DECEITFUL Desires: Why the OLD MAN Must Be Seen to Be PUT OFF

Introduction

For years, I lived as a sincere believer—attending worship gatherings, serving in ministry, speaking the language of faith—but something resisted the life of Christ in me. I blamed external attacks, spiritual warfare, or circumstances. The real culprit, I later discovered, was far closer: the old man within, decaying and deceptive, masquerading as my own voice.

The moment the Holy Spirit exposed this, I was lost for words. It was humiliating, silencing, and utterly freeing. What I had treated as an outside enemy was an internal corruption, stinking and rotting from within. Only then did Ephesians 4:22 cease to be a verse I quoted and become a reality I lived.

Paul writes:

“…that you put off, concerning your former conduct, the old man which grows corrupt according to the deceitful lusts…” (Eph 4:22, NKJV).

Most teaching treats this as a call to moral improvement—try harder, resist temptation, manage sin. Paul offers something far more serious: an ontological diagnosis. The old self is not merely sinful; it is actively decomposing, driven by desires whose very source is deception. Until we see this corruption for what it is, we cannot truly put it off.

This article traces that verse from its Greek depth to its lived cost, from personal awakening to the church’s blind spots. It is written for every believer who senses a lingering resistance, and for every teacher who wants doctrine that actually saves.

1. The Greek Diagnosis

The Greek text is precise and unflinching:

τὸν παλαιὸν ἄνθρωπον τὸν φθειρόμενον κατὰ τὰς ἐπιθυμίας τῆς ἀπάτης –                ton palaión ánthrōpon ton phtheirómenon katà tàs epithymías tês apátēs

Literally:

“the old man, the one being corrupted/decaying according to the desires of deceit.”

Three terms demand attention.

First, φθειρόμενον phtheirómenon— a present middle/passive participle from φθείρω –phtheiró. This is not static corruption but ongoing, progressive decay. The same root appears in 1 Corinthians 15:42 (“sown in corruption”) and Galatians 6:8 (“reap corruption”). Paul does not picture a bad person who needs reform; he pictures something organically rotting from within—alive in appearance, dead in essence.

Second, ἐπιθυμίαςepithymías— desires or lusts. In Greek, ἐπιθυμία- epithymía is morally neutral; it simply means strong craving. Its ethical direction is supplied by the next phrase. Paul is not limiting this to sexual lust. It includes every hunger for autonomy, recognition, control, or identity apart from Christ.

Third, τῆς ἀπάτηςtēs apátēs— “of deceit” or “of deception.” The structure binds it all together: the old man decays according to (κατά -kata) these desires of deceit (τῆς ἀπάτης). The genitive is crucial: the desires are not merely deceitful; they are born of deception. Ἀπάτη apátē carries the sense of seduction by false promise—bait in a trap, an illusion masquerading as life. The lust itself is already deceived.

Deception produces desire; desire drives decay. The old self is not merely flawed—it is programmed for self-destruction. Scripture elsewhere exposes this inner sequence with brutal clarity: “Every man is tempted, when he is drawn away of his own lust, and enticed. Then when lust hath conceived, it bringeth forth sin: and sin, when it is finished, bringeth forth death” (James 1:14–15).

Paul’s description in Ephesians is not a sudden collapse but a process—a downward momentum governed from within, moving relentlessly from deception to desire, from desire to corruption, and finally to death. He immediately contrasts this with the new man: “created according to God, in true righteousness and holiness” (v.24). Deceit fragments; truth integrates. The stakes are not merely behavioral—they are existential.

2. The Lived Deception

I wish someone had taught me this at the beginning. Instead, I learned it late—after years of worship sessions, Bible studies, and what I now call “Sunday Christianity.” The flesh remained unnamed, and therefore powerful.

When the Spirit finally exposed it, the realization was devastating. The resistance I felt was not primarily demonic oppression or external temptation. It was my own corruption stinking within me—the old man convincing me that its voice was mine, its desires were natural, its accusations were true.

I had mistaken the flesh for self-protection, religious zeal, even spiritual sensitivity. It borrowed Christian language fluently. Only when the light entered the inward parts (Ps 51:6) did I see it clearly: a corpse still trying to rule.

