White Paper 5: Measuring “Ministerial Skill” Under Low-Expectations Messaging

1. Framing the Problem

The first four papers of this suite have addressed the structural and rhetorical conditions of authority within the assembly: the alignment between metaphor and corporate form, the New Testament patterns of authority and their non-transferable limits, the proper scope of warning language, and the specific drift of family rhetoric into business analogy. Each of these examinations has touched, in passing, on the question of how the work of the ministry is evaluated. The present paper takes that question up directly.

The work of the ministry is real work. The teaching of doctrine, the care of souls, the oversight of the flock, the administration of the assembly’s life — these are activities that can be done well, badly, or somewhere in between. They are activities that can be improved, refined, taught, and learned. The texts that describe the office of elder do so in terms that presuppose that the work has a quality, that the quality matters, and that those entrusted with the work are accountable for how they have done it. “Let the elders that rule well be counted worthy of double honour, especially they who labour in the word and doctrine” (1 Timothy 5:17) presupposes that some elders rule well and some, by implication, do not. “Take heed therefore unto yourselves, and to all the flock, over the which the Holy Ghost hath made you overseers, to feed the church of God” (Acts 20:28) places the seriousness of the work in the foreground. The texts do not authorize the abandonment of evaluation; they authorize its faithful exercise.

The difficulty addressed by this paper arises in a particular setting that is common to many assemblies in the present generation: the setting in which evangelistic success — the conversion of large numbers, dramatic numerical growth, public visibility — is not expected, is not promised, and in many cases is theologically discounted. The reasons for the discounting vary by tradition. In some assemblies, the conviction is that the work of calling is the Father’s prerogative (John 6:44, 65), and that the assembly is responsible for faithfulness to the truth rather than for the production of converts. In other assemblies, the conviction is eschatological — that the present age is one of preparation rather than ingathering, and that the great harvest belongs to a coming time. In still others, the conviction is more cautiously practical — that numerical metrics distort pastoral work, that growth-orientation has historically corrupted the assembly’s witness, and that an unhurried and unanxious posture toward outcomes is itself part of faithfulness.

Each of these convictions has biblical support and pastoral integrity. The discounting of evangelistic outcome metrics is not, in itself, a flaw in the assembly’s self-understanding. The difficulty is what happens to evaluation when the most readily measurable outcomes are discounted and nothing comparably concrete is put in their place. A measurement vacuum opens. Evaluation does not, on that account, stop occurring; evaluation always occurs, because human institutions cannot operate without some assessment of who is doing what well. What changes is the criteria. In the absence of explicit, defensible, biblically grounded criteria, evaluation drifts toward what is observable: tone, demeanor, deference to those higher in the structure, conformity to internal expectations, the absence of complaint. These are not evaluations of skill; they are evaluations of posture, and they cannot do the work that evaluation of skill is meant to do.

The thesis of this paper is that when outcome metrics are discounted without alternatives in their place, evaluation drifts toward tone and loyalty, and that a balanced scorecard grounded in the New Testament’s own categories can preserve both pastoral care and mission clarity. The work of the paper is to describe the measurement vacuum and what fills it when nothing better is supplied, to construct a balanced scorecard that names the actual dimensions of ministerial work, to identify and resist the substitution of loyalty for faithfulness, to propose feedback structures that gather information from those who have it without putting them in adversarial relation to those evaluated, and to provide concrete deliverables that an assembly can adapt for its own use.

The work is undertaken with awareness that evaluation in ministry is delicate. Ministers are not employees in the ordinary sense; the office is callings-based, the relationships are personal, and the temptation to let evaluation become either harsh or perfunctory is constant. The proposal here is neither harsh nor perfunctory. It is disciplined, and the discipline is in the service of the work itself — the work the texts describe as feeding the flock, watching over souls, keeping the doctrine sound, and being examples to those over whom the Holy Spirit has placed the elders. That work deserves evaluation worthy of it, and the assembly’s failure to provide such evaluation is not a kindness to its ministers; it is a withholding of one of the conditions under which the work can be done well over a lifetime.

2. The Measurement Vacuum

When evangelistic outcome metrics are discounted and no alternative metrics are explicitly developed, the resulting situation is not an absence of evaluation. It is the presence of evaluation under unstated criteria. Several features characterize this situation, and each is worth describing in turn.

The first feature is the persistence of evaluative instincts under conditions of metric scarcity. Human beings cannot avoid evaluating one another’s work, especially in settings of close cooperation and shared purpose. Members of an assembly form impressions of their ministers; ministers form impressions of one another; regional administrators form impressions of those they oversee. These impressions are continuous and largely automatic. They cannot be turned off. What can be done is to discipline them — to require that they be formed on grounds that are explicit, examinable, and defensible — or to leave them undisciplined, in which case they are formed on whatever grounds happen to be available. The choice is not between evaluation and no evaluation. The choice is between disciplined evaluation and undisciplined evaluation.

The second feature is the drift toward observable proxies. When the criteria are not explicit, the criteria that come to operate are those that are most readily observed. In the ministerial setting, what is most readily observed is not the quality of pastoral care given in private, the depth of preparation behind a sermon, or the long-term formation of members under a particular ministry’s care. What is most readily observed is the sermon’s effect in the moment, the minister’s manner in interaction with peers and superiors, the absence of public complaints from the congregation, and the minister’s apparent alignment with the prevailing direction of the assembly. None of these is the actual work of ministry, but each is what an evaluator can see without effort, and each becomes, in the absence of better criteria, what evaluation tracks.

The third feature is the inversion of evaluative direction. The patterns examined in Papers 2 and 3 establish that the New Testament places the primary direction of accountability between leaders and Christ, with mutual exhortation among members and recognized congregational agency in discernment, selection, discipline, and financial visibility. When the measurement vacuum opens, the direction of evaluation tends to invert. Members are evaluated by their ministers for their compliance, their support, their absence of complaint; ministers are evaluated by their superiors for similar qualities relative to those above them. The direction in which the evaluative gaze travels becomes downward and inward, and the upward and outward direction the texts authorize — the testing of teaching against Scripture, the visibility of significant decisions to the body, the accountability of leaders to those they serve — atrophies for lack of structural support.

The fourth feature is the substitution of identity for output. Without explicit criteria for what good ministerial work looks like, the question “is this minister doing well?” becomes increasingly difficult to distinguish from the question “is this minister one of us?” The latter question is answerable; the former is not, in the absence of criteria. The result is that evaluation becomes a function of belonging. A minister who is recognized as one of us is, by that recognition, evaluated favorably; a minister whose belonging is in doubt is, by that doubt, evaluated unfavorably, regardless of the actual quality of the work being done. This is not a deliberate substitution. It is what happens when the question of work-quality has no available answer and the question of belonging is the only question available.

The fifth feature is the cumulative cost of unmeasured work. Work that is not measured tends, over time, not to be done. This is not because workers are lazy; it is because attention follows feedback, and feedback follows measurement. A minister whose pastoral visitation is unmeasured will, over years, find that the time spent on pastoral visitation is not visible to anyone, while the time spent on activities that are visible — public speaking, attendance at conferences, presence at meetings — produces feedback. The minister’s effort drifts toward what produces feedback. The pastoral visitation that no one measured slowly becomes the pastoral visitation that is no longer being done, and the loss is invisible until it is severe. This is one of the slow institutional costs of the measurement vacuum, and it is paid not by the ministers — who are, on the whole, doing what their environment rewards — but by the members whose pastoral care has quietly diminished.

These five features together describe the cost of failing to develop explicit ministerial evaluation under conditions where the most readily measurable outcomes are theologically discounted. The cost is not solved by the addition of evangelistic outcome metrics that the theology of the assembly does not endorse. It is solved by the development of alternative metrics that match what the work actually is and that can be defended on the assembly’s own theological grounds.

3. The Balanced Scorecard for Ministry

The constructive proposal of this paper is a balanced scorecard for ministerial evaluation, organized around four dimensions of the work that the New Testament itself names. The scorecard is balanced in two senses. It is balanced across the dimensions, so that no one dimension dominates the others. And it is balanced between input and output, between effort and result, in a way that does not collapse the evaluation into either pure activity-counting or pure outcome-measurement. Each dimension is described below in terms of what it measures, how it can be measured without reducing it to crude proxies, and what safeguards prevent it from being misused.

Dimension 1: Care. The first dimension is the pastoral care of those entrusted to the minister. This is the work named in 1 Peter 5:2 — “Feed the flock of God which is among you, taking the oversight thereof” — and in Acts 20:28 — “Take heed therefore unto yourselves, and to all the flock, over the which the Holy Ghost hath made you overseers.” It includes visitation of the sick and the elderly, counseling of the troubled, response to crises, follow-up on those who have withdrawn from fellowship, attention to families undergoing transitions, and the ordinary day-by-day attentiveness that the office requires.

Care is, by its nature, not quantifiable in the way commercial outputs are. The number of visits made does not, by itself, indicate whether the visits were of any pastoral value; the time spent in counseling does not indicate whether the counseling was sound. Quantitative measures of care are real but partial; they describe the visible texture of effort without describing the quality of what was done. A faithful evaluation of care therefore combines several kinds of evidence. The frequency and pattern of pastoral contact — whether members in particular categories of need are being attended to with appropriate regularity — is one kind of evidence. The reports of those who have received care, gathered through the feedback structures discussed in section five, are another. The judgment of fellow ministers who have observed the minister’s pastoral work, where such observation is appropriate, is a third. The minister’s own account, given in periodic conversation with those who oversee, of what pastoral situations have been encountered and how they have been addressed, is a fourth. None of these alone is sufficient; together they give a textured picture of the care being given.

The safeguards on this dimension are important. The evaluation of care must not become an interrogation of pastoral confidences; what is shared in pastoral encounters belongs to the encounter and not to the evaluation. The evaluation must not produce a count-driven distortion in which ministers prioritize the accumulation of visits over the quality of presence. And the evaluation must recognize that some care is by nature long-term and slow-fruiting; a minister who has carried a difficult pastoral situation for years may have, in the moment of evaluation, less to show than one who has handled many briefer matters, and the longer carrying may itself be the more excellent work.

Dimension 2: Teaching. The second dimension is the teaching of the assembly. This is the work named in 2 Timothy 4:2 — “Preach the word; be instant in season, out of season; reprove, rebuke, exhort with all longsuffering and doctrine” — and in Titus 1:9 — “Holding fast the faithful word as he hath been taught, that he may be able by sound doctrine both to exhort and to convince the gainsayers.” It includes the preparation and delivery of sermons, the teaching of classes, the conduct of Bible studies, the answering of questions raised by members, and the cumulative work of forming the assembly’s understanding of Scripture and doctrine over time.

Teaching is more readily evaluable than care, because its products are more public and its quality is more directly testable against Scripture. Faithful evaluation of teaching combines three kinds of assessment. The first is fidelity: does the teaching represent what Scripture actually says, in context, with attention to the texts’ own concerns and the framework of the gospel? This is a question of doctrine, and it requires that those evaluating the teaching be themselves competent in Scripture; it cannot be delegated to evaluators whose only concern is whether the teaching aligns with current institutional emphasis. The second is clarity: does the teaching communicate, in language the hearers can follow, what it intends to communicate? Clear teaching can be tested by asking hearers what they understood; opacity can be detected by the same test. The third is comprehensiveness over time: does the minister’s teaching, taken as a whole over months and years, cover the range of biblical truth — the gospel, the moral law, the covenants, the prophetic witness, the practical instruction of the apostles — without reducing to a narrow band of topics or a partisan emphasis on a few favored themes?

The safeguards on the teaching dimension are particularly important. The evaluation of teaching can become, in a corrupted form, the enforcement of internal consensus rather than the testing of fidelity to Scripture. The two are not the same, and they can come apart. A minister who is teaching what Scripture clearly teaches but at variance with current institutional emphasis is doing the work the office requires; a minister who is teaching current institutional emphasis but at variance with what Scripture clearly teaches is not. The evaluation must be capable of recognizing the difference, which means it must be conducted by those whose primary loyalty is to Scripture rather than to institutional continuity. Where this safeguard is absent, the teaching dimension becomes the most easily corrupted of the four, because teaching is the dimension most directly visible and therefore most readily managed by those who would manage perception rather than substance.

Dimension 3: Formation. The third dimension is the formation of members under the minister’s care — the long-term development of those entrusted to the ministry into mature, faithful, capable members of the body of Christ. This is the work described in Ephesians 4:11–13, where the gifts of pastors and teachers are given “for the perfecting of the saints, for the work of the ministry, for the edifying of the body of Christ; till we all come in the unity of the faith, and of the knowledge of the Son of God, unto a perfect man, unto the measure of the stature of the fulness of Christ.” Formation is the dimension that distinguishes ministry from religious entertainment or chaplaincy in the limited sense; it asks whether those who have been under a minister’s care are growing.

Formation is the most difficult dimension to evaluate, because growth is gradual, individual, and not always visible in the timeframe of evaluation. The evidence available is indirect. Are members under this ministry deepening in their understanding of Scripture over time? Are they exercising the gifts they have received? Are they bearing the burdens of others, loving their neighbors, raising their children in the faith, taking up the responsibilities of mature membership? Are those who have been under the ministry for a decade visibly more equipped than those who are newly arrived? The answers are not simple; many factors besides the ministry contribute to a member’s formation, and a minister cannot be held simply responsible for outcomes that depend on the member’s own response. But the question of whether the ministry contributes to formation, in the aggregate and over time, is a real question, and it is one that members themselves can speak to with reasonable accuracy when they are asked in structured ways.

The safeguards on this dimension are similarly important. Formation cannot be reduced to participation rates in particular programs, attendance at particular events, or any other proxy that mistakes activity for growth. It also cannot be reduced to subjective impressions of a member’s “spiritual maturity” detached from observable practice. Faithful evaluation of formation looks at the trajectory of those under the minister’s care over years, with attention to multiple indicators — including the testimony of members themselves about what has helped them grow and where they remain stuck — and resists the temptation to substitute measurable proxies for the actual phenomenon being measured.

Dimension 4: Mission. The fourth dimension is mission — the carrying out of whatever evangelistic and outreach responsibilities the assembly has, in faithful proportion to its actual calling. This dimension is the most contested in the setting this paper has framed, because the assembly’s discounting of outcome metrics is most pointed here. The proposal of this paper is that the discounting of outcomes does not entail the discounting of the work itself. The minister whose assembly does not expect mass conversions can still be evaluated on whether he is doing the outreach work the assembly’s understanding of mission requires — whether the work is being done at all, whether it is being done with care, whether the witness offered is faithful to the gospel, whether the minister’s life among those outside the assembly commends or compromises that witness.

The evaluation of mission proceeds by asking what the assembly understands its mission to be, and then asking whether the minister’s work is consistent with that understanding. If the mission is to maintain a faithful witness to the truth as opportunity arises, the evaluation asks whether the minister is taking such opportunities and conducting himself in them with appropriate care. If the mission includes deliberate outreach efforts of particular kinds, the evaluation asks whether those efforts are being carried out and what their texture is. The evaluation does not ask whether large numbers have been converted, because the assembly’s theology has explicitly placed that question outside the scope of what the minister can be held responsible for. But it does ask whether the work the minister can be held responsible for — the offering of witness, the doing of outreach in whatever form the assembly has determined, the maintenance of a life that adorns rather than discredits the gospel — is being done.

The safeguards on this dimension protect against two corruptions. The first is the corruption of overcounting effort: treating the mere existence of outreach activities as sufficient evidence that mission is being attended to, regardless of the texture of those activities. The second is the corruption of theology-driven evasion: using the discounting of outcomes as cover for the absence of effort, on the grounds that since outcomes do not matter, the work itself is dispensable. Both corruptions are real, and the second is more dangerous in the setting this paper has framed, because it has theological cover that the first does not. The evaluation of mission therefore requires honest distinction between what the assembly’s theology actually discounts (results that depend on God’s calling and the response of others) and what it does not discount (the faithful work of the minister in offering witness in the form the assembly’s understanding endorses).

The four dimensions together — care, teaching, formation, mission — describe the work the New Testament names for those who hold the office of elder, overseer, or minister. A balanced scorecard tracks all four; it does not allow any one to dominate, and it does not allow the discounting of any one to become the discounting of evaluation altogether. The scorecard is not a substitute for the texts; it is an instrument that makes the texts’ own concerns operative in the evaluation of the work.

4. Avoiding Loyalty Substitution

The most consequential corruption of ministerial evaluation in the setting this paper has framed is the substitution of loyalty for faithfulness. The two are easily confused, and the confusion is one of the predictable pathologies that follows from the measurement vacuum. A clear account of the difference is therefore necessary if the balanced scorecard is to do the work it is designed to do.

Faithfulness, in the New Testament sense, is the disposition of the steward who is true to what has been entrusted to him. Paul’s instruction in 1 Corinthians 4:2 — “Moreover it is required in stewards, that a man be found faithful” — places faithfulness at the center of the steward’s evaluation. The steward is faithful to the householder, which means faithful to what the householder has given him to do and faithful to the householder’s purposes in giving it. In the ministerial application, faithfulness is fidelity to Scripture, to the gospel, to the work the office requires, to the souls entrusted to the minister’s care, and ultimately to Christ as the head of the body. Faithfulness can be evaluated, and the New Testament does evaluate it; the texts speak of faithful and unfaithful stewards, and the difference between them is a difference in their relation to what they have been entrusted with.

