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Churchianity: Satan's Greatest Triumph and the Church's Greatest Failure
Churchianity: Satan's Greatest Triumph and the Church's Greatest Failure
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Author Ronald Seaman is writing Churchianity as a solemn and compelling critique of the organized Christian Church. He highlights and explains the primary cause of most of the spiritual apathy which have characterized local churches since the Fourth Century. The root cause involves a fundamental change in church pastoral ministry which the author believes has produced disastrous spiritual results through the centuries.
The author portrays the young Christian Church in its first three centuries as prospering spiritually in spite of severe persecution. These early believers met informally in homes as to nurture and disciple each other, and enthusiastically evangelized everyone they met.
Understandably, Satan was not happy. To frustrate and checkmate this spiritual vitality, the Devil devised a clever strategy. He took advantage of church leaders' willful disobedience of Biblical teaching.
Read Churchianity and become acquainted with Satan's strategy and its success in transforming the vigor and enthusiasm of the Early Christian into the tragedy and sadness of "spectator Christianity", and consider and evaluate the author’s solution for restoring lay biblical pastoral ministry in local churches.
The author portrays the young Christian Church in its first three centuries as prospering spiritually in spite of severe persecution. These early believers met informally in homes as to nurture and disciple each other, and enthusiastically evangelized everyone they met.
Understandably, Satan was not happy. To frustrate and checkmate this spiritual vitality, the Devil devised a clever strategy. He took advantage of church leaders' willful disobedience of Biblical teaching.
Read Churchianity and become acquainted with Satan's strategy and its success in transforming the vigor and enthusiasm of the Early Christian into the tragedy and sadness of "spectator Christianity", and consider and evaluate the author’s solution for restoring lay biblical pastoral ministry in local churches.
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