This delay was not divine negligence but mercy. Had the Lord shown me this earlier—before my identity in Christ had substance, before grace was more than theory—it might have crushed me. He waited until the new man could bear the sight of the old. Then He spoke, gently but clearly: “This is what you are carrying—and it is not you.”

The moment I saw it, its authority broke. Exposure, not effort, disarmed it.

3. Pauline Mechanics of Flesh and Freedom

Paul never treats the old man as annihilated at conversion. He treats it as dethroned.

In Romans 6:6, “our old man was crucified with Him, that the body of sin might be rendered inoperative (καταργηθῇ –katargēthēi).” Καταργέω Katargeō does not mean destroyed but stripped of authority—made ineffective. Sin is cut off from its root, yet it lingers like a decaying body: it can contaminate, defile, deceive the senses, even attract scavengers—but it cannot reign.

That is why Paul warns, “Do not let sin reign…” (Rom 6:12). You do not negotiate with a deposed king.

Yet the decay still operates as a “law in the members” (Rom 7:23)—an ingrained reflex attempting captivity. Its poison is accusation and deception: first it entices with false promise (ἐπιθυμία τῆς ἀπάτης – epithymía tês apátēs), then it bites through the body, then it paralyzes with condemnation (“See? You’re still the old man”).

The antidote is not suppression but recognition and renewal. Paul calls believers to:

  • Spirit-led circumcision of the heart: cutting away the body of the flesh (Col 2:11).
  • Washing by the Word: cleansing thought-patterns and reframing desire (Eph 5:26).
  • Walking by the Spirit: resisting the lusts of the flesh (Gal 5:16).
  • Sanctification by the Spirit: living in true holiness (1 Thess 4:3–4).

Sexual sin receives unique urgency (“flee fornication,” 1 Cor 6:18) because it forges soul-level bonds and re-animates the memory of the old man. It does not resurrect the corpse, but it puts perfume on decay and calls it life.

Victory, for Paul, is not wrestling darkness but exposing it. Light reveals; the rot loses its voice.

4. The Church’s Blind Spot

Much modern teaching treats lust as moral weakness or lack of discipline. Paul treats it as desire engineered by deception.

We are often trained in atmosphere, activity, and emotional language, but not in discernment of the inner man. When resistance appears, we default to “the devil” or “external attack.” Rarely are we taught Paul’s honesty: “Nothing good dwells in me, that is, in my flesh” (Rom 7:18).

The result is a subtle self-deception: sincere profession without inner transformation. People learn to feel right with God, sound right with God, appear right with God—while quietly resisting truth that would save them from themselves.

Sound doctrine is resisted when it becomes “demanding.” It is dismissed as harsh, legalistic, or unloving. Yet healthy (ὑγιαίνουσα –hygiaínousa) teaching is the opposite of corrupting (φθειρόμενον-ptheirómenon). Excitement is mistaken for the Spirit; conviction is mislabeled as bondage.

Jesus faced the same response: “This is a hard saying; who can hear it?” (John 6:60). Many walked away. He did not soften the word.

5. Discerning Conviction from Legalism

Spirit-led conviction and dead legalism can feel similar at first glance. Here is how to tell them apart:

|                              Spirit-Led Conviction                  |              Dead Legalism            |

| Focus            | Heart, motives, identity           | Behavior, rules, appearances  |

| Effect on soul   | Peace + empowerment to obey    | Guilt + oppression, never “good enough”   |

| Source    | Holy Spirit through Scripture  | Human tradition, pride, or fear  |

| Goal        | Freedom, Christlikeness, life      | Control, self-justification, conformity     |

| Fruit      | Humility, repentance, renewal     | Judgment of others, hypocrisy, exhaustion      |

True conviction exposes internal corruption so the old man can be stripped off. Legalism punishes the old man superficially and feeds self-deception.

6. Doctrine That Actually Saves

Paul told Timothy:

“Take heed to yourself and to the doctrine. Continue in them, for in doing this you will save both yourself and those who hear you” (1 Tim 4:16).

Timothy was already regenerate, called, gifted. Yet Paul says continuing in sound doctrine will “save” him—not from hell, but from deception, corruption, and slow ruin.

Paul feared not heterodoxy but life-draining orthodoxy: truth spoken without transformation, grace proclaimed without surgery. Doctrine that does not rescue people from inward corruption may be correct, but it is not apostolic.