Loyalty, in the sense that comes to operate in the corrupted form of evaluation, is something different. It is the disposition of the subordinate toward the institution and its current direction — willingness to support, defer, refrain from challenge, and align with prevailing emphasis. Loyalty in this sense is not biblically named as a virtue of the steward; it is, at most, a contingent good that may or may not align with faithfulness depending on whether the institution’s direction is itself aligned with what the steward is faithful to. When the institution’s direction is faithful, loyalty and faithfulness coincide, and the difference does not show. When the institution’s direction departs from faithfulness in some respect, the two come apart, and the question of which one is being evaluated becomes acute.

The substitution occurs when evaluation, having lost the explicit criteria for faithfulness, defaults to the more readily observable criterion of loyalty. A minister who is faithful but inconveniently so — who teaches what Scripture clearly says even when it cuts against current emphasis, who raises questions about practices that seem to him at variance with the texts, who declines to enforce expectations that he judges biblically unwarranted — appears, under the substituted criterion, as disloyal. A minister who is loyal but unfaithful in some respect — who teaches what is currently endorsed without rigorous reference to Scripture, who suppresses concerns rather than raising them, who enforces expectations regardless of their scriptural basis — appears, under the same substituted criterion, as the model of what the office requires. The evaluation, conducted under loyalty as the operative criterion, rewards the second and penalizes the first. This is not because the evaluators are corrupt; it is because the criterion is.

Several diagnostic markers indicate that loyalty has substituted for faithfulness in a particular evaluative culture. Each is worth naming.

The first marker is the praise of conformity rather than the praise of work. When ministers are commended in language that emphasizes their alignment with direction, their support of leadership, their absence of friction — rather than in language that names the substantive quality of their pastoral care, teaching, formation work, or mission engagement — the criterion in operation is loyalty. The praise pattern is itself diagnostic. Substantive praise names substantive work; loyalty praise names posture.

The second marker is the response to legitimate disagreement. In a culture where faithfulness is the operative criterion, a minister who raises a substantive concern receives a substantive response; the concern is engaged on its merits; the eventual judgment, whatever it is, is grounded in argument. In a culture where loyalty has substituted, a minister who raises a substantive concern is treated as having raised a question about his loyalty, and the response addresses that question rather than the substance. The pattern from Paper 3 — the rhetorical drift by which disagreement is recategorized as rebellion — operates here as a particular case of the larger loyalty substitution.

The third marker is the career trajectory of those who have raised substantive concerns and those who have not. Over years, the pattern of who advances and who does not within an institution reveals what is actually being rewarded. If those who have raised substantive concerns find their advancement halted, their assignments narrowed, their visibility reduced — while those who have raised no such concerns find advancement, assignment, and visibility flowing reliably — the operative criterion is loyalty regardless of what is said about faithfulness in formal documents. The pattern is observable and, over time, unmistakable.

The fourth marker is the internal language of evaluation itself. When ministers are spoken of, in evaluative settings, in terms that center on their relation to leadership — “he’s been very supportive,” “she’s a real team player,” “he understands where we’re going” — rather than in terms that center on the substance of their work — “his preparation is rigorous,” “her counseling has helped many,” “his teaching has formed several leaders in the local body” — the criterion in operation can be inferred from the vocabulary. The vocabulary follows the criterion; the criterion can be read off the vocabulary.

The recovery of faithfulness as the operative criterion requires explicit attention to each of these markers. Praise must be reformed to name substantive work. Response to disagreement must be reformed to engage the substance. Career trajectories must be reviewed to ensure that those who have raised legitimate concerns are not, by that fact, disadvantaged in their assignments and advancement. The internal language of evaluation must be retrained to name the dimensions of the work rather than the postures of the worker. None of these reforms is dramatic in any single case; together, over time, they restore the criterion the texts authorize.

A further observation is necessary, because the proposal can be misunderstood. The argument that loyalty must not substitute for faithfulness is not an argument that ministers should be free of any expectation of cooperation with the body’s direction. The body has direction; cooperation is necessary to its functioning; ministers who are persistently uncooperative without substantive ground are not, by virtue of their uncooperativeness, faithful. The point is that cooperation is a contingent good that should not be confused with the work being evaluated, and that the threshold for treating uncooperativeness as a fault must include serious examination of whether the uncooperativeness is groundless — which it sometimes is — or whether it is the response of a faithful steward to a direction he judges, on substantive grounds, to be at variance with the texts. The same uncooperative behavior can be evidence of either condition, and the criterion of faithfulness is what allows the distinction to be made.

5. Feedback Loops

The balanced scorecard requires evidence, and the evidence requires sources. Members of the assembly are among the most important sources of evidence about ministerial care, teaching effectiveness, and formation, because they are the recipients of the work and have direct knowledge of its texture from the receiving end. Fellow ministers and those who oversee are sources for other dimensions, including peer accountability and observation of work that members do not see directly. The development of feedback loops that gather this evidence honestly and use it constructively is the structural counterpart to the scorecard itself.

Several principles govern the design of these feedback loops.

The first principle is that feedback should not be adversarial in framing. The purpose of gathering member feedback is not to give members a tool for grievance against ministers, and the practice of gathering feedback should not produce that effect. Adversarial framing — treating feedback as a complaint mechanism, structuring it as the bringing of charges, positioning members against ministers in a contest — corrupts both the feedback and the relationships it touches. Constructive framing presents feedback as the body’s care for itself, its care for those who serve, and its responsibility before God for the quality of the work being done in its midst. Members are invited to contribute what they can see; ministers are positioned as those for whom the feedback is a service; the framing throughout is of mutual benefit rather than opposition.

The second principle is that feedback should be solicited rather than left to volunteer initiative. When feedback is left to volunteer initiative, what arrives is biased toward complaint — those most dissatisfied are most likely to speak — and toward the cases most easily articulated. Members whose pastoral care has been excellent often do not think to say so; members whose teaching experience has been formative often do not think to say so; the steady ordinary excellence of ministerial work goes unreported, while the sharper edges of dissatisfaction reach the evaluators. Solicited feedback — periodic, structured, and inclusive of the full range of members — produces a more accurate picture, and it does so without requiring members to take the initiative of bringing concerns that they may not be sure rise to the level of formal raising.

The third principle is that feedback should be confidential where appropriate, and identifiable where appropriate, with the distinction explicit. Some kinds of feedback — observations about pastoral care, comments on teaching, reports on what has helped a member grow — can be given more honestly when the giver knows that the feedback will not be attached to him personally in the minister’s hearing. Other kinds of feedback — formal concerns about doctrine or conduct, requests that require a response — must be identifiable because they cannot be addressed without conversation with the giver. The feedback structure should make the distinction clear: which kinds are gathered confidentially, which kinds require identification, and how the two are kept appropriately separate. Members who do not know which is which will default to caution, and the feedback will be impoverished accordingly.

The fourth principle is that feedback should reach those competent to act on it, and the action taken should be visible in some form to those who provided the feedback. Feedback that disappears into a process whose workings are invisible to its sources produces, over time, a sense among members that their input is not real — that giving it changes nothing — and the feedback dries up. Feedback whose handling is visible at the appropriate level — without breaching the privacy of any minister whose work is the subject — sustains the practice over time. The visibility need not be detailed. It needs to communicate that input was received, that it was considered, and that it has informed the assembly’s thinking in some way the giver can recognize.

The fifth principle is that feedback should be one input among several, not the sole determinant of evaluation. Members can speak to what they have experienced; they cannot speak to dimensions of the work they do not see. A minister’s preparation, his pastoral attention to those whose situations the wider body does not know about, his work with fellow ministers, his administrative responsibilities, his own character and conduct in settings the members do not observe — these are dimensions that require other sources of evidence. The use of member feedback as the sole determinant produces a distortion in the opposite direction from the loyalty substitution: it can elevate ministers who are publicly skilled but privately deficient, or penalize ministers whose private excellence is not visible to those whose feedback is sought. Member feedback is essential and irreplaceable; it is also partial, and the evaluation must combine it with other evidence to be balanced.

A further observation concerns the texture of the feedback itself. The questions asked of members shape what they can answer, and the questions can be asked well or poorly. Questions that ask members to rate their minister on a scale of 1 to 10 produce data that is essentially uninterpretable, because it is unclear what dimension is being rated and what the scale means. Questions that ask members to describe what their minister has done well, what they wish he had done differently, what teaching has been most helpful to them, what pastoral encounter has been formative — these produce data that is interpretable, because the data is anchored in particular reported experiences. The design of the feedback instrument is itself part of the work, and a poorly designed instrument is worse than no feedback at all, because it produces the appearance of evidence without the substance.

6. Deliverable: KPI Set with Definitions and Safeguards

The first deliverable of this paper is a set of key performance indicators corresponding to the four dimensions of the balanced scorecard, each with its definition, its means of measurement, and the safeguards that protect it from corruption. The set is illustrative; particular assemblies will adapt the indicators to their own circumstances and emphasize different aspects depending on the local context.

Under the dimension of care, the indicators are the regularity of pastoral contact with members in defined categories of need (the elderly, the chronically ill, those in crisis, those who have recently joined, those who have withdrawn from fellowship), the responsiveness of pastoral attention when situations arise (whether the minister is reachable and reaches out when needed, within appropriate timeframes), and the quality of pastoral encounter as reported by those who have received it (gathered through the feedback structures of section five, anchored in the recipients’ specific accounts of what helped). The means of measurement are records the minister himself maintains of pastoral contact, reports from members gathered through structured feedback, and the judgment of fellow ministers where appropriate observation has occurred. The safeguards are the protection of pastoral confidentiality (records describe contact, not content), the avoidance of count-driven distortion (regularity rather than total number is the metric, and quality is weighted equally), and the recognition of long-term carrying as legitimate care.

Under the dimension of teaching, the indicators are fidelity of doctrine to Scripture as evaluated by competent peers and against the texts directly, clarity as reported by hearers and observed by evaluators familiar with the audience, and comprehensiveness over time as evaluated by review of the minister’s teaching across months and years for breadth across the range of biblical truth. The means of measurement are review of recorded or written teaching by competent peers, structured feedback from members on what has been understood and what has been formative, and periodic examination of teaching coverage against a rough framework of biblical material. The safeguards are the requirement that fidelity be evaluated against Scripture rather than against current institutional emphasis, the protection of legitimate distinctive emphasis that may not match the prevailing direction but remains within scriptural fidelity, and the avoidance of evaluation by those whose primary loyalty is to institutional consensus rather than to the texts.

Under the dimension of formation, the indicators are the trajectory of members under the minister’s care over years (whether members are growing in understanding, in exercise of gifts, in mature responsibility), the testimony of members about what has helped them grow, and the visible difference between members who have been under the ministry for a decade and those who are newly arrived. The means of measurement are longitudinal observation, structured feedback from members specifically on formation experiences, and the kind of qualitative review that asks whether the body under this ministry is, in the aggregate, being built up. The safeguards are the recognition that formation depends on many factors besides the ministry, the avoidance of crude proxies (program participation, event attendance) for the actual phenomenon of growth, and the willingness to evaluate over timeframes that are long enough for formation to be visible — typically several years rather than a single annual cycle.

Under the dimension of mission, the indicators are the existence and texture of whatever outreach activities the assembly’s understanding of mission endorses, the consistency of the minister’s life with the witness he offers (his conduct toward those outside the assembly being consistent with the gospel he proclaims), and the faithfulness of the witness offered in its content (the gospel preached being the gospel of Scripture, in proportion and emphasis). The means of measurement are review of outreach activities undertaken, observation of the minister’s conduct in settings outside the assembly’s internal life, and examination of the content of witness offered. The safeguards are explicit theological honesty about what is and is not being measured (faithfulness to mission as the assembly understands it, not numerical results that the theology has placed outside the minister’s responsibility), and resistance to the corruption that would use the discounting of results as cover for the absence of work.

Across all four dimensions, two cross-cutting safeguards apply. The first is that no minister should be evaluated solely on a single dimension; the balanced scorecard is balanced precisely so that strength in one area does not excuse weakness in another and weakness in one area does not eclipse strength in others. The second is that evaluation should be conducted with the seriousness the work deserves, on schedules that allow patterns to be visible, and with the kind of personal engagement between evaluator and evaluated that produces understanding rather than mere data — the New Testament’s pattern of evaluation is relational, and the scorecard does not displace that pattern but disciplines it.

7. Deliverable: Reporting Template That Avoids “Proof-of-Nothing Work”

The second deliverable is a template for periodic ministerial reports that gathers evidence about the work without producing the institutional pathology that elsewhere has been called “proof-of-nothing work” — the production of documentation whose function is to demonstrate that activity has occurred without conveying anything substantive about what was done. The template is designed to extract real information with reasonable economy of effort, and to resist the corruption that turns reporting into a performance of compliance.

The template covers a defined period — a quarter, a half-year, a year, depending on the assembly’s rhythm — and is organized around the four dimensions of the scorecard.

For care, the report describes the texture of pastoral attention given during the period: the categories of members attended to, the patterns of contact, the significant pastoral situations carried (described in terms that protect confidentiality but convey what was carried), the situations that proved difficult and how they were handled, and the situations the minister judges he could have handled better and what he is doing in response. The report does not list every contact made; it describes the pattern and gives examples that convey what the work has been.

For teaching, the report describes the topics taught, the texts addressed, the questions encountered from members and the responses offered, the areas in which the minister judges his preparation has been particularly fruitful, and the areas in which he judges his preparation needs strengthening. The report includes, where appropriate, copies of significant teaching pieces or notes for review by competent peers. It does not list every sermon delivered; it describes the trajectory of teaching across the period and engages reflectively with its quality.

For formation, the report describes what the minister has observed about the development of those under his care: members who have grown noticeably in particular ways, situations of struggle that have been worked through, the body’s movement toward or away from the marks of mature membership the minister is watching for. The report acknowledges the limits of what the minister can claim about formation — many factors contribute, and the minister’s own assessment of his contribution must be modest — and offers his honest reading of where the body is and where he hopes to see growth.

For mission, the report describes the outreach activity undertaken in whatever form the assembly’s mission endorses, the texture of the minister’s life among those outside the assembly during the period, the content of witness offered, and the minister’s reflection on the consistency of his life with the witness he carries. The report does not claim results that the theology has placed outside its scope; it does report on the work the minister is responsible for.

A final section invites the minister’s own reflection on his work during the period: what he has learned, what he is wrestling with, where he wants to grow, what support or correction he is requesting from those who oversee. This section is not optional. It is the place where the minister speaks for himself, and it is one of the protections against the report becoming an exercise in institutional performance.

The template is designed to produce reports that are substantively informative, reasonable in the time they require to produce, and honest in their texture. It is also designed to make clear that the report is not the evaluation; the report is one input into evaluation, alongside member feedback, peer observation, and direct conversation between the minister and those who oversee. A report that is honest about a difficult quarter is more valuable than a report that has been polished into the appearance of uniform success, and the evaluation culture must reward the first and treat the second with the appropriate skepticism.

8. Conclusion

When the most readily measurable outcomes of ministerial work are theologically discounted, the question of how the work is to be evaluated does not disappear; it becomes more difficult, and the cost of failing to address it explicitly is the drift of evaluation toward criteria that cannot do the work the New Testament requires. The drift is not toward no evaluation but toward evaluation under unstated criteria — tone, demeanor, conformity, loyalty — that are not what the texts authorize and that cannot, over time, sustain the actual work of ministry that the texts describe.

The proposal of this paper has been a balanced scorecard that names the four dimensions of the work — care, teaching, formation, mission — that the New Testament itself names, with indicators and safeguards for each, supported by feedback structures that gather honest evidence from those who have it and disciplined reporting that avoids the institutional pathology of documentation as performance. The proposal is not radical; the texts have always asked the assembly to evaluate the work of its ministers, and the categories the proposal uses are the texts’ own. What the proposal offers is the discipline of making the evaluation explicit, balanced, and sustainable in a setting where the absence of explicit alternatives has allowed the criterion of loyalty to substitute for the criterion of faithfulness.

The cost of failing to develop such an evaluation is borne by the ministers whose work is poorly understood, by the members whose care is invisibly diminished as ministerial effort drifts toward what produces feedback, and by the assembly whose capacity to know whether its work is being done well is impaired in proportion to the vagueness of its evaluation. The cost of developing it is the discipline of attention — the willingness to ask what is being measured, to defend the criteria, to gather the evidence honestly, and to act on what is found. The cost is not small, but it is the cost of caring about the work, and the work is worth caring about.

The paper that follows takes up a question that has been adjacent to several of the discussions in this suite and now requires direct treatment: the boundary between divine governance and human administration, and the theological care required when an ecclesial arrangement claims to participate in or instantiate the government of God. The connection to the present paper is direct. The criterion of faithfulness, as opposed to loyalty, presupposes that there is a ground to which the steward is faithful that is not identical to any human institution; the criterion of loyalty presupposes that the institution is itself the ground. Which presupposition is operative depends, in the end, on the theological account of where the government of God is and how it relates to whatever human administration is at hand. That theological account is what the next paper undertakes to clarify.

