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The Spirit Distributed, Not Centralized
If ekklesia is more than a word… what does it actually look like when it comes alive?
In Episode I, we rediscovered the word Jesus used — a people called out and gathered under His lordship. But a question remained: How did that reality function in everyday life?
In this episode, we move from language to lived experience.
Walking carefully through key texts like 1 Corinthians 14, Romans 12, and the shared life of Acts 2 and 4, we explore a striking pattern: when believers gathered under Christ’s headship, participation was assumed. Not performance. Not spectatorship. Shared life.
We slow down to examine the word diakonos — ministry — and confront a modern reversal where ministry often creates the gathering instead of flowing from it. Scripture paints a different picture: the Spirit did not empower an institution; He indwelt a people. Gifts were distributed. Service was mutual. Leadership existed within the body — not above it.
You’ll hear:
This is not a call to dismantle everything.
It’s an invitation to notice… and to begin again with small, faithful steps toward shared life.
Because Christian community is not sustained by meetings alone —
it is sustained by presence, participation, and love embodied in ordinary relationships.
And as we close, a deeper question emerges:
Why does this way of life feel so deeply human… and its absence so costly?
That’s where we’re heading next.
👉 Next Episode: Designed This Way — Why the Ekklesia Fits the Human Soul
Because the truth matters… and so do you.
Send us a text
Support the show
By Roland AlbertusThe Spirit Distributed, Not Centralized
If ekklesia is more than a word… what does it actually look like when it comes alive?
In Episode I, we rediscovered the word Jesus used — a people called out and gathered under His lordship. But a question remained: How did that reality function in everyday life?
In this episode, we move from language to lived experience.
Walking carefully through key texts like 1 Corinthians 14, Romans 12, and the shared life of Acts 2 and 4, we explore a striking pattern: when believers gathered under Christ’s headship, participation was assumed. Not performance. Not spectatorship. Shared life.
We slow down to examine the word diakonos — ministry — and confront a modern reversal where ministry often creates the gathering instead of flowing from it. Scripture paints a different picture: the Spirit did not empower an institution; He indwelt a people. Gifts were distributed. Service was mutual. Leadership existed within the body — not above it.
You’ll hear:
This is not a call to dismantle everything.
It’s an invitation to notice… and to begin again with small, faithful steps toward shared life.
Because Christian community is not sustained by meetings alone —
it is sustained by presence, participation, and love embodied in ordinary relationships.
And as we close, a deeper question emerges:
Why does this way of life feel so deeply human… and its absence so costly?
That’s where we’re heading next.
👉 Next Episode: Designed This Way — Why the Ekklesia Fits the Human Soul
Because the truth matters… and so do you.
Send us a text
Support the show