Conclusion

Ephesians 4:22 begins as Greek grammar and ends as self-recognition—and only then does it fulfill its purpose.

We need teachers willing to name the deceitful desires of the flesh, and believers willing to let the Spirit expose them. The process is painful. The old man does not go quietly. But exposure is the path to freedom.

What grace did for one late-awakened believer, it can do for many: cut away the rotting garment, wash the inward parts, and let the new man—created in truth—finally thrive.

The old man is rotting. See it, name it, put it off.

There is life on the other side.

 

From Prayer’s Whisper to Worship’s Roar: Exposing the Spiritual Adultery That’s Gutting God’s House

Penned in the Fire of Holy Discontent

The Temple Tantrum That Still Echoes

Picture it: cords whipping through the air, tables flipping like dominoes, doves scattering in a frenzy of feathers and fury. Jesus didn’t mince words or movements—He stormed the courts with a zeal that scorched the stones: “My house shall be called a house of prayer, but you have made it a den of thieves!” (Matthew 21:13). That wasn’t just a one-off rage against Roman coins clinking in sacred shadows. No, it was a divine gut-punch to anything that twists God’s sanctuary into a marketplace of the soul.

Fast-forward two millennia, and the echo is deafening. We’ve swapped the money-changers for mic-standers, the sacrificial lambs for spotlight solos. What was meant to be a furnace of fervent prayer—a place where broken hearts bleed out before the throne—has morphed into a glossy auditorium of applause. And oh, the grief it stirs. If your spirit hasn’t churned with that same holy anger, lean in closer. Because this isn’t ancient history; it’s the hijacking happening in pews and pixels right now.

The Unholy Swap: When Hearts Stay Uncut

Isaiah nailed the blueprint long before the Messiah’s boots hit Jerusalem’s dust: “For My house shall be called a house of prayer for all nations” (Isaiah 56:7). Prayer. Not performance. Not production values that could rival a Vegas revue. Yet here we are, in an era where the pulpit—once reserved for prophets thundering truth—has become a launchpad for the next big worship “star.” They glide in with golden voices and guitar riffs that tug at heartstrings, but peel back the lyrics, and what do you find? Shallow streams masquerading as rivers of living water. World-loving anthems that wink at compromise. Spirit-grieving vibes that prioritize vibe over verse.

These aren’t the worship leaders of old, like David, who danced with raw abandon before the Ark, his heart circumcised by covenant fire (2 Samuel 6). No, these are the uncircumcised at heart—echoing Jeremiah’s lament of a people whose foreskins of the soul remain intact (Jeremiah 4:4). They grieve the Holy Spirit not with outright rebellion, but with a subtler sin: spiritual fornication. It’s the adultery of the altar, wedding the sacred to the secular for fame’s fleeting kiss. Sound doctrine? That’s the boring uncle at the party, shuffled offstage while the crowd chants choruses that feel good but feed nothing.

And the fruit? Megachurch empires rising like Babel’s ghost—sprawling campuses with coffee bars and conference rooms, where the “ministry” metric is membership rolls, not marked lives. Musicians with marginal theology climb the sacred ladder, building their brand on beats that bypass the brain and the Bible. It’s not worship; it’s a wolf in worship-wear, devouring discernment while the sheep scroll and sway, mistaking motion for momentum, emotion for encounter.

The Grief That Burns: Why This Hits the Spirit Like Salt in a Wound

If you’ve felt that churn in your gut—that prophetic indigestion—know it’s not mere cynicism. It’s the Spirit’s own sorrow, the same that moved Paul to weep over a church chasing “another Jesus, a different spirit, a different gospel” (2 Corinthians 11:4). This isn’t harmless entertainment; it’s a hijack of the holy. When prayer closets gather dust while praise teams rehearse for prime time, we’re not just diluting doctrine—we’re dethroning the Divine. The house of prayer becomes a house of worship in the worst sense: self-soaked, star-struck, starved of the substance that sustains.

Consider the casualties: saints sidelined by superficiality, seekers starved by spectacle, and a watching world that mocks the mimicry. “By this all will know that you are My disciples,” Jesus said, “if you have love for one another” (John 13:35). But when our “love” looks like likes and levies for larger lights, what witness remains? The anger rising in you? It’s God’s echo, calling you to reclaim what’s been ravaged. Not with pitchforks, but with prayer that pierces heaven and words that wound the wicked one.