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White Paper 4: The “Family Business” Frame: Ownership, Participation, and Voice

1. Framing the Problem

The first paper of this suite identified a general drift in ecclesial metaphor: the elasticity by which “family” can move from describing the warmth of relational care to performing structural work for which it was never designed. The drift was named in passing and then set aside for fuller treatment. The present paper takes up that fuller treatment. The specific elasticity at issue is the move from family to family business — a move that retains the warmth of the household metaphor and adds to it an implicit claim about ownership and shared enterprise that the corporate structure of the assembly does not in fact provide.

The phrase, in the form it actually takes in pastoral and conference rhetoric, is recognizable. The assembly is described as the family of God; the work in which the assembly is engaged is described as the family business; members are addressed as participants in that business; the affective force of the rhetoric is to invite members into a shared enterprise in which they have a stake. The warmth is real. The pastoral intent is, in most cases, genuine — the rhetoric is not deployed cynically, and those who use it are not generally aware that it carries implications the structure does not support. The difficulty is that the warmth and the implication travel together, and the implication is one the structure cannot honor without modification it has not made.

The thesis of this paper is that the family business metaphor accurately captures something real about internal ministerial solidarity but inaccurately implies shared ownership across the membership. Without explicit clarification, the metaphor recasts congregants as participants in an enterprise to which the legal and decisional structure does not actually admit them. The result is a category mismatch with predictable pastoral costs: members who experience the inclusion language and discover the exclusion in decision-making, members who orient themselves toward an enterprise stake they do not in fact hold, and members who find their position recharacterized in ways the metaphor implied but the structure never delivered. The paper’s work is to deconstruct the analogy with care, to map the actual member-status typology, to distinguish voice from care, to propose practices of structural transparency, and to offer alternative frames that capture what is true in the family business metaphor without importing what is not.

The work is constructive in spirit. The metaphor has been useful precisely because it expresses something the assembly experiences as true: that the work of the body is a shared work, that the brethren are not customers but participants, that the ministry and the membership are not in a transactional relationship. These are real observations, and any proposed alternative must do them justice. What the alternative must also do is keep the relational truth from importing structural claims that the structure does not honor — not because the structure is wrong, but because the structure is what it is, and honesty about the structure is part of what makes the warmth of the relational truth trustworthy rather than confusing.

2. The Business Analogy Deconstructed

A business, in any recognizable sense of the word, has a particular set of features. It has owners — those who hold the legal and economic interest in the enterprise, who bear its risks, and who receive its returns. It has managers — those who exercise day-to-day authority over operations on behalf of the owners and within the limits the owners set. And it has clients or customers — those who are served by the enterprise, who provide its revenue, and who exist in a defined relation to it that does not include ownership. Some businesses also have employees, whose relation to the enterprise is contractual labor for compensation; some have investors, who hold ownership-equivalent positions without operational authority; some have other stakeholders. The basic structure, however, is recognizable: ownership, management, and the parties served.

When the business analogy is applied to the assembly, the question is what the parties of the analogy are. The answer, on the most natural mapping, is uncomfortable. If the assembly is a business, then the legal members of the ministerial corporation — those who hold corporate membership, vote on corporate matters, and bear fiduciary responsibility — occupy the position of owners. The credentialed ministers, including those without legal membership, occupy a managerial position. The wider membership of the congregation occupies the position of those served — the position that, in any other business, would be called clients or customers. The warmth of the family metaphor obscures this mapping, but it does not change it. In structural terms, members of the congregation, however brotherly the language, occupy the position of those for whose benefit the enterprise operates, not the position of those who own or direct it.

This mapping is, on the face of it, jarring. It is jarring because the texture of life in the assembly is not the texture of a commercial relation, and members do not experience themselves as customers of a religious service provider. They experience themselves as participants in a body to which they belong. The relational reality is genuinely different from a customer relation, and the difference is theologically grounded — believers are members of the body of Christ, and the body is not a service-delivery organization. The point of the deconstruction is not to claim that the customer mapping is the true description of what the membership is. The point is to show that, when the business analogy is invoked, the customer mapping is what the analogy structurally implies, and that the warmth of the family qualifier does not, by itself, change the structural implication. The metaphor combines two frames whose structural implications point in different directions, and the combination relies on the warmth of the first to suppress the implication of the second.

Three observations about the deconstruction are worth making explicit.

First, the family qualifier does not change the structural mapping; it changes only its affective register. A “family business” is still a business, and in family businesses outside the ecclesial context the same questions of ownership, management, and customer relation operate. Family businesses do not, in the ordinary sense, redistribute ownership across the family; ownership is held by particular family members, others may be employees or beneficiaries, and the legal arrangements are typically explicit on these points. What “family” adds is the texture of trust, the assumption of shared interest, the willingness to bear inconvenience for the enterprise. It does not add ownership rights to family members who do not hold them.

Second, the metaphor’s pastoral force depends on the suppression of the structural mapping. The warmth of the family business language works because hearers receive it as inclusion — they are part of the family, and therefore part of the business. If the structural implication were made explicit (“you are part of the family in the relational sense, and you are in the position of those served by the business in the structural sense”), the warmth would be retained but the affective force of the inclusion language would be considerably reduced. The metaphor depends, for its rhetorical effect, on the inference being available without being examined.

Third, the metaphor’s structural cost is paid by those who, on the basis of the inclusion language, orient themselves toward a stake they do not hold. A member who has heard for years that the assembly is the family business and who has invested time, treasure, and identity on the assumption that this means he is a participant in the enterprise will, at some point, encounter a decision in which his participation is not formally available. The encounter is not, in the structure’s terms, a betrayal — the structure was always like this. In the metaphor’s terms, however, it is an unraveling, because the metaphor implied something the structure cannot honor. The member is left to reconcile what was said with what is the case, and the reconciliation is privately costly.

The point of these observations is not to argue that the assembly should never use business language to describe its work. It is to argue that the family business frame, used without clarification, does work the family metaphor and the business metaphor cannot do separately and should not be asked to do together. The frame is not malicious; it is imprecise. The cost of the imprecision is borne by those whose orientation toward the assembly the imprecision has shaped.

3. Member Status Typology

A more precise account of the actual relation between members and the corporate body of the assembly requires a typology. The single category “member,” used without further specification, does too much work and too little. It groups together relations that are structurally distinct, with the result that questions about voice, participation, and decision-making cannot be answered cleanly because the category itself does not distinguish among them. The typology that follows is intended to make the distinctions visible.

Beneficiaries. Every member of the congregation is, in the most basic sense, a beneficiary of the work of the assembly. The teaching, the pastoral care, the fellowship, the spiritual oversight, the prayer of the body — these are real goods that flow to members because they belong. This is not a diminished category. It is the foundational one. The assembly exists, in significant measure, for its members in this sense, and the language of beneficiary captures something the language of customer does not: the goods received are not purchased, they are not contractual, and the relationship is not transactional. They are the goods of belonging to the body of Christ as expressed in this particular local and corporate form.

Contributors. Members are also contributors. They give financially, they serve in roles formal and informal, they teach, they host, they visit the sick, they bear one another’s burdens, they pray. The contribution is not equivalent to the beneficiary status — a member who contributed nothing would still be a beneficiary of the body’s care, and rightly so — but it is real, and it is significant. The assembly’s life is sustained, in human terms, by the contributions of its members. To name members as contributors is to honor what they actually do, and it is to recognize that the relation between members and the body is not merely receptive.

Participants in the body. Members are participants in the life of the body in the New Testament sense. They are members of one another (Romans 12:5; Ephesians 4:25); they exercise gifts that build up the whole (1 Corinthians 12); they are not interchangeable parts but particular members with particular places in the body. This category captures what the body metaphor of Paper 1 named: the genuine interdependence of those who belong, the fact that no member can be dispensed with, and the fact that the life of the body is the life of all its members in concert. Participation in this sense is not optional and is not minimal; it is constitutive of what it means to be a member at all.

Participants in pastoral discernment, selection, and discipline. The patterns examined in Paper 2 — Acts 6, 1 Corinthians 5, 2 Corinthians 8, Acts 17:11 — establish that members have biblically authorized roles in discernment of teaching, selection of those who serve, exercise of discipline, and visibility into the handling of significant decisions. These roles are not equivalent to legal corporate governance; they are something prior to it and structurally distinct from it. They are roles the New Testament repeatedly enacts and that the texts treat as belonging to the assembly’s life regardless of whatever legal form the assembly takes.

Holders of corporate governance rights. Some members of the assembly — in the typical ministerial corporation, the credentialed ministers who hold legal membership in the corporate entity — also hold the rights and responsibilities that accompany corporate governance. They vote in the corporate sense; they bear fiduciary responsibility; they are recognized in civil law as the responsible parties of the legal entity. This category is structurally narrower than the others. It does not encompass the full membership of the body in the relational or biblical sense; it encompasses a particular subset to whom the legal form has assigned particular responsibilities.

The typology yields a clarification that the single-word “member” obscures. A given person in the assembly will typically occupy several of these categories simultaneously. A congregant who attends faithfully, gives generously, teaches a class, raises children in the faith, and prays for the body is a beneficiary, contributor, participant in the body, and participant in the biblically authorized agency of the assembly. He is not, in the typical arrangement, a holder of corporate governance rights. The first four categories are not diminished by the absence of the fifth, and the fifth is not the measure of the others. To equate the first four with the fifth — to suggest that participation in the body’s life entails or should entail corporate governance rights, or that the absence of governance rights diminishes the other four — is to confuse categories that the texts and the structure both treat as distinct.

The clarification has a corollary in the other direction. To equate the fifth with the others — to suggest that holders of corporate governance rights have, by virtue of their legal position, a fuller participation in the body’s life than other members — is the symmetrical confusion. Legal membership is not spiritual primacy. It is a particular role with particular responsibilities, and those who hold it are no more (and no less) members of the body than those who do not. The typology, properly understood, prevents both confusions. It allows the various forms of participation to be seen for what they are, and it allows questions about voice and participation to be asked precisely.

4. Voice and Care

A further distinction that the family business frame tends to collapse is the distinction between voice and care. The two are related — care without voice is incomplete, and voice without care is hollow — but they are not identical, and a healthy account of the assembly’s life keeps them distinct.

Care is the texture of pastoral concern that flows to members from the body and from those who shepherd within it. It is the visitation of the sick, the counseling of the troubled, the teaching of the uncertain, the bearing of burdens, the ministry of the word, the prayer of the elders. Care is not contingent on a member’s status in any particular structural category; it is owed to members because they belong to the body, and it is exercised by the body’s care for itself and by the particular shepherding work of those called to it. Care is, in the New Testament, a constant. It does not need to be earned, and its withdrawal cannot be a sanction in the ordinary case without violating the texts that command it.

Voice is the structural reality of being heard in decisions that affect the member’s life in the assembly. It includes participation in the biblically authorized agencies of the body — discernment of teaching, selection of those who serve, exercise of discipline, financial visibility — and it includes the channels by which member concerns reach those who exercise authority and receive a response on the merits. Voice is not equivalent to corporate governance, but it is not nothing either. It is the structural counterpart to relational care, and its absence cannot be made up for by the warmth of the relational language alone.

The collapse of the distinction occurs when care is offered as if it included voice, or when voice is reduced to care. Both directions of collapse are damaging.

In the first direction, the assembly responds to a member’s concern by attending to the member’s emotional state but not to the substance of the concern. The member is heard in the sense of being listened to with apparent sympathy; the member is not heard in the sense of having the substance of the concern addressed. The warmth of the encounter can mask, even from the participants, what has not happened: the question raised has not been answered, the issue identified has not been examined, the change requested has not been considered. The pastoral encounter has been care without voice. It may be all that is offered, and it may be offered sincerely, but it does not constitute the response the situation called for.

In the second direction, the assembly assumes that because the relational language is warm, the structural channels of voice can be left implicit. Members are told they are family, their concerns are welcome, their input is valued. What members observe is that there are no defined channels through which input reaches decision-making, no defined response timelines, no defined procedures for the handling of concerns, and no transparent record of what input has been received and how it has been considered. The warmth of the language is not matched by structural reality. Members who try to use the implicit channels find that the channels do not exist, and the rhetorical inclusion is not redeemed by structural inclusion of any kind.

The recovery of the distinction is a matter of being explicit. Care is offered, and it is named as care. Voice is offered, where it is offered, and it is named as voice. Where voice is structurally limited — where members do not, in the typical corporate arrangement, hold legal governance rights — the limitation is named honestly, and the channels that do exist for member concern, feedback, and participation are made visible and operative. The result is an assembly in which members know what to expect from each kind of encounter and are not asked to interpret one as the other.

A further observation concerns the relation of voice to feedback. Member voice is not equivalent to member approval. Voice is the structural reality of being heard; it is not the guarantee that the hearer will agree. The assembly that takes voice seriously will sometimes hear concerns it judges, on examination, to be unfounded, and will say so with reasons. The assembly that takes voice seriously will sometimes hear concerns it judges to be well founded, and will respond by changing course. What it will not do is conflate hearing with agreement, or treat the absence of agreement as a sign that the voice was not heard. The integrity of voice is in the hearing, in the engagement on the merits, and in the honest response — not in the outcome of the hearing.

5. Transparency Practices

If the family business frame is to be replaced — or, more modestly, to be supplemented with explicit structural clarification — practices of transparency are required. These practices do not alter the corporate form; they make the corporate form visible to those who live within it.

Practice 1: Explicit description of who decides what, and why. A one-page document, accessible to the membership, that describes the structure of decision-making in the assembly is a low-cost and high-value instrument. The document names which decisions are made at the local pastoral level, which involve regional or general administration, which require corporate action by legal members of the ministerial corporation, and which involve congregational agency in the biblically authorized sense. The document explains, briefly, the reasons for the assignments — that the local pastor is in the best position to make pastoral decisions for the local body, that doctrinal matters are handled with the care of those set apart for that responsibility, that financial decisions above certain thresholds require corporate action because of legal and fiduciary considerations, and so on. The document does not claim that the assignments are themselves apostolic; it claims that they are the reasonable arrangements the assembly has made for the carrying out of its work, and it makes the arrangements visible.

Practice 2: Defined channels for member concern. Where structural limits on legal governance are real, the channels for member concern, feedback, and input must be the more clearly defined. A member who has a concern about a pastoral matter knows whom to approach; a member who has a concern about a doctrinal matter knows whom to approach; a member who has a concern about a financial or administrative matter knows whom to approach. The channels are named, the expected response is described, and the timeline within which a response can be expected is reasonable and stated. The channels are not infinite — not every concern is appropriate for every channel — but they are sufficient, and members are not left to guess where their concerns ought to go or whether they will be received.

Practice 3: Visibility into significant decisions. The pattern of 2 Corinthians 8, where Paul takes pains that the handling of the collection should be honorable not only before the Lord but also before men, applies here. Significant decisions of the assembly — decisions about budgets, building projects, ministerial assignments, major policy matters — are made known to the membership in accessible terms. The membership is not asked to vote on them, in arrangements where corporate governance is concentrated in legal members; it is informed of them, including the reasons, with sufficient detail to understand what has been decided and on what grounds. The visibility does not transfer authority; it discharges the obligation of honorable conduct in the sight of those served.

Practice 4: Honest accounting of how member input is received and considered. When members raise concerns through the defined channels, the responses they receive include some account of what has been heard, what has been considered, and what conclusion has been reached. A response that says “your concern was noted” without indication of whether it was considered, what was made of it, or what the conclusion was is not, in the relevant sense, a response. The honest accounting need not be elaborate. It needs to communicate that the substance of the concern was engaged, that the engagement was real, and that the response is grounded in that engagement. Where concerns are aggregated — where multiple members have raised similar concerns — periodic communication that acknowledges the pattern, addresses the substance, and indicates the assembly’s response is appropriate.

Practice 5: Regular review of the practices themselves. Transparency practices are not self-maintaining. They drift over time toward formality, toward delay, toward closure. A periodic review — annual or biennial — that asks whether the practices are functioning as intended, whether members find them accessible and substantive, and whether adjustments are warranted, is the discipline that keeps the practices honest. The review need not be elaborate. It needs to be real, and its findings need to be acted on.

These practices do not transform a ministerial corporation into a congregational polity. They make a ministerial corporation honest about itself. The honest version is more sustainable than the implicit version, because the honest version asks members to live with what is actually the case, while the implicit version asks them to live with the gap between what is said and what is done. The first kind of life is possible; the second is corrosive over time, and its costs accumulate even when no individual instance is dramatic.

6. Alternative Frames

The family business frame, on the analysis offered here, does work the metaphor cannot honor without the structural modifications most ministerial corporations have not made. The constructive question is what frames can do the genuine work the family business frame attempts — express the warmth of relational belonging, capture the seriousness of shared work, honor the contributions of members — without importing the implications the structure cannot support. Several alternatives are proposed.

Frame 1: Household stewardship. The household metaphor of 1 Timothy 3:15 (“the house of God, which is the church of the living God, the pillar and ground of the truth”) and Ephesians 2:19 retains the warmth of family without the ownership implication. A household has an order; it has those responsible for its care; it has those who belong to it; it has work that is done within it. The language of stewardship adds the further specification that the responsibility for the household is custodial rather than proprietary. The credentialed ministers steward the household; they do not own it. The members belong to the household; they are not customers of it. The work of the household is the work of God; it is not the family business in the sense the business analogy implies. The household stewardship frame honors what the family business frame attempts to honor, and it does so within a vocabulary the New Testament authorizes directly.

