67: Why So Many Churches?: The Unity Jesus Prayed For – Part 1

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Before denominations, councils, or creeds, there was the simple, Spirit-filled community of Acts 2. In this first episode, we explore how the early church lived out its faith—with shared meals, apostolic teaching, and sacrificial love. We also look at how false teaching quickly challenged that model and forced the church to define truth, a struggle that still shapes Christianity today. Read: https://ready4eternity.com/why-so-many-churches-the-unity-jesus-prayed-for-part-1/ ▬ Website & Social Media ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ ► Website: https://www.ready4eternity.com ► Twitter: https://twitter.com/Ready4Eternity ► Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ready4eternity

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68: Why So Many Churches?: Truth Comes Under Attack – Part 2

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Welcome to the Ready for Eternity podcast, a podcast and blog dedicated to inquisitive
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Bible students exploring Biblical truths that might not be fully explored in typical sermons or Bible studies.
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My name is Eddie Lawrence. Have you ever wondered how there could be one
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Bible, but so many different denominations? This is the first episode in a new series that investigates the origins of Christian denominations.
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Why do thousands of Christian denominations exist when Jesus started only one church?
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Jesus prayed for unity among his followers. In John 17, he asked his
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Father that all the believers may be one. He wanted this unity to convince the world of his divine mission.
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Yet today, Christianity fragments into countless denominations. This division confuses outsiders and weakens our witness.
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Instead of showing the world a united body so that the world may believe, we've often displayed the opposite.
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Some people reject faith entirely because Christians can't agree among themselves.
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So what went wrong? The answer lies in church history, and it starts earlier than you might think.
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Dominoes started to fall in the earliest days of the church, which have influenced the formation of the modern denominations.
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The early church in Jerusalem shows us what Jesus had in mind.
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Acts 2, verses 42 -47 describes believers who shared everything.
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They devoted themselves to teaching, fellowship, breaking bread, and prayer.
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They weren't about impressive buildings, polished programs, or trendy gimmicks.
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They were just ordinary believers practicing extraordinary love. The result?
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The Lord added to their number daily those who were being saved, according to verse 47.
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Their unity and love attracted outsiders to faith. Imagine such a church in your community.
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Would neighbors see something so compelling they'd want to be a part of it?
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The early church succeeded because it embodied Jesus' prayer for unity.
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But this beautiful simplicity faced immediate challenges.
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Christianity began as a Jewish movement, not a rival religion to Judaism.
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It fulfilled and continued the faith of God's people under a new covenant.
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All early believers were Jews who saw Jesus as their Messiah. As a result,
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Roman authorities classified Christians as a Jewish sect. This classification mattered.
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Jews enjoyed special religious privileges under Roman rule. They didn't have to worship
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Caesar or Roman gods. Rome granted this exemption to prevent
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Jewish rebellions, and as long as Christians appeared to be a sect of Judaism, they shared this protection.
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But everything changed when Gentiles joined the church in large numbers.
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Romans began viewing Christianity as a separate religion, and this new status brought danger.
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Christians lost their religious exemption and faced suspicion from authorities, and the accusations came quickly.
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Romans called Christians atheists because they worshipped one invisible god.
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They labeled them as incestuous because believers called each other brother and sister.
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And they claimed Christians were cannibals because of communion language about eating
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Christ's body and drinking his blood. Although most of the persecution the early church endured came from the
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Jewish religious authorities, their persecutors were not exclusively
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Jewish. Nero blamed Christians for Rome's great fire.
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The historian Tacitus called them haters of mankind who were guilty of abominations.
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Justo Gonzales in his book on church history gives some insight as to why
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Tacitus perceived Christians this way. Tacitus believed the rumors and thought that Christians hated humankind.
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This last charge makes sense if one remembers that all social activities—the theater, the army, classic literature, sports—were so entwined with pagan worship that Christians often felt the need to abstain from them.
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Therefore, to the eyes of a Roman such as Tacitus, who loved his culture and society,
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Christians appeared as haters of humankind. Persecution should have destroyed the church.
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Instead, it produced explosive growth. Why? Suffering separates committed believers from casual ones.
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The weak and insincere Christians fall away when persecution comes. Only those who are truly committed to Jesus will remain faithful, and their strong faith endures and attracts others.
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Persecuted Christians care more about eternal rewards than earthly comfort. Their willingness to suffer and even die for their beliefs impresses onlookers.
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People reason that Christians must possess something very special—something that's worth dying for.
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The early church's structure was beautifully simple. Apostles provided leadership, but no complex hierarchy existed.
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When believers truly loved each other, they needed minimal organization. The community solved problems through mutual care.
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Conflicts resolved through humble service. Resources flowed naturally to those in need.
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However, this simplicity couldn't last forever. As the church grew and spread, challenges multiplied.
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External persecution, tested resolve, and internal false teaching threatened truth.
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The church's response to these challenges shaped everything that followed. Leaders developed systems to preserve apostolic teaching and maintain order.
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Churches under persecution often grow faster than comfortable ones. Hardship clarifies priorities and strengthens resolve.
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As cultural pressure increases here in the West, we'll also see similar purification and growth.
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But even in Acts, we see hints of coming struggles. The apostles addressed conflicts over food distribution in Acts chapter 6, and Paul confronted
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Peter about Jewish and Gentile relations in Galatians chapter 2. Early letters warn against false teachers and divisive behavior.
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These weren't fatal flaws, but growing pains. Every movement faces similar challenges.
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The question becomes, how do we respond? The early church's responses, both wise and flawed, planted seeds that would eventually bloom into denominational differences.
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Their decisions about leadership, doctrine, and practice echo through history.
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The early church teaches us several crucial lessons. First, unity requires intentional effort.
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It doesn't happen automatically. Believers must choose to put others first and work through differences.
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Second, external pressure can strengthen faith. Persecution reveals who truly believes and who merely shows up.
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Comfortable Christianity produces weak Christianity. Third, simple structures work best when love prevails.
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Complex organizations in the church become necessary when love fails.
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The more we truly care for each other, the less we need rules and hierarchies.
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Fourth, false teaching appears early and often. Every generation faces deception.
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We must stay rooted in Scripture and committed to apostolic truth.
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And finally, our witness depends on our unity. Jesus said,
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By this everyone will know that you are my disciples, if you love one another.
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John 13, 35 Division undermines evangelism.
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Understanding early church history helps us appreciate both our heritage and our failures. Those first believers weren't perfect.
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They made mistakes that contributed to later division. But they also demonstrated what's possible when believers truly live as one body.
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Their example challenges us to pursue the unity Jesus prayed for. The next chapter of church history reveals how external pressures and internal conflicts gradually shape the structures we inherit today.
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Those developments explain much about our current denominational landscape. For now, let's remember that before we had denominations, we had devotion.
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Before we had institutions, we had relationships. And before we had church programs, we had people who genuinely loved each other.
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That's the church Jesus prayed for. And that's the church the world needs to see.
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Thanks for listening to the podcast. We hope this episode has deepened your understanding of Scripture.
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If you found this content valuable, please share it with your friends. For more biblical studies, visit our website at readyforeternity .com.
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That's the word ready, the number four, and the word eternity. Be sure and leave a comment on the
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Ready for Eternity Facebook page or reach out on Twitter. That's all for now. Keep studying your
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Bible, growing closer to God, and getting ready for eternity. See you next time.