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'The Brethren'

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This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can usually download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1879 edition. ...them he was rebuked and warned not to repeat the like again as it was out of order; "your place is to speak to the people not to preach to them." Our spiritual instincts, we well remember, were greatly offended with this decision, and we felt that it was the kirk session that was out of order and not the young man. "The question is not," says Mr. Darby, " whether all laymen are individually qualified; but, whether as laymen they are disqualified, unless they are what is commonly called ordained.... But I confine myself to a simple question--the assertion that laymen ought not to preach without episcopal or other analogous appointment. My assertion is, that they are entitled; that they did so in scripture--were justified in doing so, God blessing them therein; and that the principles of scripture require it, assuming, of course, here, that they are qualified of God; for the question is not competency to act, but title to act if competent. "Let us see what scripture says upon the subject. The question can only arise as to their speaking in the church or out of the church. This admitted, all anomalous cases will readily be agreed in. And first, in the church. And here I remark that the directions in 1 Corinthians xiv. are entirely inconsistent with the necessity of ordination to speak. There is a line drawn there, but it is not 'if ordained or unordained.' 'Let your women keep silence in the churches'--a direction which never could have had place, were the speaking confined to a definitely ordained person, but takes quite another ground; and which implies directly, not that it is right for every man to speak, but that there was preclusion of none because of their character as laymen. Women were the precluded...

46 pages, Paperback

First published February 19, 2015

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About the author

Andrew Miller

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Andrew Miller is a freelance journalist and writer from Columbus, OH who has recently had creative work published in CCM's 2015 Compendium, Ohio Edit, Two Dollar Radio's "Frequencies Vol. 3", The Seldom Review, CCC's "Across Town", and Q&Q.

He's also written reviews and interviews for Electric Literature and Fruita Pulp, as well as journalistic pieces for The Columbus Dispatch family of newspapers, trade magazines, and IGI academic publishing.

His first full-length book of essays, If Only the Names Were Changed, is now available through Civil Coping Mechanisms (2016). His first collection of poetry "You Must Know This" Digitalocracy Analogs (2016) is also now available via Amazon and directly through the author at:
http://andrew-miller.com/blog/purchas...

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