Frame 2: Covenantal community with recognized elders. This frame foregrounds the covenantal relation among members and between the assembly and Christ, and it names the recognized eldership as the office of pastoral care and oversight within that community. The frame resists the corporate-managerial overtone of “business” while preserving the seriousness of recognized authority. It describes what the assembly is rather than what it does in business terms: a community held together by covenant in Christ, served by elders whose responsibility is exemplary and accountable, engaged in the work the gospel gives all its members. The frame is biblically grounded and structurally honest; it does not promise voice it cannot deliver, and it does not minimize the voice it does offer.

Frame 3: Body of Christ at work. The body metaphor of 1 Corinthians 12 and Ephesians 4 is used directly, with explicit attention to the work the body does. Members are described as members of the body whose gifts contribute to the work of the whole; the eldership is described as serving the body’s coherence and growth; the corporate form is described as a particular administrative arrangement within which the body’s work is carried out. The frame captures the genuine sense of shared enterprise without reducing the enterprise to a business and without implying ownership rights that the structure does not provide. It also has the advantage of corresponding directly to the New Testament’s own way of describing the assembly’s work, which is not the language of business.

Frame 4: Workers in the field. The metaphor Jesus uses in Matthew 9:37–38 and parallel passages — “the harvest truly is plenteous, but the labourers are few; pray ye therefore the Lord of the harvest, that he will send forth labourers into his harvest” — situates the assembly’s work in a different frame entirely. The field is not owned by the workers; it belongs to the Lord of the harvest. The workers are sent; they are not proprietors. The harvest is His; the work is His; the workers labor within His enterprise. The frame is humbler than the family business frame and, for that reason, more accurate to what the assembly’s work actually is. Members and ministers alike are workers in the field, with different assignments and responsibilities, all within the work of the Lord whose harvest it is.

Frame 5: Priesthood of all believers, with particular offices. The framework of 1 Peter 2:5 and 2:9 — “ye also, as lively stones, are built up a spiritual house, an holy priesthood, to offer up spiritual sacrifices, acceptable to God by Jesus Christ” — locates the participation of all members in the priestly work of the assembly, while preserving the New Testament’s clear teaching about particular offices within that priesthood. The frame honors the universal participation that the family business frame attempts to express, and it grounds that participation in the actual New Testament category of priesthood rather than the imported category of business. Particular offices — eldership, oversight, the service of deacons — operate within the priesthood, not over against it. The corporate form is one administrative expression of that priesthood’s life in a particular cultural and legal setting.

These frames are not mutually exclusive. The assembly can describe itself in several of these ways at different times, depending on what aspect of its life is in focus. What they have in common is that they capture the warmth, the seriousness, and the shared character of the assembly’s work without combining the family metaphor with the business metaphor in a way that imports ownership implications the structure cannot honor. The frames do not diminish the assembly’s self-understanding; they make it more accurate, and the accuracy is itself a pastoral good.

7. Deliverable: Governance Clarity Template

The first deliverable of this paper is a template for a one-page document that an assembly can adapt to make its actual structure of decision-making visible to the membership. The template is illustrative rather than prescriptive; the language is suggestive, and the particular assignments will vary by assembly and by the ministerial corporation’s specific arrangements. What the template models is the kind of clarity that replaces the implicit operation of the structure with explicit description.

The template proceeds in sections. Section one names the assembly and the corporate body of which it is a part, and it describes briefly the relation between the local assembly and any larger administrative body. Section two describes the office of the local pastor and the scope of pastoral decisions made at the local level — matters of pastoral care, teaching, local fellowship, the ordinary life of the assembly. Section three describes the role of regional or general administration, where applicable, and the scope of decisions made at that level — ministerial assignments, doctrinal matters that affect the wider body, significant policy questions. Section four describes the corporate body of legal members and the scope of decisions that require corporate action — major financial commitments, property matters, governance changes, the formal recognition of ordained ministers. Section five describes the channels through which member concerns, feedback, and input are received, including whom to contact for what kind of matter and what response can be expected.

The template includes, as a final section, an honest acknowledgment of what the document does not change. It does not transform the assembly into a congregational polity; it does not relocate authority that legitimately belongs to the offices to which it has been assigned; it does not promise that every concern will be acted on in the way the member raising it would prefer. What it does is make the structure visible, so that members are not left to infer it from rhetoric or to encounter it for the first time when they bump into one of its limits. The honesty of the document is the source of its pastoral value. Members who know how the assembly is organized are not surprised by it; they may agree or disagree with the arrangements, but they can engage with them as they actually are rather than as the rhetoric implied.

8. Deliverable: Participatory Channels Short of Corporate Membership

The second deliverable is a description of participatory practices that honor member voice without altering the locus of corporate governance. These practices are appropriate to most ministerial corporate arrangements; they do not require structural reform, and they extend the kind of agency the New Testament authorizes for the assembly within whatever legal form the assembly has taken.

Listening sessions. The local pastor, the regional administration, or both, hold periodic gatherings in which members are invited to raise concerns, ask questions, and offer perspective on the life of the assembly. The sessions are not deliberative in the corporate sense; they are listening in the proper sense. The pastor or administrator who hosts the session takes notes, follows up on substantive matters in subsequent communication, and returns to the body with a summary of what was heard and how it has been engaged.

Advisory bodies. The assembly forms, at the local or regional level, advisory bodies composed of members whose perspective is valued — those with relevant experience, those known for sound judgment, those whose service to the body has been consistent. The advisory bodies do not hold corporate authority; they advise. The credentialed ministers and corporate officers who receive the advice take it seriously, weigh it on the merits, and respond to it. The bodies are convened at predictable intervals, with clear charges, and their counsel is part of the regular life of the assembly’s decision-making.

Transparent financial reporting. The assembly makes available to its members, in accessible form, an honest account of how its resources are received and used. The level of detail is appropriate to the scale of the assembly — a small local assembly can do this with a brief annual statement; a larger corporate body requires more detailed reporting — but the principle is the same. Members who give to the assembly are treated as those for whose information the resources are accountable. The transparency does not transfer authority; it discharges the obligation Paul names in 2 Corinthians 8 to handle the assembly’s resources in a manner honorable in the sight of men as well as the Lord.

Accessible doctrinal exposition with invitation to questions. Teaching in the assembly is not delivered as a closed transmission. The Berean pattern of Acts 17:11 is honored by an explicit invitation to examine what is taught against Scripture, and the channels for raising questions about the teaching are the more readily available the more weighty the teaching is. A doctrinal matter newly addressed or freshly emphasized is accompanied by occasions for the body to bring its questions, receive further teaching, and engage the matter with the seriousness it deserves. The invitation is not a formality; it is operative, and the responses to questions raised are substantive.

Structured opportunities for raising concerns. When members have concerns that are not being adequately addressed through the ordinary channels, the assembly provides a defined further channel — a written submission, a meeting with a designated minister, an appeal to a regional administrator — that gives the concern a fair hearing on the merits. The further channel is not a guarantee that the concern will result in a particular outcome; it is a guarantee that the concern will be received, considered, and responded to by someone competent to address it.

Periodic feedback on the practices themselves. The assembly invites the membership to comment, periodically and through a defined mechanism, on whether the participatory practices are functioning. Members report whether they find the channels accessible, whether they find the responses substantive, whether there are matters they have wished to raise but have not found a way to. The feedback is itself feedback on the assembly’s care for its members’ voice, and the assembly responds to it with the same seriousness it asks of the members in their substantive concerns.

These practices are not radical, and they do not require corporate reform. They require attention, intentionality, and the disciplined refusal to let the relational warmth of family language stand in for the structural reality of voice. Where they are adopted, members live in a more honest relation to the assembly, and the assembly’s leadership operates with the kind of feedback and accountability that the apostolic pattern envisions. Where they are absent, the family business frame fills the gap rhetorically, and the costs identified in this paper accumulate over time.

9. Conclusion

The family business frame has been useful in ecclesial rhetoric because it expresses, with affective force, something the assembly experiences as true: that members are not customers of a religious service, that the work is shared, that the relation between members and the body is not transactional. These are real observations, and the rhetoric has been used to honor them. The frame’s difficulty is that it borrows the warmth of family and the agency of business and assigns both, by implication, to all who hear, while the structural arrangement of the typical ministerial corporation distributes ownership and decisional authority along narrower lines. The combination is not malicious, but it is imprecise, and the imprecision is paid for by those whose orientation toward the assembly the rhetoric has shaped.

The proposal of this paper is not that the assembly should never speak of itself in family language or never describe its work as work. It is that the family business frame, used without clarification, performs structural work the metaphor cannot honor, and that clarification is therefore required if the frame is to be retained. The clarification can take the form of explicit structural transparency — the practices proposed in section five — or the form of alternative frames that capture the warmth and shared work without the ownership implications — the alternatives proposed in section six. Either path, or some combination, brings the rhetoric and the structure into alignment, so that what is said about the assembly and what is the case about the assembly say the same thing.

The papers that follow turn from the structural and rhetorical questions examined in the first four to the questions of evaluation and theological boundary. Paper 5 takes up the measurement vacuum that low-expectations messaging creates and proposes a balanced framework for ministerial evaluation that preserves both pastoral care and mission clarity. Paper 6 addresses the most sensitive register of authority language — the claim that a particular ecclesial arrangement participates in or instantiates the government of God — and works out the boundary between divine governance and human administration that any honest claim in this register must respect. The seventh and final paper integrates the threads into a working framework for alignment among language, structure, and practice. The work of this paper, undertaken in the territory between metaphor and structure, has been to clear one of the spaces in which alignment is most often lost, so that the constructive work of the suite can proceed on ground that has been honestly surveyed.

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White Paper 3: Warnings of Rebellion: Exegesis, Scope, and Misapplication Risk

1. Framing the Problem

The previous paper argued that the New Testament authorizes real authority within the assembly and qualifies that authority in equally explicit terms. Authority is pastoral, exemplary, plural, locally rooted, and accountable; it is not absolute, proprietary, or exempt from the testing of Scripture. That framework, faithfully applied, has implications for the rhetorical instruments by which authority is exercised. Among those instruments, none is more weighty — and none more liable to drift — than the language of rebellion.

The category of rebellion is biblically serious. Scripture treats it so. The wilderness generation that refused to enter the land was barred from the rest of God; Korah and his company were swallowed by the earth; the prophets repeatedly addressed Israel’s covenantal infidelity in terms that admit no softening. When the Psalmist writes “Today, if ye will hear his voice, harden not your heart, as in the provocation” (Psalm 95:7–8), and when the writer to the Hebrews picks up that warning and applies it to the assembly (Hebrews 3:7–19; 4:1–11), the language is grave because the matter is grave. The warnings name a real and recurring failure of the human heart in response to God, and they call those who hear them to a corresponding seriousness.

Precisely because the category is grave, its application requires care. The warnings have a definite scope. They address a particular kind of failure — the hardening of the heart against the voice of God Himself, the unbelief that refuses what God has promised, the disposition that prefers the slavery one knows to the redemption one is offered. When they are applied within their proper scope, they do indispensable pastoral work. When they are applied beyond that scope — when the language of rebellion is extended to cover ordinary disagreement, conscience-based objection, scriptural questioning, or prudential dispute about practical matters — the result is not faithfulness to the texts. The result is a rhetorical instrument that uses biblical weight to settle questions that the biblical texts themselves do not adjudicate, and that quietly recategorizes legitimate dissent as moral failure.

The thesis of this paper is that biblical warnings of rebellion address covenantal unbelief and hardened hearts in response to the revealed voice of God, and that they are misapplied when they are used to reframe ordinary disagreement within the assembly as moral rebellion. The work of the paper is to recover the original referent of the warnings, to develop the hermeneutical controls that prevent their over-extension, to identify the category errors that occur when the controls are absent, to name the rhetorical effects of misapplication, and to propose a framework for when the language of rebellion is appropriate and when it is distortive.

This is not a project of softening the texts. The texts are not soft, and softening them would not serve the assembly. It is a project of disciplined application — of letting the warnings do the work they were given to do, in the cases they were given to address, while refusing to draft them into service for cases they were not given to address. The discipline is owed both to the texts and to those whom misapplication harms.

2. Original Referent: Israel’s Unbelief and the Response to God’s Voice

The wilderness motif as it appears in Psalm 95 and Hebrews 3–4 has a specific historical referent, and the contours of that referent are essential to faithful application.

The two events the Psalmist names — Meribah and Massah — are recorded in Exodus 17:1–7 and revisited at Numbers 20:1–13. In both cases, the assembly of Israel quarreled with Moses and tested the LORD over the absence of water. The texts use sharp language: the people strove with Moses, they tempted the LORD, they asked “Is the LORD among us, or not?” (Exodus 17:7) — and this question came after the ten plagues, the deliverance at the Red Sea, the manna, and the cloud. The provocation was not principally about water; it was about the response of the people’s hearts to a God who had repeatedly demonstrated His presence and power. They had seen His works; they tempted Him still.

Numbers 14 supplies the broader and more devastating instance of the wilderness pattern. The twelve spies returned from Canaan; ten brought a fearful report; the assembly wept all night, accused Moses and Aaron of bringing them out to die, and proposed to choose a captain and return to Egypt. “And the LORD said unto Moses, How long will this people provoke me? and how long will it be ere they believe me, for all the signs which I have shewed among them?” (Numbers 14:11). The verdict is given in the next chapter of the same narrative: “Your carcases shall fall in this wilderness; and all that were numbered of you, according to your whole number, from twenty years old and upward, which have murmured against me, doubt not, ye shall not come into the land” (Numbers 14:29–30). The forty years of wilderness wandering are the consequence of that single refusal — the refusal to enter the rest God had offered, on the testimony of His own clear word, after all that He had already shown them.

When the Psalmist takes up this material, he addresses Israel across generations: “Today, if ye will hear his voice, harden not your heart.” The warning is not historical reminiscence. It is contemporaneous address. Each generation that hears the psalm is being warned against the same pattern, and the pattern is named with precision. The rebellion in question is not generic disobedience to authority. It is the specific failure to hear God’s voice — to believe what He has spoken, to enter the rest He has prepared, to trust the deliverance He has offered. The hardness is the hardness that prefers Egypt to Canaan after the seas have parted.

The writer to the Hebrews picks this up and applies it to the assembly. “Take heed, brethren, lest there be in any of you an evil heart of unbelief, in departing from the living God” (Hebrews 3:12). The category is unbelief — the same category named in Numbers 14:11. The action is departing from the living God — turning back from the redemption He has accomplished. The exhortation that follows in Hebrews 3:13 (“exhort one another daily, while it is called Today”) makes the application personal and continuous, but the pattern being warned against is the wilderness pattern, not a generalized pattern of authority dispute.

Hebrews 4 extends the typology. The rest the wilderness generation forfeited is not exhausted by the land of Canaan; there remains a rest “to the people of God” (Hebrews 4:9), and the question for the assembly is whether they will, by faith, enter that rest, or whether they will, by unbelief, fall short of it as the fathers did. The seriousness of the warning is unmistakable. The specificity is equally unmistakable. The rest is God’s rest. The voice is God’s voice. The unbelief is unbelief in what God has spoken. The hardness is hardness against the gospel itself.

Three observations about the original referent are pastorally consequential.

First, the voice in question is God’s voice as revealed in His word and in the gospel. The warnings address response to that voice. They do not, in any direct way, address response to leaders’ counsel, ministerial directives, or organizational decisions, except insofar as those things accurately reflect the voice that has been revealed. The link between the warnings and any human authority is mediated entirely by the question of whether the human authority is faithfully transmitting what God has actually said.

Second, the failure in question is unbelief, not noncompliance. The wilderness generation did not refuse to enter the land because they disliked Moses. They refused because they did not believe God could give it to them. The category at the root of the warnings is the disposition of the heart toward God’s promises, not the disposition of behavior toward leaders’ instructions. Where these come apart — where someone complies behaviorally but does not believe, or where someone questions behaviorally but believes deeply — the warnings track the heart’s disposition toward God, not the surface compliance toward men.

Third, the texts treat the warnings as addressed to the assembly as a whole, in mutual exhortation. Hebrews 3:13 places the work of warning in the body’s care for itself: “exhort one another daily.” The warnings are not, in their primary biblical use, a top-down instrument by which leaders address members. They are a horizontal instrument by which the body addresses itself, including the leaders within it, lest any be hardened. The wilderness generation included Moses’ contemporaries — not Moses himself, in the case of the unbelief at Kadesh — and the warning of Hebrews is for “any of you,” without status restriction.

Read with these three observations in view, the warnings of Psalm 95 and Hebrews 3–4 do indispensable pastoral work. They name a real failure that the assembly is constantly liable to. They sustain the seriousness of the response God’s word demands. They keep the gospel from being received as a comfortable possession rather than a living word that requires faith, today and continually. None of this work depends on extending the warnings beyond their original referent. All of it is undone when the extension occurs.