Reclaiming the Courts: A Call to Radical Return

So what now, in this den of diluted devotion? The Savior didn’t stop at the scourging—He rebuilt, teaching daily in the temple courts (Luke 19:47). We must too. Start where the stones still smolder: in your own heart. Carve out corners of unfiltered intercession, where no amp amplifies but the Almighty’s voice alone. Gather the remnant—those famished for the full counsel of God (Acts 20:27)—and let doctrine be your drumbeat, not distraction.

To the platform-peddlers: repent. Step down from the stolen stage and into the secret place. Let your skills serve the Savior, not spotlight your story. To the silent sufferers: rise. Your voice, laced with that Spirit-stirred ire, is the whip-crack the church needs. Write it, preach it, pray it—turn the tables on this temple treason.

Because here’s the promise amid the pandemonium: “The effective, fervent prayer of a righteous man avails much” (James 5:16). One house of prayer can ignite a holy fire that consumes the counterfeit. And when it does? Nations will flood the courts, not for the show, but for the Shekinah glory that shatters chains.

Let the anger forge altars, not arsenals. Let the grief birth glory. God’s house will be a house of prayer—starting with yours.

If this stirs your soul, share it. The remnant is rising, one reclaimed court at a time.

 

Biblical Deep Dives: “The Power of Sound Doctrine”

The Bible doesn’t mince words: sound doctrine isn’t optional—it’s life. Paul tells Timothy, “If you instruct the brothers in these things, you will be a good servant of Christ Jesus, nourished by the words of the faith and of the good doctrine” (1 Timothy 4:6). Again, he urges, “Pay attention to yourself and to the doctrine… for by doing so you will save both yourself and those who hear you” (1 Timothy 4:16). Why such urgency? Because what you believe shapes who you become.

Scripture is packed with this truth. Titus 1:9 calls us to hold firm to trustworthy teaching. Hebrews 13:9 warns, “Be not carried about with diverse and strange doctrines.” Why? A heart established in grace—God’s unmerited favor—needs a foundation that doesn’t shift. Sound doctrine, powered by the Spirit, does that. It’s not dry rules; it’s the living truth that frees us from sin’s grip (Romans 6:17-18). When we obey “that form of doctrine” from the heart, we’re made servants of righteousness, not slaves to chaos.

Step off that path, and the stakes climb. First Timothy 4:1 predicts a time when some “depart from the faith, giving heed to seducing spirits and doctrines of devils.” Sound familiar? We’re there—false prophets rising, ears turning from truth (2 Timothy 4:3-4). But here’s the hope: the engrafted word can still save souls (James 1:21). That’s why I write—to call us back to what’s solid. Dig into these verses with me. Your soul’s worth it.

Signs of a TRUE APOSTLE According to the Bible

Introduction: Unveiling True Apostleship in a Conflicted Age

In an era where the title “apostle” adorns countless ministers—pastors, prophets, and gospel workers alike—the biblical essence of apostleship risks dilution. This proliferation prompts a vital question: what distinguishes a true Apostle according to Scripture? Far from a self-appointed badge of honor, apostleship in the Bible is a sacred, divinely ordained role, marked by distinct qualifications that anchor the Church’s foundation.

False claims to this office can mislead believers, distort the gospel, and fracture Christian unity. Yet, rather than merely decrying such trends, we are called to discern with wisdom—honoring the authentic while guarding against deception. True apostles, as revealed in the New Testament, were Christ’s chosen emissaries, tasked with proclaiming His resurrection, wielding divine power, and forging the early Church through sacrifice and truth.

This study explores the biblical signs of genuine apostleship, from divine commissioning to Christ-like living. By grasping these hallmarks, we not only uncover the profound legacy of the apostles but also equip ourselves to evaluate spiritual leadership today with clarity and grace. Let us journey into Scripture to rediscover what it means to be a true Apostle—and how that truth resonates in our time.

Chapter 1: Called by Christ Alone

Summary: A true Apostle is directly commissioned by Jesus, not self-appointed.

