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title: "1. The Irreducible Life"
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# 1. The Irreducible Life

<a id="1-the-irreducible-life"></a>

Before choosing a name or date, answer a harder question: what must still be present if the public launch never happens? Acts 2 will not supply a modern launch sequence, but it will not permit attendance to stand in for church life. Apostolic teaching, fellowship, prayer, shared goods, baptism, and the breaking of bread appear together. First Corinthians adds differentiated gifts, discipline, love, and ordered worship. Ephesians joins one Lord, one faith, and one baptism to the slow growth of the body. The Pastoral Epistles place teaching beside tested character, money, prayer, care, and the handing on of the faith.

The Greek ekklesia names the assembly or congregation, but the New Testament does not leave it a neutral meeting. The Church belongs to God and is Christ's soma, his body. Its koinonia is shared participation, not mere friendliness. Christ is kephale, Head, and the Spirit gives life and gifts. The Hebrew background of qahal and edah keeps the assembly inside Israel's covenant story. Gentiles are brought near to Israel's Messiah; they do not found a replacement people or gain reason to boast over Israel.

The earliest Christian witnesses recognize the same joined life. The Didache places the Two Ways, baptism, fasting, prayer, Eucharistic thanksgiving, teachers, prophets, bishops, deacons, reconciliation, and the Lord's coming in one small community world. First Clement addresses envy, repentance, order, leadership, and restoration without making office self-authenticating. Ignatius holds Christ's true flesh, Eucharist, unity, and visible ministry together. Justin describes Scripture reading, exhortation, prayer, Eucharistic thanksgiving, material sharing, and care for people in need. Irenaeus joins apostolic truth, creation, Eucharist, Spirit, and the resurrection of flesh. None gives a modern operations manual. Together they show why a plant cannot call branding, preaching content, or social energy the whole Church.

<a id="write-the-received-life-rule"></a>

## Write the Received-Life Rule

Draft one page that names the realities below in the plant's ordinary language. It is not a slogan page. Each statement must name a practice, a responsible office or group, and a way the congregation can recognize whether the practice is real.

- Confession and gospel: the Triune God; Jesus Christ incarnate, crucified, risen, reigning, and coming; salvation by his grace; repentance, faith, forgiveness, holiness, judgment, resurrection, and new creation.
- Spirit and Scripture: dependence on the Holy Spirit; public reading, preaching, teaching, study, obedience, and correction under the canonical Scriptures.
- Baptism and the Lord's Table: Christ-given embodied practices under accountable ecclesial care, not decorative launch symbols or private spiritual techniques.
- Prayer and worship: praise, confession, lament, thanksgiving, intercession, silence, song, offering, blessing, and shared time before God.
- Holiness and order: catechesis, qualified office, mutual care, discipline, forgiveness, appeal, protection, and visible repentance.
- Mercy and mission: burden-bearing, care for the poor and excluded, gospel proclamation, disciple making, hospitality, justice, and service without institutional display.
- Israel, nations, and hope: the Church gathered around Israel's Messiah from Israel and the nations; no Gentile boasting; bodily resurrection and renewed creation as the final horizon.

For every line, ask: When will this happen? Who prepares it? Who may question it? What happens when it fails? A plant that says prayer is central but gives prayer no protected time has written desire, not a rule. A church that says children are precious but has no screened workers, interaction rules, check-in process, or report path has written sentiment, not protection.

Before you move on. A one-page Received-Life Rule with a practice, owner, reviewer, and failure response for each reality.