3. Hermeneutical Controls

Faithful application of the wilderness warnings requires hermeneutical controls — disciplines of reading that prevent the texts from being drafted into service for cases they were not given to address. Four such controls are proposed.

Control 1: Distinguish between God’s command and a leader’s judgment. Scripture itself maintains this distinction sharply. Paul, in 1 Corinthians 7, repeatedly marks where he is speaking under the Lord’s commandment and where he is giving his own judgment as one who has received the Lord’s mercy: “But to the rest speak I, not the Lord” (1 Corinthians 7:12); “Now concerning virgins I have no commandment of the Lord: yet I give my judgment” (1 Corinthians 7:25). The distinction is preserved by an apostle whose judgment was, on any account, weighty. If Paul observed the distinction, those whose authority is derivative of Scripture should observe it more carefully, not less. A leader’s prudential judgment may be wise, may be experienced, may even be correct; it is not, on that account, equivalent to “the voice of God” in the sense of Psalm 95 and Hebrews 3. To treat the two as equivalent is to make a category claim the texts do not authorize.

The practical implication is that the wilderness warnings cannot be invoked to settle disputes about leaders’ prudential judgments, because the warnings address response to God’s revealed word, and prudential judgments are, by definition, not in that category. They may be informed by God’s word; they may be consistent with God’s word; they are not themselves the word.

Control 2: Identify whether the disputed matter is addressed by clear scriptural teaching. This control follows from the first. When a question arises within the assembly, the prior question is whether the question itself is one Scripture has spoken to. Some matters are clearly addressed: the requirement of holiness, the prohibition of explicit sins, the substance of the gospel, the moral law summarized by Christ. Other matters are not directly addressed: organizational structure beyond the principles examined in Paper 2, the timing of particular events, the allocation of resources within faithful options, the methods by which faithful work is accomplished. The wilderness warnings address the first category — they describe the disposition of the heart that hears God’s clear word and refuses it. They do not extend, by simple analogy, to the second category, where the texts themselves leave room for judgment, prudence, and disagreement among those who agree about the underlying scriptural commitments.

Control 3: Maintain the proper direction of the warnings. Hebrews 3:13 places the warnings in the mutual care of the body for itself. The pattern is horizontal exhortation, not unilateral application from one office to those under it. This does not deny that those who teach have a particular responsibility to warn; it observes that the warnings, in their biblical texture, are not an instrument that flows in only one direction. A leadership that uses the warnings to address the membership but refuses to receive the warnings when the membership voices them — that, for example, treats it as inappropriate for members to wonder whether a particular pattern of conduct in the leadership might itself be a hardening — has reversed the texture the texts establish. The warnings do not exempt any office from their reach.

Control 4: Examine the practice against the biblical pattern of testing. The texts the warnings come from sit alongside other texts that are equally weighty. 1 Thessalonians 5:21 instructs the assembly to “Prove all things; hold fast that which is good.” Acts 17:11 commends the Bereans as “more noble than those in Thessalonica” because they searched the Scriptures daily to see whether the things Paul preached were so. 1 John 4:1 commands believers to “try the spirits whether they are of God.” These texts are not in tension with the warnings; they describe the disposition by which the warnings are themselves to be received. The hardened heart Hebrews warns against is one that refuses God’s voice. The Berean disposition Acts commends is one that examines what is presented as God’s voice to confirm that it is. These are not opposites; they are complementary aspects of a single disposition of faithfulness. A reading that treats the wilderness warnings as if they prohibited Berean examination has misread both the warnings and the Berean commendation, and has placed two scriptural patterns in artificial opposition.

These four controls do not soften the warnings. They locate them. The warnings remain serious; they remain applicable; they remain essential to the assembly’s life. What the controls prevent is the drift by which a text addressing covenantal unbelief in response to God’s voice becomes a rhetorical lever in disputes that have nothing to do with covenantal unbelief and everything to do with prudential judgment, organizational practice, or interpersonal grievance.

4. Category Errors

When the hermeneutical controls are not maintained, predictable category errors result. Two are particularly important to name.

Category Error 1: Disagreement is not rebellion. This is the most common and the most consequential confusion. Disagreement is a relation between two persons or parties about a matter; it presupposes that both parties have positions and that the positions differ. Rebellion, in the biblical sense, is a relation between a person and God; it is the refusal of what God has spoken or commanded. The two are not on the same axis. A person who agrees with everything Scripture teaches and disagrees with a leader’s interpretation or application is not, on the basis of that disagreement, in rebellion against God. A person who claims to agree with leaders but disregards what Scripture clearly teaches is in a more serious position than the first, regardless of how compliant the surface conduct.

The error becomes visible when one notices the consequences of the conflation. If disagreement is recategorized as rebellion, then the disagreement cannot be examined on its merits. The question of whether the disagreement is well founded — whether the dissenter is making a sound argument, raising a legitimate concern, or pointing to an actual problem — is displaced by the question of the dissenter’s loyalty. The substance is lost; only the posture remains. This is not a minor pastoral cost. It means that real concerns cannot surface, real errors cannot be corrected, and the assembly’s capacity to test and self-correct is impaired in proportion to the rhetorical power of the rebellion frame.

The biblical pattern explicitly contradicts the conflation. Galatians 2:11–14 records that “when Peter was come to Antioch, I withstood him to the face, because he was to be blamed.” Paul, an apostle, publicly confronts another apostle for behavior inconsistent with the truth of the gospel. The confrontation is direct: “I said unto Peter before them all, If thou, being a Jew, livest after the manner of Gentiles, and not as do the Jews, why compellest thou the Gentiles to live as do the Jews?” (Galatians 2:14). This is not rebellion. It is faithful confrontation in defense of the gospel. The category of rebellion cannot be extended to cover what Paul did to Peter, and any framework that would recategorize it has misread Galatians 2 as well as Hebrews 3.

Category Error 2: Questioning is not hardening. The hardening of heart that Hebrews 3 warns against is a closing of the heart against God’s word. It is the disposition that has heard and chosen not to hear, that has seen and chosen not to see, that has been corrected and refused correction. It is, by its nature, a hardening — a setting of the will against what is known. Questioning, by contrast, is the disposition that has not yet settled, that is examining, that is asking how this fits with that. The two are nearly opposite states of the heart. The hardened heart needs nothing more to know; the questioning heart wants to understand. To call questioning a form of hardening is to invert the biblical category at its root.

The Bereans were not hardened when they examined the Scriptures to see whether Paul’s preaching was so. They were honored. The text is explicit: they were “more noble” for it. Whatever else Acts 17:11 establishes, it establishes that the disposition to examine teaching against Scripture is, in the inspired commentary of Luke, a noble disposition. A culture that treats questioning as suspect — that responds to a member’s request for scriptural support of a particular practice by suggesting that the request itself indicates a hardening — has created a category in opposition to the one the text commends. The cost is again pastoral: members learn that questions are unwelcome, and the assembly loses the testing function the texts authorize.

Two further conflations operate alongside these primary errors and are worth identifying briefly.

Conscience-based objection is not Korah-style rebellion. Korah and his company in Numbers 16 sought the priesthood that God had given to Aaron alone. Their offense was not asking questions; it was attempting to seize an office God had not given them, in defiance of God’s clear designation. The wider assembly was warned, after the judgment, not to bring strange fire as Korah’s company had done. The lesson is precise: do not arrogate to yourself what God has reserved to others, and do not despise the office God has Himself instituted. A member who, in good conscience and on the basis of careful reading of Scripture, declines to participate in something he judges contrary to Scripture is not in Korah’s position. He is not seeking another’s office. He is exercising the responsibility every believer has to keep the conscience clean before God. The two cases are not analogous, and any application that conflates them has imported a weight the conscience-based case cannot bear and was never meant to bear.

Persistent concern is not murmuring. The “murmuring” that the wilderness generation engaged in and that Numbers and Exodus describe with such severity was complaint against God Himself, expressed against His appointed leaders, in a context where God’s faithfulness had been repeatedly demonstrated and was being repeatedly denied. It was complaint that came down to “Is the LORD among us, or not?” (Exodus 17:7). Persistent concern within the assembly about a recognized issue — a concern that is voiced through proper channels, supported by reasoning, oriented toward resolution — is not the same act. It may be inconvenient; it may be unwelcome; it may even be wrong on the merits. It is not, on that account, the murmuring of Numbers 14. To call it so is to invoke a weight the biblical category does not authorize for cases of this kind.

5. Rhetorical Effects of Misapplied Rebellion Language

The misapplication of rebellion language has predictable rhetorical effects, and these effects are themselves pastorally significant. They are not merely matters of word choice; they reshape how the assembly evaluates situations, hears its members, and conducts its disputes.

Effect 1: The shift from outcomes to loyalty. When a question is recategorized from “is this practice consistent with Scripture?” to “is this person being rebellious in raising the question?”, the axis of evaluation moves from the substance to the disposition. The original question may have been answerable on its merits — perhaps the practice is consistent with Scripture, perhaps it is not, perhaps the answer requires more careful exegesis than has yet been given. The recategorization sets that question aside and substitutes a different one: where does this person stand in their relation to authority? The new question can be answered without ever addressing the first. A leader who is uncomfortable with the substance can dispose of the substance by characterizing the questioner. The texts themselves do not authorize this maneuver, but the rhetorical apparatus enables it. The assembly’s ability to examine substance is degraded in proportion to how often the maneuver succeeds.

Effect 2: The chilling of legitimate inquiry. Members observe how rebellion language is used. They notice when its use follows the raising of certain kinds of questions. They draw the obvious inference: certain kinds of questions, however legitimate, carry a personal cost. Over time, this produces a selection effect in what gets raised and what does not. The questions that survive into the open are the ones whose answers are already congenial to the leadership. The questions that would test the leadership are quietly retained by those who hold them. The assembly does not learn, because it has stopped being told. This is not because members are timid; it is because they are reasonable. The cost of speaking has been raised, and they have priced it in.

Effect 3: The re-description of disagreement as moral failure. In a healthy framework, disagreement is a normal feature of life together — sometimes resolved, sometimes settled by patient teaching, sometimes acknowledged as enduring on a matter where Scripture leaves room. Disagreement is not, in itself, sin. Romans 14 is the explicit New Testament treatment of disagreement on disputable matters, and Paul does not call either party to repent of disagreeing; he calls both to honor the conscience of the other and not to despise or judge. When rebellion language is overlaid on ordinary disagreement, this entire texture is lost. Disagreement becomes moral failure. The disagreeing parties cannot occupy the position Romans 14 envisions, because the position has been redefined as illegitimate. A pastoral resource the New Testament gives the assembly is removed by rhetorical means.

Effect 4: The misdirection of pastoral attention. When concerns are categorized as rebellion, the pastoral response is calibrated to address rebellion: warning, counsel toward repentance, in serious cases discipline. The pastoral response that the situation might actually require — listening to the concern, examining the substance, acknowledging where the concern is well founded, correcting where it is not — is bypassed. The member experiences having been “addressed pastorally” without having been heard, because what was addressed was a rebellion that may not have existed, while the substance that did exist was not engaged. Trust diminishes. The next time a concern arises, it is not raised with leadership. It is raised among peers, or held privately, or carried out of the assembly. None of these outcomes is what the assembly needs.

Effect 5: The immunization of leadership from review. This is the cumulative effect, and it is the most institutionally consequential. When the rhetorical pattern operates over time, it produces a leadership that is, in practice, beyond the kind of testing the texts envision. Not because the leadership is formally exempt — the texts do not authorize formal exemption — but because the practical cost of raising questions has risen to the point that the questions are not raised. The leadership’s accountability becomes nominal. The assembly’s capacity to self-correct becomes compromised. The texts themselves describe leaders as keeping watch over souls “as those who will have to give an account” (Hebrews 13:17); a leadership that is not, in practice, accountable to anyone within the present life of the assembly has a structurally distorted relation to that future accounting, because the practices that should sustain present accountability have been quietly removed.

These effects are not theoretical. They are observable wherever rebellion language has drifted from its biblical scope. The practical importance of recovering the proper scope is therefore proportional to the cost of these effects, and the cost is not small.

6. Proper Use Framework

The argument of this paper has been that rebellion language is misapplied in many cases. It has not been that rebellion language has no proper use. It has a proper use, and refusing to allow it that use would be as serious an error as extending it beyond its scope. A framework for proper use is therefore necessary.

The framework rests on the observation that rebellion language is biblically warranted in cases where the matter at issue is the response of the heart to God’s revealed word, where the response is one of refusal, and where the refusal is sustained in the face of clear scriptural witness. Three conditions, each of which must be met, define the proper use.

Condition 1: The matter is one to which Scripture clearly speaks. Rebellion in the biblical sense is rebellion against what God has commanded. Where Scripture has commanded, the category applies. Where Scripture has not directly commanded — where the matter is prudential, organizational, or under reasonable disagreement among those who hold the same scriptural commitments — the category does not apply, and its invocation imports weight the case cannot bear.

Condition 2: The refusal is sustained, not occasional. Hebrews 3:13 envisions exhortation as ongoing, “while it is called Today,” precisely because momentary failures of faith are not yet hardening. Hardening is what happens when the heart, having heard, sets itself against what it has heard, and continues in that setting through repeated occasions of correction. The wilderness generation forfeited the rest after Numbers 14 not because of one moment of fear but because of a sustained pattern of unbelief, which Hebrews summarizes by noting that God was grieved with that generation forty years (Hebrews 3:9–10). A single instance of hesitation, doubt, or even refusal does not constitute hardening in the biblical sense. The category names a settled disposition, not a passing failure.

Condition 3: Patient correction has been given and rejected. The biblical pattern is that warnings are issued, opportunities for correction are provided, and the warnings escalate only in response to refusal. The structure of Hebrews itself — extended argument, careful exposition, repeated exhortation — embodies this pattern. The assembly is not given the warnings as a starting point; it is given the gospel, the explication of Christ’s work, the patient laying out of the case, and within that frame the warnings come. A pastoral practice that begins with rebellion language, before the substance has been engaged and the correction has been offered, has reversed the biblical pattern. Where the substance has been engaged, the correction has been offered with care, and the response is a sustained refusal of what Scripture clearly teaches, then the language of rebellion is appropriate, because the case has actually become the case the texts describe.

When all three conditions are met, the assembly is in the territory where the wilderness warnings do their proper work. The warnings can be invoked because the case is the kind of case the warnings address. The seriousness is appropriate because the matter is serious. The pastoral instrument fits the pastoral situation.

When any of the conditions is not met, the language is not yet appropriate, regardless of how strongly the situation may be felt. If the matter is prudential, the language is misapplied at the level of category. If the refusal is occasional rather than sustained, the language is premature and may itself induce hardening rather than relieve it. If patient correction has not been given, the language has skipped a step the biblical pattern requires. In each of these cases, the appropriate response is not the warning but the work that the warning presupposes — engaging the substance, providing the correction, allowing time for response — and only after that work has been done is the question of warning even on the table.

The framework has a corollary that is sometimes overlooked. The warnings, properly applied, are not principally an instrument of compliance. They are an instrument of pastoral concern for the soul of the one warned. The wilderness generation’s tragedy was not that they failed to comply with Moses; it was that they failed to enter the rest God had prepared for them. The warning of Hebrews 3 is for the sake of those who hear it, that they not fall short of what is offered. When the warnings are used in service of compliance with leaders’ directives, they have been redirected from their proper telos. The assembly’s leaders are not the destination of the warnings; the rest of God is.

7. Decision Tree: Is This Rebellion or Legitimate Dissent?

The diagnostic instrument that follows is intended for use by ministers, those evaluating pastoral situations, and members seeking to assess their own standing. It is structured as a sequence of questions, each of which narrows the territory until the situation can be characterized with reasonable accuracy.

The first question is the question of substance: is the matter at issue one to which Scripture clearly speaks? If the matter is the explicit teaching of Scripture — the requirements of holiness, the commands of Christ, the substance of the gospel, the moral law as the New Testament expounds it — then the question of rebellion is on the table and the inquiry continues. If the matter is one Scripture has not directly addressed — a prudential question, an organizational question, a method or means rather than an end — then rebellion language is misapplied at the level of category, and the inquiry should move to the question of how the disagreement is to be navigated rather than whether it constitutes rebellion. Romans 14 is the relevant frame for the second case; the wilderness warnings are not.

The second question, on the assumption that the first has placed the matter in the scriptural category, is the question of direction: is the person under examination resisting clear scriptural teaching, or contending for it? A person who maintains that Scripture commands what is being practiced, and who is uncomfortable with leadership that appears to be moving away from that command, is contending for Scripture, not against it. To characterize such a person as rebellious is to invert the relation: the rebellion in such a case, if there is rebellion at all, lies on the side of the practice that has departed from the scriptural command, not on the side of the person urging fidelity to it. A person who maintains a position that Scripture explicitly and clearly contradicts — and who maintains it after the contradiction has been laid out — is in a different position, and the inquiry continues with respect to that person.

The third question is the question of pattern: is the resistance occasional or sustained? Momentary failures of faith — doubt that arises and is being worked through, a difficult question that has not yet been settled, a struggle with a particular command that is in the open and being addressed — are not, in the biblical pattern, hardening. They are the ordinary texture of Christian life, addressed pastorally with patience and continued exhortation. Hardening is the settled refusal that persists through the opportunities for correction. The category of rebellion is appropriate to the second; it is misapplied to the first, and its application to the first may itself impede the recovery the situation calls for.

