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This section argues that eldership is an older, covenantal office that the church inherits rather than invents rooted in Israel’s family-and-tribal order, where “elders” governed household, synagogue, and civil life under the one standard of God’s law. In the New Testament, elders (presbyters) become the governing-teaching officers of the “new Israel,” marked by ordination/laying on of hands (1 Tim. 4:14) and qualified especially by proven household rule (1 Tim. 3:2–5). Because persecution and pagan courts made the church function as a “total society,” elders also served as a court of discipline and arbitration among believers (Matt. 18:15–17; 1 Cor. 6:1–3), shaping a responsible community that cares for its needy (1 John 3:17) without excusing idleness (2 Thess. 3:10) and that strengthens family provision (1 Tim. 5:8). The author then widens the concept: since law = rule/reign, elders are officers of Christ’s kingship tasked with applying God’s law-word across life, not merely inside Sunday structures so “eldership” is presented as a calling that can extend into education, civil governance, and vocations, with Revelation’s “twenty-four elders” (Rev. 4:10) symbolizing the crowned, enthroned rule of God’s people under God’s supreme kingship.
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