The heartbeat of apostleship begins with a voice—Christ’s voice. Mark 3:13-14 reveals Jesus ascending a mountain, calling those He desired, and appointing twelve to be His apostles. This divine selection, not human ambition, defines their role. Paul, too, underscores this in Galatians 1:1: “not from men nor through man, but through Jesus Christ and God the Father.” His dramatic encounter on the Damascus road (Acts 9:3-6, 15) seals his calling as an instrument to the Gentiles, proving that apostleship transcends the original Twelve but never escapes Christ’s direct summons.

These encounters—whether by a Galilean shore or a blinding light—carry authority from the risen Lord. Apostles are not volunteers; they are conscripts of grace, sent with His mandate to preach, heal, and build. In a world of self-made titles, their commissioning stands as a clarion call: true authority flows from Christ alone.

Profound Takeaway: Authority flows from Christ’s voice, not human ambition—a whisper that reshapes destinies.

Chapter 2: Witnesses of the Risen Lord

Summary: Apostles saw the resurrected Christ, grounding their testimony.

From calling, we turn to seeing. A true Apostle bears witness to the resurrection, the cornerstone of the gospel. Acts 1:21-22 sets this as a criterion for replacing Judas: one who walked with Jesus from baptism to ascension must testify to His rising. Paul, defending his apostleship, cries, “Have I not seen Jesus our Lord?” (1 Corinthians 9:1), pointing to his vision of the risen Christ (Acts 9:3-6).

This eyewitness role is no mere credential; it’s the fire in their bones. The resurrection—Christ’s triumph over death—fuels their preaching, turning fishermen and persecutors into heralds of eternity. Today, we might ask: what validates a leader’s claim if not a transformative encounter with the living Christ?

Profound Takeaway: The resurrection fuels their mission—eyewitnesses of eternity proclaiming life beyond the grave.

Chapter 3: Signs, Wonders, and the Power of God

Summary: Miracles affirm the apostles’ calling and God’s presence.

The apostles’ words were matched by wonders. Paul declares, “The signs of a true Apostle were performed among you with utmost patience, with signs and wonders and mighty works” (2 Corinthians 12:12). Acts 5:12 echoes this: “many signs and wonders were regularly done among the people by the hands of the apostles.” These acts—Peter and John healing a lame man (Acts 3:6-8), Paul casting out a spirit (Acts 16:18), Peter raising Tabitha (Acts 9:36-42), Paul reviving Eutychus (Acts 20:9-12)—were God’s fingerprints, as Hebrews 2:3-4 affirms: “God also bore witness by signs and wonders and various miracles.”

These were not stunts but sermons in action, piercing skepticism and exalting Christ. Wrought amid persecution, they bore witness to a power beyond human reach. Do today’s leaders reflect such divine endorsement, or do they lean on charisma alone? The apostles’ miracles compel us to look for God’s hand in those who claim His mantle.

Profound Takeaway: Divine acts pierce human doubt, exalting Christ through hands stained with patience.

Chapter 4: Heralds of the Gospel

Summary: Apostles preach Christ’s death and resurrection as their core mandate.

From wonders, we turn to the message they served. Jesus commands, “Go into all the world and proclaim the gospel to the whole creation” (Mark 16:15), and at Pentecost, the Spirit empowers this charge (Acts 2:1-4; 1:8). Paul distills it: “Christ died for our sins… was buried… was raised on the third day” (1 Corinthians 15:3-4). The early Church “devoted themselves to the apostles’ teaching” (Acts 2:42), a doctrine of repentance and faith unshaken by rival gospels (Galatians 1:6-9).

This was no abstract theology but a living proclamation, birthed in obedience to Matthew 28:19-20. Apostles were not innovators but stewards of a truth so simple, yet so vast, it demands a lifetime to unpack. Their mandate echoes: the gospel’s clarity is its power.

Profound Takeaway: The gospel’s simplicity is its unshakable depth—a seed that topples empires.

Chapter 5: Architects of the Church

Summary: Apostles lay the Church’s foundation with Christ as cornerstone.

The apostles’ words built more than ideas—they built a people. Ephesians 2:19-20 declares the Church “built on the foundation of the apostles and prophets, Christ Jesus Himself being the cornerstone.” Paul, a “wise master builder” (1 Corinthians 3:10), planted churches across the Roman Empire, appointing elders (Acts 14:23) and guiding them through letters and visits.