The fourth question is the question of process: has patient correction been given and refused? Has the substance been engaged with care? Has the person had opportunity to respond, to ask questions, to receive teaching? Has the response of the person been considered on its merits? If these steps have not been taken, the situation has not yet reached the territory where rebellion language belongs, regardless of how strongly the matter is felt. If these steps have been taken — fully and with the kind of patience the texts model — and the response has been a sustained refusal of clear scriptural teaching, then the situation has reached the territory the warnings address, and the warnings can be applied with their proper weight.

A fifth question stands alongside the others as a check on the whole inquiry: does the characterization of rebellion serve the soul of the one being characterized, or does it serve the convenience of the one doing the characterizing? The wilderness warnings are pastoral instruments oriented toward the recovery of those who are warned. If the use of the language in a particular case would not, in any plausible sense, work toward the recovery of the one being warned — if its function is rather to settle a dispute, suppress a concern, or close a question — then the language has been redirected from its biblical telos, and its use should be reconsidered regardless of how the other questions have been answered.

The decision tree does not produce mechanical certainty. It produces disciplined consideration. Cases that survive each question with clear answers can be addressed accordingly; cases that fail at any question require attention to what the failure indicates before the rebellion frame is applied. The discipline is the protection against the misapplication the paper has identified.

8. Language Alternatives That Preserve Seriousness Without Overreach

Where rebellion language has been the default rhetorical instrument and where the diagnostic shows that its application is not warranted, alternative language is needed that preserves the seriousness of pastoral concern without importing the weight the case cannot bear. Several alternatives are proposed, each suited to particular situations.

When the matter is a substantive disagreement on a prudential question, the appropriate language describes what the situation actually is: “this is a disagreement about how we ought to proceed in a matter Scripture has not directly settled, and we are working through it together.” This language preserves the seriousness — disagreements are real, they require attention, they cannot be ignored — without misclassifying the disagreement as moral failure. Members who hear this language know they are being taken seriously. Members who hear the rebellion frame imposed on the same situation know they are being shut down.

When the matter is a member’s concern about leadership conduct, the appropriate language describes the concern as a concern: “you have raised a concern about how a particular matter has been handled, and we want to hear it carefully and respond to it on its merits.” This language acknowledges that concerns are legitimate, that hearing them is part of the leadership’s responsibility, and that the merits of the concern are the question. It does not preempt the merits by characterizing the raising of the concern as itself problematic.

When the matter is a member’s question about how a particular practice or teaching aligns with Scripture, the appropriate language honors the question: “this is a question that deserves a careful answer from Scripture, and we will give it that answer.” The Berean pattern in Acts 17:11 is the warrant. Members are not to be discouraged from asking how teaching aligns with Scripture; they are to be helped to do so well. The leadership that takes this approach will sometimes find that the question reveals a problem the leadership had not seen, and the question becomes a gift to the assembly. The leadership that suppresses the question by characterizing the questioner has lost both the question and the gift.

When the matter is a member’s conscience-based objection to participation in something he judges contrary to Scripture, the appropriate language honors the conscience: “we understand that your conscience does not permit you to participate in this, and we will not require you to act against your conscience.” Romans 14 establishes the pattern; the conscience is not to be violated, and the strong are not to despise the weak nor the weak to judge the strong. A leadership that responds to conscience-based objection with rebellion language has misclassified the case and has placed the member in an impossible position: comply against conscience, or be characterized as in rebellion against God. Neither option is faithful, and the texts do not authorize the framing that produces them.

When the matter is, after all the other questions have been carefully worked through, an actual case of sustained refusal of clear scriptural teaching, the appropriate language can name the matter directly without recourse to the wilderness frame: “Scripture clearly teaches X; you have indicated that you do not accept this teaching; we are calling you, with seriousness, to receive what Scripture teaches.” This language preserves the gravity of the case without invoking categories the case may or may not actually fit. If the case becomes one in which the wilderness warnings are appropriate — sustained, settled, after correction — then the warnings can be applied. But the language can do its work without the warnings in cases where the warnings are not yet warranted, and reserving the warnings for cases that genuinely meet the conditions preserves their weight for those cases.

A general principle underlies these alternatives. Seriousness in pastoral language does not require maximalist categories. Often it requires the opposite: precise description of what the case is, careful engagement with its substance, and language that names what is happening without overshadowing it. The warnings of Hebrews 3 retain their force when they are reserved for the cases they were given to address. They lose their force when they are extended to every case, because extension dilutes the category. A leadership that uses rebellion language frequently teaches its hearers that the category means little; a leadership that reserves it for the cases that warrant it preserves the meaning the texts give it. The discipline of language is, in this respect, a discipline of stewardship: stewardship of the words Scripture has given the assembly, used for the purposes Scripture has given them.

9. Conclusion

The wilderness warnings of Psalm 95 and Hebrews 3–4 are among the most weighty pastoral instruments the assembly has. Their proper use sustains the seriousness with which the gospel must be received, the urgency of “Today” in which the voice of God speaks, and the ongoing care by which members exhort one another lest any be hardened. The warnings name a real failure of the human heart, and they call the assembly to a corresponding seriousness. None of this work can be done without the warnings, and the assembly that lost them would have lost something essential.

The misapplication of the warnings, however, does work the warnings were not given to do. When ordinary disagreement is recategorized as rebellion, when questioning is recharacterized as hardening, when prudential dispute is reframed as covenantal infidelity, the language of Scripture has been redirected from its proper telos and pressed into service for purposes the texts do not authorize. The cost is not only to the dissenters whose concerns are dismissed; the cost is to the assembly as a whole, which loses the testing function the texts elsewhere commend, and to the leadership itself, which is quietly placed beyond the kind of review the apostolic pattern envisions.

The discipline this paper has urged is therefore a discipline of fidelity to the texts. The wilderness warnings address what they address; they do not address what they do not address; and the difference matters. The hermeneutical controls, the diagnostic decision tree, and the language alternatives proposed here are all in the service of letting the warnings do their proper work in the cases they were given to address, while refusing to draft them into service for cases they were not given to address. This is not a softening of Scripture. It is a respect for what Scripture has actually said.

The paper that follows takes up the specific drift of household and family language into the metaphor of “the family business” — a drift introduced briefly in Paper 1 and now requiring fuller treatment. The connection between the present paper and the next is direct. The rhetorical drifts examined here and there share a common pattern: language with a proper biblical use is asked to perform work it was not given to do, with the result that members find themselves living inside contradictions the language and structure together produce. Recovering the proper scope of each — the warnings here, the household and business metaphors there — is part of the larger project of bringing language, structure, and practice into the alignment that the suite as a whole proposes.

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White Paper 2: Biblical Models of Authority: Elders, Shepherds, and the Limits of Analogy

1. Framing the Problem

The previous paper made the gap between metaphor and structure visible. This paper turns to the texts that ought to govern how that gap is closed. The question is direct: what do the New Testament patterns of authority actually authorize, and what do they refuse to authorize? The question matters because the recurring difficulty in ecclesial governance is not that authority is exercised — Scripture plainly establishes that it should be — but that the kind of authority Scripture establishes is regularly conflated with kinds of authority Scripture qualifies, limits, or rejects outright.

The argument of this paper has three parts. First, the New Testament affirms real authority within the called-out body of Christ, located in the offices of elder and overseer, exercised through teaching, oversight, and pastoral care. Second, the same New Testament consistently qualifies that authority as stewardship rather than ownership, as exemplary rather than coercive, as plural rather than monarchical, and as accountable rather than absolute. Third, the contemporary translation of these patterns into the ministerial corporation introduces analogical strains that must be acknowledged and disciplined; the corporate form is not the eldership of the New Testament, and it cannot be made into the eldership of the New Testament by being described in eldership language.

The aim is not to dismantle pastoral authority. The aim is to recover the authority Scripture actually gives, in the form Scripture actually gives it, with the qualifications Scripture actually attaches to it. An assembly that does this is not weakened in its governance; it is grounded in it. An assembly that does not do this can find itself defending forms of authority the New Testament neither recognizes nor permits, while neglecting the forms it actually establishes.

2. The Texts in View

The passages this paper engages are the standard set, treated as a coherent body rather than as a list of proof texts. The eldership and oversight passages — Acts 14:23, Acts 20:17–35, 1 Timothy 3:1–7, Titus 1:5–9, James 5:14, 1 Peter 5:1–4 — establish the office. The shepherding passages — John 10, Ezekiel 34, 1 Peter 5, John 21:15–17 — establish the posture. The mutuality passages — Matthew 20:25–28, Mark 10:42–45, Luke 22:24–27 — establish the limits. The congregational agency passages — Acts 6:1–6, Acts 15, 1 Corinthians 5, 2 Corinthians 8:16–24 — establish the participatory texture within which the office operates. Galatians 2:11–14 establishes that even apostolic authority is correctable on matters of practice. Hebrews 13:7 and 13:17 establish the responsibility of the body toward those who lead. 1 Thessalonians 5:12–13 establishes the same from the other direction.

These texts are not a constitution. They do not specify the legal form a body should take in any given century. They specify the kind of authority that operates in the body, the kind of person who should hold it, the kind of conduct that should mark it, and the kind of response the body should give it. Within those specifications there is real room for institutional variation. Outside those specifications, no institutional variation can justify itself by appeal to these texts.

3. Authority as Stewardship, Not Ownership

The first qualification the New Testament places on authority in the body of Christ is the one most consistently overlooked in practice. Authority in the assembly is exercised over what does not belong to the one exercising it. Peter’s address to the elders makes this explicit: “Shepherd the flock of God that is among you” (1 Peter 5:2). The flock is God’s. The shepherd is a steward of what God owns. The same point is made in Paul’s address to the Ephesian elders at Miletus: “Be on guard for yourselves and for all the flock, among which the Holy Spirit has made you overseers, to shepherd the church of God which He purchased with His own blood” (Acts 20:28). The assembly is purchased; the purchase price is the blood of Jesus Christ; the elders oversee what He has bought. Ownership has been settled. The office is stewardship within that settlement.

The implications of this qualification are substantial. A steward is accountable to the owner; the steward’s authority is delegated and revocable; the steward’s exercise of authority must serve the owner’s purposes, not the steward’s; and the steward who treats the owner’s property as his own commits a category error that Scripture treats with considerable severity. The parable of the wicked tenants (Matthew 21:33–46) is a sustained meditation on this category error. The tenants are not the owner. When they begin to act as owners — refusing the owner’s representatives, claiming the inheritance for themselves — the parable’s outcome is grim.

This is the controlling qualification because it sets the frame for every other qualification. Authority that knows it is stewardship can be plural, exemplary, accountable, and correctable, because none of those qualifications threaten anything the steward owns. Authority that has drifted toward ownership cannot easily accept any of those qualifications, because each of them appears to threaten what the office now considers its own. The drift from stewardship to ownership is rarely announced. It shows up in language — my congregation, my people, my work — and in practice — defensiveness when oversight is exercised from outside, resistance when feedback is offered from inside, the conflation of disagreement with disloyalty.

The contemporary corporate form, in itself, does not cause this drift, but it can mask it. The legal vocabulary of corporate membership, fiduciary duty, and officer responsibility is a vocabulary of stewardship in its own register; it is designed to track the difference between those who hold authority and those for whose benefit the authority is held. When the corporate form is administered with the stewardship frame in view — when ministers understand themselves as legal stewards of an asset that does not belong to them, on behalf of a body whose true Owner is Jesus Christ — the corporate form serves the biblical pattern reasonably well. When the corporate form is administered with the language of family and household but the underlying disposition has drifted toward ownership, the legal form provides cover for a posture Scripture explicitly rejects.

The diagnostic question is not “Does this minister claim to own the work?” Almost no one will say so. The diagnostic question is whether the practical operations of authority — how decisions are made, how disagreement is received, how feedback is processed, how successors are prepared, how transitions are conducted — are recognizable as the operations of a steward or as the operations of a proprietor.

4. Plurality and Locality of Elders

The second qualification is structural. The New Testament pattern is plural eldership, locally rooted. Acts 14:23 records that Paul and Barnabas “appointed elders for them in every church.” The plural is consistent. Titus 1:5 instructs Titus to “appoint elders in every city.” James 5:14 directs the sick to call for “the elders of the church.” Acts 20:17 records that Paul “called to him the elders of the church” at Ephesus. There is no New Testament example of a single elder governing a single local assembly without the company of fellow elders. The pattern is companies of elders in particular cities and assemblies.

This plurality is not decorative. It is a check against the concentration of authority in one office and one personality. When elders are plural, no single elder can decide a matter of teaching or pastoral judgment without the counsel and consent of the others. When elders are local, their authority is bounded by the assembly they actually know and serve. The two qualifications together — plurality and locality — produce a structure in which authority is exercised by those who can be observed by those who hold them accountable, in a circle small enough that the observation is real.

The contemporary translation of this pattern is the place where the analogical strain is most visible. Modern ecclesial structures, including the ministerial corporations under examination in this suite, typically do not consist of plural local elderships in the New Testament sense. They consist of regional and general administrative bodies that oversee multiple congregations, with local pastors who may or may not have plural eldership in their assemblies, and with supervisory relationships that extend across geographic areas. The reasons for this departure are not hard to identify: the dispersion of small congregations, the desire for doctrinal consistency, the practical advantages of shared administrative resources, the historical inheritance of denominational forms.

The analogical strain is that the New Testament word elder is used in this contemporary structure to describe roles that bear only partial resemblance to the New Testament office. A regional pastor with oversight of fifteen scattered congregations is not, in the New Testament sense, an elder of any of them; he is something the New Testament does not directly describe. This does not delegitimize the role. It does mean that the role cannot defend itself by simple appeal to the New Testament eldership texts. The role must be defended on its own terms, with its own qualifications, and with explicit acknowledgment that the New Testament pattern of plural local eldership is not what this role is.

The constructive proposal is twofold. First, where local plural eldership is possible — where an assembly is large enough and stable enough to support more than one ordained leader — it should be preferred. The biblical preference is clear, and the structural protections it provides are real. Second, where local plural eldership is not possible, the structural protection it provides should be approximated by other means: regular peer review, transparent doctrinal accountability, clearly defined channels of appeal, and a culture in which the local pastor does not exercise authority in isolation. The substance of the qualification — that authority not be concentrated in one observable office without check — must be preserved even where the form of plural local eldership cannot be.

5. Exemplarity Versus Coercion

The third qualification concerns the means by which authority operates. The New Testament pattern is exemplary, not coercive. Peter is most explicit: elders are to shepherd “not under compulsion but willingly … not for sordid gain but with eagerness; nor yet as lording it over those allotted to your charge, but proving to be examples to the flock” (1 Peter 5:2–3). The construction is striking. Each of three commendable postures is paired with the opposite that must be refused. Willing, not compelled. Eager, not mercenary. Exemplary, not domineering. The language of “lording it over” — katakurieuō — is the same root used by Jesus in Matthew 20:25 and Mark 10:42 to describe the manner of Gentile rulers, the manner that the assembly is told explicitly will not characterize its leaders: “It shall not be so among you” (Matthew 20:26).

The exemplary mode is authority by demonstration. The leader leads by being what the rest are called to be. The flock follows because the path is visible in the shepherd’s own walking of it. This is not a softer authority; it is, in some respects, a harder one, because it cannot be exercised through any instrument other than the leader’s own life. The coercive mode, by contrast, is authority by command and consequence. The flock complies because non-compliance carries cost. The coercive mode is the natural mode of civil authority, military authority, and many forms of organizational authority. It is the mode the New Testament explicitly excludes from the assembly.

Several practical consequences follow. The first is that pastoral authority cannot be sustained by enforcement mechanisms alone. When the only thing keeping members in line is the threat of disfellowshipment or the social cost of dissent, the authority being exercised is not the authority Scripture authorizes. It may produce compliance; it does not produce the followership 1 Peter envisions. The second consequence is that the exemplary mode requires a kind of transparency that the coercive mode does not. If the leader is the example, the leader’s life must be visible enough to be examined. The qualifications in 1 Timothy 3 and Titus 1 — temperate, hospitable, gentle, not quarrelsome, not addicted to wine, not pugnacious, not greedy, managing his own household well — describe what the visible life should look like. They are not bureaucratic checkboxes; they are the working substance of exemplary authority.

The third consequence is the most difficult. The exemplary mode means that when authority fails — when a leader falls into the postures Peter and Paul explicitly forbid — the appropriate response of the body is not the redoubling of the coercive apparatus but the addressing of the failure. The texts assume that elders can fail and provide for the response. 1 Timothy 5:19–20 instructs Timothy not to receive an accusation against an elder except on the testimony of two or three witnesses, but in the same paragraph instructs that those who continue in sin be rebuked in the presence of all, “so that the rest also will be fearful of sinning.” The protection against frivolous accusation is real; so is the requirement of public correction when accusation is established. The exemplary mode does not mean elders are unaccountable; it means their accountability is structured, witnessed, and serious.

