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Description: The Diffusion of Ecclesiastical Authority explores the
leadership of the church in Acts from a sociological perspective.
Two primary models emerge from a sociologically informed
investigation of first-century Greco-Roman and Jewish religious
leadership: ""manager-leader"" and ""innovator-leader."" An
examination of seven passages in Acts reveals that the leaders of
the early church, although initially conforming to cultural
expectations, are best described as innovator-leaders whose
counter-cultural actions resulted in the empowerment of new leaders
and the advancement of the gospel. Through the use of fictive
kinship language, the voluntary sharing of authority, the fostering
of a sense of mutual dependence on God as the common patron, and
the redefinition of what is honorable, the leaders in Acts
consistently enabled others to share authority in the church. About
the Contributor(s): Darin H. Land is an adjunct professor at Fuller
Theological Seminary. He lives with his wife in Alhambra,
California.
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