Their labor was architectural, not ornamental—establishing communities rooted in Christ’s teachings. From Jerusalem to Corinth, they sowed unity and truth, ensuring the Church stood firm. Their foundation invites us to ask: are we building on their work, or on shifting sand?

Profound Takeaway: Their labor endures as living stones rise, cemented by Christ’s unyielding corner.

Chapter 6: Bearing the Cross of Suffering

Summary: Persecution marks apostles as Christ’s partners in sacrifice.

The apostles’ path was no parade but a crucible. Paul catalogs his scars: “imprisonments, countless beatings, and often near death” (2 Corinthians 11:23-28). Peter and John faced the Sanhedrin’s threats (Acts 4:1-22), rejoicing to suffer for Jesus (Acts 5:41). Paul was stoned (Acts 14:19-20), James beheaded (Acts 12:1-2)—yet they pressed on, sharing Christ’s sufferings (Philippians 3:10).

This was no accident but a seal of authenticity. Suffering stripped away pretense, revealing hearts forged in loyalty to the cross. In a world that flees pain, their endurance whispers: true calling bleeds.

Profound Takeaway: Suffering forges credibility in a broken world—cross-bearers mirroring the Crucified.

Chapter 7: Guardians of Truth

Summary: Apostles teach and defend sound doctrine with authority.

Apostles were not just builders but sentinels. Paul urges Timothy to hold “the pattern of sound words” (2 Timothy 1:13) and leaders to “give instruction in sound doctrine and rebuke those who contradict it” (Titus 1:9). At the Jerusalem Council (Acts 15:1-29), they affirmed grace over legalism; Paul’s letters—rooted in revelation (Galatians 1:11-12)—command obedience (1 Corinthians 14:37). Peter warns of twisting Scripture (2 Peter 3:16), guarding the faith’s purity.

Their authority was not domineering but protective, wielding truth against heresy. Today, their charge persists: stand firm where doctrine bends.

Profound Takeaway: Truth is their sword, unity their shield—watchmen of an eternal deposit.

Chapter 8: Reflections of Christ

Summary: Apostles embody Christ’s holiness and humility.

Beyond words and works, apostles mirrored Christ’s life. Paul beckons, “Be imitators of me” (1 Corinthians 4:16), living so “to live is Christ, and to die is gain” (Philippians 1:21). Jesus washed feet, saying, “Do just as I have done” (John 13:14-15); Paul recalls Christ’s poverty for our riches (2 Corinthians 8:9). To the Thessalonians, they were models in affliction and joy (1 Thessalonians 1:6).

Their holiness was no veneer but a call to follow. In humility and sacrifice, they reflected the One they served, proving faith by footsteps.

Profound Takeaway: Their lives preach louder than words—mirrors of a Savior’s love.

Chapter 9: Unity in the Apostolic Brotherhood

Summary: Apostles collaborate, preserving the Church’s oneness.

Apostles were not lone wolves but a fellowship. Ephesians 4:3-4 urges “the unity of the Spirit”; Paul receives “the right hand of fellowship” from James, Peter, and John (Galatians 2:9). The Jerusalem Council (Acts 15:1-29) models collective discernment; Paul honors Apollos (1 Corinthians 16:12), weaving a tapestry of mutual respect.

This unity amplified their witness, binding diverse gifts into one mission. In our fractured age, their harmony beckons: the Church thrives when hands clasp.

Profound Takeaway: Fellowship amplifies their witness—many voices, one song.

Conclusion: The Apostolic Legacy Today

A true Apostle, Scripture reveals, is:

– Called directly by Christ,

– A witness to the resurrection,

– Marked by signs and wonders,

– A preacher of the gospel,

– A builder of the Church,

– Steadfast in suffering,

– A guardian of truth,

– A reflection of Christ,

– United with fellow apostles.

In a time when “apostle” is claimed freely, these signs are not relics but lanterns—guiding us to discern with wisdom, not judgment. The apostles’ legacy, etched in Scripture, calls us to honor their foundation while testing today’s voices against it. Their lives and teachings remain the Church’s bedrock, urging us to build faithfully.