The implication for institutional practice is that any structure in which an elder’s failure cannot be addressed by the body — because the appeal mechanisms do not exist, or because raising a concern is itself treated as a failure of submission — is a structure that has departed from the New Testament pattern at one of its most important qualifications. The exemplary mode requires correctability. Without correctability, exemplarity becomes pretense, and the only authority left operating is coercion under another name.

6. Congregational Agency in the Texts

The fourth qualification establishes the texture within which authority operates. Congregational agency is not the same thing as congregational governance, and the New Testament does not present a model of congregational governance in the modern democratic sense. It does, however, consistently depict the body as a body that participates in its own life — that recognizes its leaders, that distinguishes between teaching to be received and teaching to be tested, that handles certain matters as a body, and that contributes to decisions in ways that are explicitly recorded.

Acts 6:1–6 is the clearest example. When the Hellenistic widows are being neglected in the daily distribution, the apostles do not unilaterally appoint deacons. They convene the multitude of the disciples and instruct them: “Select from among you, brethren, seven men of good reputation, full of the Spirit and of wisdom, whom we may put in charge of this task.” The apostles set the criteria; the assembly selects the persons; the apostles confirm and lay hands on those selected. The pattern is not democratic in the modern sense, but it is participatory in a structured way. The body has a role; that role is shaped by apostolic instruction and confirmed by apostolic action; the result is a decision in which more than one circle of agency is operating at once.

Acts 15 shows a similar texture at the level of doctrinal and pastoral judgment. The Jerusalem council convenes apostles and elders, but the resulting letter is sent in the name of “the apostles and the brethren who are elders” along with “the whole church” (Acts 15:22). The decision is made in a structured deliberation; it is communicated as the judgment of a body that includes more than the deciding officers. 2 Corinthians 8:16–24 records Paul sending Titus and another brother to Corinth, and identifying that brother as one who “has been appointed by the churches as our travel companion” — the verb is cheirotoneō, the same verb used in Acts 14:23 for the appointment of elders. The churches participate in the appointment of those who will travel with apostolic authority on a financial matter.

1 Corinthians 5 instructs the assembly to act, as an assembly, in the matter of the man living in sin. Paul issues the apostolic judgment, but the action is to be taken when the body is “assembled, in the name of our Lord Jesus, with my spirit also, with the power of our Lord Jesus” (1 Corinthians 5:4). The assembly does not act on its own initiative apart from apostolic instruction; nor does the apostle act apart from the assembly. The two are joined in the action.

These passages establish a working principle. Authority in the New Testament assembly is not exercised over an inert body. It is exercised within a body that has its own agency, its own role, and its own contribution to the life and decisions of the whole. The relevant agencies are not necessarily the agencies of legal corporate membership; the New Testament does not contemplate that legal form. They are the agencies of recognition, selection, deliberation, testing, and structured participation that the texts describe. An institutional structure that gives the body none of these agencies — that treats the congregation as a recipient of decisions made entirely outside its participation — has narrowed the pattern the New Testament shows.

This is one of the points where the analogical strain between the New Testament pattern and the modern corporate form is most acute. The corporate form locates governance rights in legal members. The New Testament pattern locates participatory agency in the body more broadly. The two are not necessarily incompatible — the corporate form decides certain matters that the New Testament agencies are not addressing, and the New Testament agencies operate in registers that the corporate form is not designed to capture — but they are not the same thing, and one cannot substitute for the other. An assembly that has corporate governance but no participatory agency has a structure without a body. An assembly that asserts participatory agency in language but does not provide it in practice has a body without honest structure. The work of alignment, here as elsewhere, is to let both operate in their proper registers without confusing them.

7. Implications for Modern Polities

The four qualifications — stewardship, plurality and locality, exemplarity, and congregational agency — do not yield a single polity. They yield a set of constraints within which a range of polities can be biblically defensible. The implications for the ministerial corporation, which is the polity most directly in view in this suite, can be stated as a series of pressures.

The stewardship qualification presses against any practice in which the corporate form drifts toward proprietorship. It is the easiest qualification to affirm verbally and the hardest to maintain operationally. The diagnostic markers — defensive responses to outside oversight, resistance to internal feedback, possessive language about the work — are recognizable when they are looked for. The constructive practice is the cultivation of an institutional culture in which the language and the operations of stewardship are reinforced in equal measure: regular acknowledgment of Christ as the true owner, transparent accountability to those above and around, and explicit teaching at all levels that the work belongs to God and the office is held in trust.

The plurality and locality qualification presses against any practice in which authority is concentrated in one office without check. Where the modern structure cannot reproduce plural local eldership directly, it can approximate the substance through peer review, regular doctrinal accountability with named peers, structured supervisory relationships in which the supervision is real rather than nominal, and explicit appeal channels that do not depend on the favor of the supervised. The qualification is not satisfied by titles. It is satisfied by the actual operation of plural witness in the exercise of authority.

The exemplarity qualification presses against any practice in which compliance is sustained primarily by enforcement. The diagnostic markers include the relative weight of teaching versus discipline in pastoral practice, the visibility of leaders’ lives to those they lead, the frequency with which “the Bible says” carries the burden in pastoral instruction versus the frequency with which “I say” or “we say” carries it, and the response of leaders to questioning. The constructive practice is the deliberate cultivation of exemplary leadership: leaders whose lives are visible, whose teaching is open to examination, and whose authority is plainly grounded in what they are and do rather than in what they can compel.

The congregational agency qualification presses against any practice in which the body is treated as a recipient rather than as a participant. This is the qualification most often invoked verbally — “we want your input,” “we welcome your questions” — and most often unsupported in practice. The constructive practice is the building of structured participatory channels that operate reliably, that produce visible responses to the input received, and that do not depend on the disposition of any individual leader. Channels that are activated when convenient and ignored when uncomfortable are not channels; they are decorations.

Beyond these specific pressures, a more general implication operates across all four. The New Testament patterns of authority are not survivable as decoration. They cannot be invoked verbally and abandoned operationally without cost. The body that hears the language of stewardship, plurality, exemplarity, and agency, and observes the operations of proprietorship, concentration, coercion, and recipiency, is being formed by the gap between the two. What it learns is that the words of the assembly are not what the assembly does. That lesson, once learned, is difficult to unlearn. It produces, over time, the precise pastoral conditions that this suite of papers is attempting to address.

8. Deliverable: Text → Principle → Non-Transferable Limit

The first deliverable of this paper is a working table that lays out the relevant texts, the principle each establishes, and the non-transferable limit each places on the institutional analogy. The non-transferable limit is the work the text refuses to do — the extension of analogy that the text cannot be made to support, regardless of institutional convenience.

For the eldership and oversight texts (Acts 14:23, 1 Timothy 3:1–7, Titus 1:5–9, 1 Peter 5:1–4), the principle is that real authority is established in qualified persons in local assemblies. The non-transferable limit is that the office is not transferable to legal forms that depart from its essential qualifications. A role that does not require, observe, or maintain the qualifications of 1 Timothy 3 and Titus 1 cannot defend itself as the New Testament office of elder by virtue of being called by that name. The office is constituted by the qualifications, not by the title.

For the shepherding texts (1 Peter 5:1–4, John 21:15–17, Acts 20:28, Ezekiel 34), the principle is that pastoral authority is exercised over what belongs to God, in a posture that is willing, exemplary, and non-domineering. The non-transferable limit is that the language of shepherding cannot be retained while the substance is replaced. A pastoral office that operates by enforcement rather than by example, or that treats the flock as a possession rather than as a trust, has departed from the texts even if it continues to use their vocabulary.

For the mutuality texts (Matthew 20:25–28, Mark 10:42–45, Luke 22:24–27), the principle is that the manner of authority in the assembly is explicitly contrasted with the manner of authority among the Gentiles, with the contrast turning on the rejection of “lording over” and the embrace of service. The non-transferable limit is that no institutional convenience justifies the importation of the Gentile pattern. “It shall not be so among you” is a positive prohibition. Forms of authority that operate by domination — however effective they may appear — are excluded by direct command.

For the congregational agency texts (Acts 6, Acts 15, 1 Corinthians 5, 2 Corinthians 8), the principle is that the body has structured roles in its own life and decisions, even where those roles are not equivalent to legal governance. The non-transferable limit is that the silence of the body cannot be substituted for its participation. An assembly in which the body is never selecting, deliberating, or contributing in any structured way has not preserved the agency these passages assume; the absence of formal democratic governance does not authorize the absence of any participatory texture.

For the correctability texts (Galatians 2:11–14, 1 Timothy 5:19–20, Acts 17:11), the principle is that authority in the assembly is correctable by appropriate means, with appropriate safeguards, in appropriate registers. The non-transferable limit is that no level of authority is in principle exempt from correction on matters of truth and practice. Paul’s correction of Peter establishes that even apostolic authority is correctable; no later office can defensibly claim greater immunity. The Berean commendation establishes that the testing of teaching against the Scriptures is a virtue, not an offense; institutional cultures that treat such testing as offense have departed from the apostolic commendation.

For the response texts (Hebrews 13:7, 13:17; 1 Thessalonians 5:12–13), the principle is that the body owes its leaders genuine respect, willingness to be led, and recognition of their labor. The non-transferable limit is that the response is owed to the kind of authority Scripture establishes, not to forms of authority that have departed from those qualifications. The texts do not authorize obedience to leaders in matters where leaders contradict the Scriptures, nor do they authorize the use of the response texts as a rhetorical instrument to suppress legitimate question or appeal. The body’s obligation is real; it is also bounded by the same qualifications that bound the office it responds to.

9. Deliverable: Guardrails Against Over-Extension of Analogy

The second deliverable is a set of working guardrails for institutional self-examination. They are stated as questions that can be asked of any current practice that claims biblical warrant from the patterns of authority discussed here.

First, does the practice preserve the stewardship frame, or does it functionally treat the assembly as the property of the office? The diagnostic is in the operational details: how is decision-making conducted, how is feedback received, how are transitions and successions handled, how is language about the work shaped over time?

Second, does the practice preserve plurality of witness in the exercise of authority, or does it concentrate authority in single offices without check? Where local plural eldership is not present, what functional substitutes are operating? Are they real or nominal?

Third, does the practice operate in the exemplary mode, or does it rely primarily on enforcement? What is the actual proportion of teaching, persuasion, and demonstration to discipline, threat, and coercion in the maintenance of order? Are leaders’ lives visible enough to be the example the texts require?

Fourth, does the practice preserve participatory agency in the body, or does it treat the body as a recipient? Are there structured channels through which selection, deliberation, contribution, and concern are actually heard, weighed, and answered? Do those channels operate reliably, or only when convenient?

Fifth, does the practice preserve correctability, or has it drifted toward immunization of authority from challenge? Can a member raise a concern about teaching or practice through known channels without prejudicing his standing? Can an elder be addressed when he errs, with the safeguards of 1 Timothy 5? Is the testing of teaching against the Scriptures honored as the Bereans were honored, or treated as the offense the texts do not call it?

These questions do not produce a verdict on any institution. They produce a working examination, and an examination that can be repeated. The qualifications the New Testament places on authority in the assembly are not one-time achievements; they are ongoing disciplines. The body that asks these questions of its own practice, and answers them honestly, is doing the work the texts assume will be done.

10. Conclusion

The New Testament establishes real authority in the assembly of believers, and the assembly that fails to recognize this authority has not understood the texts. The same New Testament qualifies that authority at every point — in its frame, its structure, its mode, and its texture — and the assembly that fails to honor those qualifications has equally failed to understand the texts. The two failures are not opposite errors that cancel one another out. They are correlated errors that compound each other. An assembly that does not recognize the authority Scripture establishes will tend, by default, to depart from the qualifications that authority is given under, because the qualifications were given to authority in its proper form. An assembly that recognizes the authority but neglects the qualifications will tend, by default, toward the postures Peter and Paul explicitly forbid, because the qualifications are precisely what hold authority within its proper exercise.

The constructive task is to hold both at once. To affirm the office, the qualifications that constitute it, the persons who hold it, and the response the body owes it; and in the same breath to maintain the stewardship frame, the plurality of witness, the exemplary mode, the participatory texture, and the correctability that the same texts require. Where this is done, the assembly’s authority is the authority Scripture warrants. Where it is not done, the authority being exercised is some other authority, however biblically dressed.

The next paper turns to a particular feature of the rhetorical environment in which authority is exercised and received: the language of rebellion and the wilderness warnings. That language, properly used, names something serious. Improperly used, it can be deployed to suppress the very correctability that the texts of this paper require. The work there is to recover the texts in their scope, to identify the misapplications, and to offer hermeneutical controls that preserve the seriousness without licensing the distortion.

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White Paper 1: Metaphor and Structure: When “Family” Meets Corporate Governance

1. Framing the Problem

Every assembly of believers describes itself with metaphors before it describes itself with organizational charts. This is not a failure of precision; it is a function of what the body of believers actually is. The New Testament does not begin with bylaws. It begins with images — household, body, flock, kingdom, vine — and from those images it draws the relational vocabulary in which authority, belonging, mutual obligation, and care are subsequently understood. The metaphors are doing genuine theological work. They are not ornamental.

The difficulty addressed by this paper is not that the metaphors are used. It is that, in the modern ecclesial setting, they are typically used alongside — and on top of — an organizational form the New Testament does not specify and could not have anticipated in its present shape: the ministerial corporation. In that form, ordained ministers hold corporate membership, vote on corporate matters, elect or confirm officers, and are recognized in civil law as the responsible parties of the legal entity. Congregants, by contrast, are not corporate members. They contribute, attend, receive pastoral care, participate in fellowship, and are addressed as brethren — but they do not hold governance rights in the legal sense. This arrangement is not unusual; in the United States and in many other jurisdictions it is one of the standard ways a religious body can constitute itself for legal, financial, and administrative purposes. It is, however, a structure that does not map directly onto any of the relational metaphors the same body uses to describe itself from the pulpit.

When a metaphor and a structure say different things by the same word, something has to give. Either the language is adjusted to match the structure, the structure is adjusted to match the language, or — most commonly — the gap is left unaddressed and the members of the body are quietly required to live inside the contradiction. The thesis of this paper is that the third option, which is the default option, is unsustainable. Family language is pastorally powerful but structurally ambiguous. When applied without clarification to a ministerial corporation, it can obscure the distinction between care and control, between belonging and decision-making, between the warmth of the household and the mechanism of governance. The work of this paper is to make that gap visible, to identify where the drift occurs, and to propose alignment protocols that allow the metaphors to remain in their proper biblical use without being asked to perform structural work they cannot bear.

2. Metaphor Taxonomy

The New Testament uses a finite set of governing images for the called-out body of Christ, and each image carries a different emphasis. A disciplined account of how these metaphors function — and what they each leave unsaid — is the necessary first step before the structural mapping can proceed.

Household (oikos). The household image is the most pervasive and the most easily extended into “family” language. Paul writes of “the household of God” (1 Timothy 3:15) and instructs Timothy on how one ought to behave within it. Ephesians 2:19 tells the Gentile believers that they are no longer strangers and aliens but “fellow citizens with the saints, and of the household of God.” The household figure emphasizes belonging, mutual obligation, the existence of an internal ordering, and the claim that the body is not a voluntary association but a place of derived identity. What it leaves out, importantly, is any specific claim about how the household is governed in legal terms. The Greco-Roman household had a recognizable internal structure — the paterfamilias, the place of children, of servants, of guests — but the New Testament uses the household image theologically, not as a template for civil incorporation. The image gives us belonging and order; it does not, in itself, give us a board of directors.

Body. The body image, developed at length in 1 Corinthians 12 and Romans 12 and condensed in Ephesians 4, emphasizes interdependence and the distribution of gifts. Every part is necessary; no part can say to another, “I have no need of you” (1 Corinthians 12:21). The head of the body is Jesus Christ (Colossians 1:18; Ephesians 1:22–23), and from Him the whole body, fitted and held together, grows up. The body image powerfully resists the reduction of the assembly to a hierarchy of the gifted over the ungifted; it insists that the foot and the eye are equally and differently necessary. What the body image leaves out is administration. It does not specify how decisions are made about budgets, properties, ministerial assignments, or doctrinal questions. It tells us that the body is one and that Christ is its head; it does not tell us what civil form the body should take in the twenty-first century.

Flock. The flock image runs from Psalm 23 through John 10 into 1 Peter 5. It emphasizes vulnerability, the need for protection and feeding, and the role of the shepherd as one who leads, guards, and gives his life for the sheep. Peter tells the elders to shepherd the flock of God among them, “exercising oversight, not under compulsion but willingly … not domineering over those in your charge, but being examples to the flock” (1 Peter 5:2–3). The flock image authorizes pastoral authority in strong terms; it also qualifies that authority in equally strong terms. Shepherds are not owners. The flock belongs to the Chief Shepherd. What the image leaves out is shared deliberation. Sheep do not deliberate. The flock metaphor does not, by itself, provide categories for congregational voice or feedback; it must be supplemented by other texts and other images for that work to be done.

Kingdom. The kingdom image sets the assembly within an eschatological frame. The Kingdom of God is preached, awaited, and partially anticipated in the present life of the body, but its consummation is future. The kingdom image emphasizes sovereignty, the rule of Jesus Christ, the priority of the King’s commands, and the orientation of the assembly toward a coming reality. What it leaves out — when used by itself — is the present pastoral texture of life together. A kingdom under a distant king can be administered by satraps; a body with a present Head is not. The two images must be held together.

