical drift from the Spirit-led, Christ-centered apostolic movement to today's personality-driven institutions. The early church was marked by shared leadership, intimate community, radical discipleship, and a focus on Jesus alone-not titles, buildings, or empires.
But through centuries-from the post-apostolic era through Constantine's imperial endorsement, the medieval papacy, the Protestant Reformation, Pentecostal revivals, and modern charismatic megachurches-the church increasingly drifted toward hierarchy, branding, and performance. Ampofo identifies key signs of this drift: the rise of the "man of God" syndrome, where one leader replaces the functioning body; the fear-based systems that trap believers in silence; and the loss of true fellowship and spiritual gifts.
He invites readers to re-examine the biblical blueprint-plural leadership, participatory gatherings, discipleship, Spirit-sensitivity, and missional living. He argues that revival won't come by singing louder in broken systems, but by letting go of the counterfeit and courageously returning to the simplicity and power of the early church. The book closes with a vision of the radiant bride Christ is coming for-a church with no need for platforms or personalities, but filled with love, truth, humility, and power.
Interwoven with personal testimony and poetic reflection, this is not just a critique but a compassionate plea to return to Jesus, follow His Spirit, and be the church again.
But through centuries-from the post-apostolic era through Constantine's imperial endorsement, the medieval papacy, the Protestant Reformation, Pentecostal revivals, and modern charismatic megachurches-the church increasingly drifted toward hierarchy, branding, and performance. Ampofo identifies key signs of this drift: the rise of the "man of God" syndrome, where one leader replaces the functioning body; the fear-based systems that trap believers in silence; and the loss of true fellowship and spiritual gifts.
He invites readers to re-examine the biblical blueprint-plural leadership, participatory gatherings, discipleship, Spirit-sensitivity, and missional living. He argues that revival won't come by singing louder in broken systems, but by letting go of the counterfeit and courageously returning to the simplicity and power of the early church. The book closes with a vision of the radiant bride Christ is coming for-a church with no need for platforms or personalities, but filled with love, truth, humility, and power.
Interwoven with personal testimony and poetic reflection, this is not just a critique but a compassionate plea to return to Jesus, follow His Spirit, and be the church again.






