Reflection Questions:

1. How do your leaders echo the apostles’ marks—by power, truth, or sacrifice?

2. Are you rooted in the apostles’ timeless truth, unshaken by winds of change?

3. How will you uphold the gospel’s purity, a steward of their sacred trust?

By anchoring ourselves in these biblical hallmarks, we ensure the gospel’s flame—lit by Christ, carried by His apostles—burns bright through every generation.

The TEST of TRUE FAITH: Submission, Love, and Obedience to God’s Word

Introduction

In today’s Christian landscape, many believers tend to disregard what might be considered the “little doctrines” of the Bible—instructions that earlier generations revered and obeyed with deep reverence. Practices such as a woman covering her head while praying or prophesying, submitting to her husband, or the idea that it is a shame for a man to have long hair and emulating Christ in everything—even to the extent of loving their wives as Christ loved the church—are often dismissed as outdated or irrelevant. Yet, are these teachings not part of sound doctrine? Does God value them, and why do many believers today set them aside?

These questions are critical because they reveal whether Christians truly walk in submission, love, and obedience to God. The Word of God calls us to be doers, not hearers only, lest we deceive ourselves (James 1:22). This article will explore the significance of these teachings, the reasons they are often disregarded, and their place in a life of faith that honors God.

Are These Instructions Part of Sound Doctrine?

The teachings, such as women covering their heads (1 Corinthians 11:5-6), submitting to their husbands (Ephesians 5:22-24), and the shame of long hair on men (1 Corinthians 11:14), are rooted in Scripture. These instructions were not arbitrary cultural norms but part of the apostolic teachings to the early church. They hold weight because they reflect God’s design and order.

These doctrines often fall under the category of “church order” or “practical outworkings of faith.” They reveal deeper principles: the relationship between Christ and the Church, the roles of men and women, and the acknowledgment of God’s authority in creation.

Additionally, the phrase “because of angels” in 1 Corinthians 11:10 connects the practice of head coverings to the spiritual realm, emphasizing its profound significance beyond human understanding.

“Because of Angels”

Paul’s reference to angels in 1 Corinthians 11:10 underscores the importance of head coverings as a sign of authority. This phrase has profound implications:

  1. Angels as Witnesses: Angels are present during worship and observe the order and reverence displayed by believers. They recognize and respect God’s divine hierarchy, and head coverings symbolize a believer’s acknowledgment of this order.
  2. The Role of Angels in Spiritual Realms: Angels operate within God’s divine order, and any deviation from this order by humans can cause disruption. By maintaining proper signs of authority, believers align themselves with God’s established structure, which angels uphold.
  3. Protection and Submission: Some interpretations suggest that adhering to God’s order, symbolized by head coverings, offers spiritual protection. It demonstrates submission to God’s authority and prevents believers from stepping into realms of spiritual vulnerability.
  4. A Cosmic Testimony: What believers do in worship impacts not only the earthly but also the heavenly realm. Head coverings serve as a visible testimony to the interconnectedness of God’s creation and the acknowledgment of His authority.
  5. Repercussions of Neglecting Angelic Roles: Ignoring the responsibilities of angels in human affairs can have spiritual consequences. Angels are tasked with upholding divine order and protecting believers. Disregarding their role could lead to spiritual isolation, loss of protection, and dishonor in worship. It reflects a lack of reverence for God’s design, potentially disrupting the harmony between earthly and heavenly realms.

This connection to angels reveals that these practices are far from arbitrary; they reflect the profound spiritual realities in which believers participate.

Submission and Christ-like Love as Acts of Faith

The structure of headship and submission outlined in 1 Corinthians 11:3—”the head of every man is Christ, the head of a woman is man, and the head of Christ is God”—is not about domination but divine order. Christ’s submission to the Father, though equal with Him, is the ultimate model for us (Philippians 2:5-8). Submission and headship within marriage reflect this relationship.

For the man: Loving his wife as Christ loved the Church (Ephesians 5:25) requires self-sacrifice. Christ gave everything for His bride, even His life. Similarly, a husband must lead with humility, service, and a Spirit-transformed heart.

For the woman: Submitting to her husband “as unto the Lord” (Ephesians 5:22) is an act of trust and love, both for her husband and for Christ. This submission is not servility but a reflection of God’s wisdom and order.

