The War of Authority

The General Message of the Lecture
The lecture addresses the danger of the war of authority within church ministry, and how authority can turn from a means of pastoral care and edification into a tool of pressure and division when driven by self-centeredness or love of control. It emphasizes that the essence of church leadership is fatherhood and guidance, not domination, and that authority is given for service, not for personal dignity.
Lecture Summary
- The war of authority is one of the battles faced by the shepherd, and it is closely linked to the war of the self and the sense of entitlement and dominance.
- Domination appears in many forms: excessive commands and prohibitions, unbalanced punishments, or imposing control instead of supervision.
- The wrong use of authority causes confusion, inner wounds, and division within the Church, and its effects may extend to homes and ministries.
- Threats, punishment, and pressure do not create true obedience, but rather an outward obedience without inner respect or reverence.
- There is a clear difference between the priest who guides and convinces, thus winning the respect of hearts, and the one who dominates, taking obedience without love.
- Church authority is not a goal in itself, but a responsibility used only to the extent that it serves pastoral care, not for self-glorification or eliminating others.
- Christian obedience is not blind, but “in the Lord,” and it is balanced by another commandment: “Fathers, do not provoke your children.”
- The success of ministry and church establishment is connected to giving people freedom of movement with wise guidance, not with excessive control.
- When a priest loses the spirit of fatherhood because of domination, he turns into a harsh administrator, and true fatherhood—the essence of his service—is lost.
- Authority mixed with anger and threats causes humiliation and deep wounds, and may lead some to withdraw from service or even from the Church.
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