Both roles demand dying to self, making submission and sacrificial love acts of worship and proof of devotion to Christ. “You cannot say that you love Christ when you can’t love the humans that are in front of you.” Without love and submission in earthly relationships, our profession of faith is hollow.

Trials as Tests of Faith

Trials and testing of our faith are imperative. These tests, often likened to passing through fire, are designed to refine and strengthen us. As Peter writes, “The trial of your faith, being much more precious than gold that perisheth, though it be tried with fire, might be found unto praise and honour and glory at the appearing of Jesus Christ” (1 Peter 1:7). He further encourages believers not to be surprised by fiery trials, as they are a means of partaking in Christ’s sufferings (1 Peter 4:12-14).

Consider Abraham, the father of faith. God tested him through various trials, proving the authenticity of his faith before counting him righteous. James highlights that Abraham’s faith was made perfect through his works during these trials (James 2:22). Similarly, believers are called to walk in the steps of Abraham’s faith (Romans 4:12), demonstrating obedience and trust in God through every test.

The Adornment of Inner Beauty

The Bible emphasizes inner beauty over outward adornment. Peter writes, “Your beauty should not come from outward adornment, such as elaborate hairstyles and the wearing of gold jewelry or fine clothes. Rather, it should be that of your inner self, the unfading beauty of a gentle and quiet spirit, which is of great worth in God’s sight” (1 Peter 3:3-4).

Modern Christians often prioritize external appearance, influenced by worldly trends, over the biblical call to modesty and reverence. Such pursuits lead to spiritual decay, shifting focus from godly virtues to fleeting, superficial values. In contrast, godly women of old, like Sarah, are commended for their trust in God and their respect for their husbands (1 Peter 3:5-6). The adornment that pleases God is the beauty of holiness, not the fleeting allure of worldly fashion.

The Danger of Walking in the Flesh

Paul warns Timothy of the perilous times in the last days: “For men shall be lovers of their own selves… lovers of pleasures more than lovers of God; having a form of godliness, but denying the power thereof” (2 Timothy 3:2-5). This describes the state of many professing Christians who prioritize self-gratification over self-denial.

Walking in the flesh manifests in rejecting biblical principles, such as submission, headship, and modesty. Paul warns: “Now the works of the flesh are manifest… they which do such things shall not inherit the kingdom of God” (Galatians 5:19-21). Such behavior leads to spiritual ruin and is evidence of a heart that does not truly abide in Christ.

The Fear of God and Perseverance in Faith

Scripture repeatedly calls believers to live with reverence and fear of God: “Work out your own salvation with fear and trembling” (Philippians 2:12). Without the fear of God, people walk in rebellion, deceiving themselves into thinking they can live as they please under God’s grace (Romans 6:1-2).

The example of Israel in the wilderness serves as a stern warning. Though they experienced God’s deliverance, most perished because of unbelief and disobedience. Paul warns: “Wherefore let him that thinketh he standeth take heed lest he fall” (1 Corinthians 10:12). This reminds us that salvation is not static; it requires perseverance and faithfulness.

A Call to Faithful Obedience

In these last days, as lawlessness abounds and love grows cold (Matthew 24:12), Christians are called to stand apart. Faithful obedience to God’s Word—even in the “little things”—is a testimony to the world and evidence of true faith.

Paul’s charge to Timothy applies to us: “Preach the word; be instant in season, out of season… For the time will come when they will not endure sound doctrine” (2 Timothy 4:2-3). “Take heed unto thyself, and unto the doctrine; continue in them: for in doing this thou shalt both save thyself, and them that hear thee” (1 Timothy 4:16). Let us hold fast to the truth, walking in submission, love, and reverence for God, so that we may be found faithful when Christ returns.

Conclusion

The “little doctrines” of submission, headship, modesty, and reverence reflect profound spiritual truths. They are not burdens but blessings, drawing us closer to God and aligning us with His design. As believers, we must walk in trembling and fear, examining ourselves to ensure our faith is genuine (2 Corinthians 13:5).

Let us encourage one another to embrace a life of obedience, love, and submission—not to earn salvation but as a joyful response to the One who saved us. May we endure to the end and offer a countercultural testimony of holiness and faithfulness, bringing glory to God in all things. “May we be found faithful when Christ returns, enduring to the end for His glory.”