Vine. The vine image (John 15) emphasizes derivation, dependence, and fruitfulness. The branches do not have life of their own; they have it from the vine. The image is profoundly anti-managerial. It does not invite a metric of productivity that ignores abiding; it does not allow the branches to congratulate themselves on their fruit. What it leaves out is structure. The vine has no officers.

This taxonomy yields a working observation. The metaphors are theologically rich and mutually reinforcing, but none of them — singly or in combination — supplies a polity in the modern legal sense. They give the assembly its identity, its texture, its internal obligations, and its accountability to Christ. They do not tell a twentieth- or twenty-first-century body how to incorporate, how to file with civil authorities, how to allocate decision rights between credentialed ministers and the wider membership, or how to handle the legal liabilities that come with owning property and employing staff. Those questions must be answered, but they cannot be answered out of the metaphors alone. They must be answered by additional, explicit reasoning — and that reasoning must then be aligned, in language and in practice, with the metaphors that continue to describe the body’s identity.

3. Structural Mapping

The dominant organizational form for the assembly of believers in the contemporary setting is the ministerial corporation. The specific legal vehicles vary by jurisdiction — corporation sole, religious nonprofit corporation, ecclesiastical society, association — but the functional pattern is recognizable. The corporation has members in the legal sense; those members have governance rights; those rights typically include electing or confirming officers, approving budgets above certain thresholds, ratifying property transactions, and amending governing documents. In the most common arrangement within the broader fellowship of God’s churches, the legal members are the credentialed ministers. Lay members of the congregation are not legal members of the corporation; they are participants, beneficiaries, and contributors, but the formal locus of governance does not include them.

This arrangement has identifiable historical and practical reasons. It concentrates decision-making in those who have been called, examined, and ordained for the work of teaching and pastoral care. It reduces the risk that doctrinal questions will be settled by majority vote among those who have not been set apart for that responsibility. It provides legal clarity in dealings with civil authorities, banks, landlords, and insurers. It allows the body to act as a body in legal contexts where ad hoc congregational governance would be cumbersome or impossible. None of these reasons is illegitimate. The corporate form is a tool, and like any tool it has uses for which it is well suited.

The structural mapping at issue is not, then, a question of whether the corporate form should exist. It is a question of how the corporate form should be described to those who live within it. The mapping problem can be stated in three observations.

First, the corporate frame distributes voice along narrower lines than the metaphorical frame implies. When the body is described from the pulpit as a household, a family, a body of which all are members, the language naturally suggests that all who are addressed in those terms are also included in the deliberations of the body. The legal structure does not so include them. The metaphor and the structure are doing different things by the same word. Member in the household sense and member in the corporate sense are not the same category, and the failure to distinguish them is the source of much downstream confusion.

Second, the corporate frame concentrates responsibility, but it also concentrates exposure. Those who hold legal membership in the ministerial corporation bear obligations — fiduciary, civil, and pastoral — that those who do not hold such membership do not bear. This is not a privilege; it is a load. A clear account of the structure makes this load visible, which is itself a pastoral good. When the structure is left implicit, the ministry can appear to outsiders as merely empowered; when it is explicit, the ministry appears as also responsible, which is the more accurate picture.

Third, the corporate frame offers limited but real channels for participation that fall short of governance rights. Counsel, consultation, financial accountability, transparent reporting, advisory bodies, and structured feedback are all available within the corporate form without altering the locus of legal decision-making. The structural mapping that this paper recommends is not flat — every metaphor mapped onto every structural feature — but layered. The metaphors describe the assembly. The corporate structure organizes a particular set of decisions within the assembly. Between the two there is a designed space for participatory practices that honor both the relational reality and the legal arrangement.

4. Elasticity and Drift

Metaphors are elastic. That is part of their power and part of their hazard. The “family” metaphor in particular has a wide elastic range, and its drift in ecclesial settings is the central pastoral problem this paper seeks to name.

At one end of the elastic range, “family” means care. To call the assembly a family is to say that members bear one another’s burdens (Galatians 6:2), rejoice with those who rejoice and weep with those who weep (Romans 12:15), and treat one another with the affection due to those who share a common Father. In this register, “family” is a description of the texture of relationship — warmth, loyalty, the willingness to be inconvenienced for one another, the recognition that we are not transactional acquaintances but kin in the faith. This is the proper, biblical use of the metaphor, and it is indispensable. A body that does not speak in family language has lost something the New Testament insists on.

At the other end of the elastic range, “family” can come to mean authority. Specifically, it can come to mean a paternal pattern in which the leadership is positioned as parents and the congregation as children, with the implication that questioning, disagreement, or independent judgment is a kind of immaturity. In this register, “family” stops describing texture and starts describing rank. When this drift occurs, the metaphor begins to perform structural work — it begins to assign decision rights, to define what counts as appropriate response, and to adjudicate disputes — for which it was never designed and which the biblical material does not authorize. The shift is rarely announced. It happens in the gradual change of what the word implies in particular contexts: who can ask questions, what kinds of questions can be asked, what counts as a proper attitude, what is read as filial love and what is read as childishness.

Two further drifts are worth naming. The first is the drift from family to family business. This shift introduces an ownership claim. A family is something one belongs to; a family business is something one works for. The two are not the same. When the assembly is described as the family business — and the implication is that all members are participants in a shared enterprise — the metaphor smuggles in an ownership claim that, in the actual corporate arrangement, applies only to the credentialed ministers who hold legal membership. The congregant addressed as part of the family business is being told something the structure does not in fact provide. This is the specific elasticity that Paper 4 will address in detail; it is mentioned here because it is one of the most consequential drifts in the metaphor’s range.

The second drift is from family to firm. In this drift, the warmth of the family metaphor is retained at the level of speech, but the actual operating logic of the assembly becomes managerial. Performance is evaluated against organizational rather than pastoral criteria; conformity to internal norms substitutes for fidelity to Scripture; the language of family is used to describe what is in fact an employment relationship between the corporation and its workers. The drift is not always visible from inside, because the language has not changed. What has changed is what the language is doing.

The mechanism of all three drifts is the same. A metaphor with a proper, narrow, biblical use is asked to carry a heavier and broader load than it was designed to carry. Because metaphors are elastic, they can be stretched to carry that load for a time. But the stretching distorts both the metaphor and the structure it is being asked to obscure. The pastoral and institutional cost of the distortion is paid by those who live inside it.

5. Risk Patterns

When metaphor and structure are misaligned, the misalignment does not stay in the abstract. It produces recognizable risk patterns, two of which are particularly important to identify.

Boundary blurring. In the first pattern, the warmth of the family metaphor leads to the erosion of appropriate boundaries between pastoral care and personal control. A pastor who is a brother in Christ to the members of his congregation is in one set of relations; a pastor who is positioned as a father over members of his congregation is in another. The first relation is mutual and bounded; the second can become asymmetric and total. The risk is not that pastoral care is too close — pastoral care must, by its nature, be close — but that without clear structural complement, the closeness can drift into overreach. Decisions properly belonging to the household of the congregant — vocation, marriage, finances, geographic location — can come to be discussed under the assumption that the pastoral office has standing to direct them. In some cases this is welcomed and the boundary holds; in other cases it generates dependency that is difficult to undo and damaging when it breaks.

The biblical material is sober about this risk. Peter’s warning to elders not to be “domineering over those in your charge” (1 Peter 5:3) implies that domineering is a recognizable temptation of the office. Jesus’ instruction in Matthew 20:25–28 — “it shall not be so among you” — is given precisely because the alternative pattern, the Gentile pattern of lording it over, is a pattern the assembly will be tempted to import. The metaphor of family does not, by itself, supply the resistance to that temptation. The resistance has to come from explicit teaching and from structural practices that distinguish care from control.

Expectation mismatch. In the second pattern, the inclusion language of the metaphor leads members to expect a kind of voice that the structure does not in fact provide, and the discovery of the gap is experienced as a betrayal. A congregant who has been addressed for years as part of the family, the body, the household — who has tithed, served, taught, prayed, and borne burdens with the assembly — encounters a decision in which her voice is not formally available. She is not consulted; she has no standing to be consulted. The decision may be entirely correct on the merits, but the experience of the gap is real. The language she has been hearing implied a participation she does not have. The structure did not change; the structure was always like this. What changed is that the gap became visible.

This pattern produces two characteristic responses, both of which are damaging. The first response is private disengagement: the member continues to attend but quietly withdraws investment, having learned that the words she has been hearing did not mean what they appeared to mean. The second response is public protest, which the structure is not designed to receive and which the rhetorical apparatus of the assembly may then categorize as rebellion or hardness of heart. Either response is read by the structure as a problem belonging to the member; in fact, the problem belongs to the misalignment between language and structure that the assembly itself has not addressed.

A third risk pattern, less acute but cumulatively significant, is vocabulary inflation. When the family metaphor is asked to do more and more work, the words around it have to keep escalating to maintain the same effect. Family becomes spiritual family, then family of God, then the family, then the work, each step compressing more meaning into the term and making it harder to distinguish the metaphor from the structure. Vocabulary inflation is a leading indicator of metaphor-structure misalignment. When the language is doing more work than language can do, the structure has stopped doing its share.

6. Alignment Protocols

The constructive proposal of this paper is that metaphors and structures can be brought into coherent relation by means of explicit alignment protocols. These protocols do not require the assembly to abandon family language. They require the assembly to be honest about what the language is doing and to pair it consistently with the structural realities that complement it. Five protocols are proposed.

Protocol 1: Pair every metaphor with an explicit structural clarification. When the assembly is described as a household, the description should at appropriate intervals be accompanied by a clear account of how the household is administered: who decides what, who is consulted on what, what channels of participation exist short of legal membership, and where the boundaries of pastoral authority lie. This need not be done in every sermon. It needs to be done often enough that no member can be in the assembly for years without having heard it.

Protocol 2: Distinguish relational inclusion from governance inclusion. The phrase “you are part of the family” should not be allowed to do the work of “you are part of the corporate decision-making.” Where both are true, both can be said. Where only the first is true, only the first should be said. The language “we are family in Christ; the legal and pastoral governance of the assembly is held by the ordained ministry, who are accountable to one another and to Christ for that stewardship” preserves both realities without confusion. It is not colder than the unqualified family language; it is more honest, and honesty is a kind of warmth.

Protocol 3: Identify the proper biblical use of each metaphor and resist its extension into structural work. The household metaphor describes belonging and mutual obligation; it does not describe a polity. The body metaphor describes interdependence and gift distribution; it does not specify an organizational chart. The flock metaphor authorizes pastoral oversight and qualifies it as exemplary, not domineering; it does not authorize the corporate form as such. Each metaphor should be allowed to do its proper work and not asked to do additional work for which it was not given.

Protocol 4: Make the corporate structure visible in plain language. A one-page explainer that describes, in straightforward terms, who holds legal membership, what decisions belong to that membership, what decisions are made at the local pastoral level, what decisions involve regional or general administration, and what avenues exist for member input and concern, removes most of the surprise that drives expectation mismatch. Members who know how the structure works are not betrayed by it; they may agree or disagree with it, but they are not surprised by it. The cost of producing such an explainer is small. The pastoral benefit is considerable.

Protocol 5: Build participatory practices that honor both the metaphor and the structure. Between the warmth of family language and the formality of corporate governance there is a wide space for practices that take member voice seriously without altering the legal structure. Regular feedback channels, listening sessions, advisory councils, transparent financial reporting, accessible doctrinal exposition that invites questions, structured opportunities for members to raise concerns and receive responses — these are not concessions to a democratizing impulse; they are the natural expression of the body’s interdependence (1 Corinthians 12) within a particular legal form. They make the metaphor and the structure say the same thing about the same body.

These protocols are not a solution in the sense that, once implemented, the work is done. They are a discipline. They require ongoing attention, because the drifts they address are constant, and because the metaphors are doing genuine theological work that must continue even as their boundaries are maintained.

7. Deliverable: Metaphor–Structure Alignment Scorecard

The diagnostic instrument that follows is intended for use by ministers, regional administrators, and those responsible for institutional self-examination. It is structured as a series of paired observations. For each metaphor in routine use, the observer asks: What is the language doing in current practice? What is the structure doing in current practice? Is the gap between the two acknowledged, addressed, or invisible?

A working version of the scorecard runs as follows. For the household metaphor, the observer notes whether household language is paired with explicit teaching about how the household is administered, whether members can articulate where their voice is heard and where it is not, and whether the language has drifted toward implying ownership or governance rights that are not in fact provided. For the body metaphor, the observer notes whether the language of every-member interdependence is supported by practices in which every-member contribution is actually invited and weighed, or whether the language is heard once a year and the rest of the year is administered hierarchically. For the flock metaphor, the observer notes whether the shepherding language is qualified — as 1 Peter 5 qualifies it — by explicit teaching about non-domineering oversight and example-based authority, and whether members are taught how the shepherds themselves are accountable, to whom, and through what mechanisms. For the family metaphor in particular, the observer notes whether the language has drifted from describing texture to assigning rank, whether the term “family business” or its functional equivalents have entered the rhetoric, and whether disagreement within the assembly is responded to as a family matter (which would entail listening, working through, and bearing with) or as a corporate matter (which entails the use of the levers of legal authority).

For each row, three states are possible. Aligned: the language and the structure are saying the same thing, and members can articulate what the language means in operational terms. Unaddressed gap: the language and the structure are saying different things, but the gap is not acknowledged or explained. Drift in progress: the language is being asked to perform structural work, and the relevant warning signs — rebellion rhetoric, vocabulary inflation, opaque decision-making, dismissal of feedback — are present. The scorecard is not meant to produce a single number. It is meant to make the gaps visible so that the protocols of section six can be applied to them.

8. Deliverable: Sample Language That Preserves Warmth Without Obscuring Structure

The final deliverable is a small set of sample formulations, intended as illustrations rather than scripts. The goal is to demonstrate that warmth and clarity are not in competition.

Where the assembly might say, “We are a family, and we make decisions as a family,” the aligned formulation is, “We are family in Christ. The pastoral and legal decisions of the assembly are stewarded by the ministry, who are accountable to one another, to those over them, and to Christ. There are several ways for your voice to be heard — through your local pastor, through the channels we have set up for member feedback, and through the open conversations that are part of how we live together.” The first formulation implies a participatory governance that the structure does not provide. The second describes both the relational and the structural reality without overpromising on either.

Where the assembly might say, “This is your church; you have a stake in everything that happens here,” the aligned formulation is, “This is the assembly to which you belong. You contribute, you serve, you are part of the body. The administration of the assembly is held by the ministry under the headship of Jesus Christ, and we want you to know how that administration works and where your voice fits in it.” The first formulation creates an expectation of stake-holding that the corporate structure narrows considerably. The second preserves the genuine sense of belonging while being honest about the structural shape of decision-making.

Where the assembly might say, “We are the family business of God,” the aligned formulation is, “We are the household of God, called and being prepared for the work He has given us. The assembly has an order in which the ministry serves and the brethren serve, each according to the gifts and callings given. None of us owns the work; we all participate in it as Christ leads.” The first formulation borrows the warmth of family and the agency of business and assigns both, by implication, to all who hear. The second keeps the warmth of household, the orientation toward work given by God, and the proper humility about ownership without obscuring the order of service.

The principle illustrated by these examples is straightforward. Aligned language is not stripped of warmth; it is stripped of ambiguity. Members who hear it are given an accurate picture of both the relational reality and the structural reality, and the two pictures are coherent with each other.

9. Conclusion

The overlay of family metaphor on ministerial corporate structure is not, in itself, a flaw. The metaphor is biblically warranted, pastorally indispensable, and theologically rich. The corporate structure is, within its proper scope, a defensible administrative tool. The flaw is the failure to align the two. When the metaphor is allowed to imply what the structure does not provide, the cost is borne by those who live inside the gap — congregants who experience expectation mismatch, ministers who are positioned to wield more implicit authority than the metaphor was meant to confer, and an assembly whose self-description does not match its self-organization.

The proposal of this paper is not that the assembly should adopt either the metaphor alone or the structure alone, nor that one should be made to dominate the other. It is that they should be brought into explicit, disciplined alignment. The metaphors describe the body’s identity in Christ. The structure organizes a particular set of decisions within the body’s life. Between them lies a large space for participatory practices, transparent communication, and pastoral care that takes both seriously. The work of alignment is the work of letting language and structure say the same thing about the same assembly, so that what is heard from the pulpit, what is recorded in the corporate documents, and what is experienced in the life of the congregation can stand together without contradiction.

The papers that follow build on this foundation. Paper 2 turns to the New Testament patterns of authority — eldership, oversight, shepherding — and asks what those patterns authorize and what they refuse to underwrite. Paper 3 takes up the rhetorical category of rebellion and the wilderness warnings, working out hermeneutical controls that preserve the seriousness of the texts without licensing their misapplication. Paper 4 returns to the specific drift of “family” into “family business” and proposes alternative frames. The remaining papers address ministerial evaluation, the boundary between divine governance and human administration, and the integrative alignment framework that draws the threads together. The first task, undertaken here, is to make the basic gap visible — to see clearly where the warmth of the household language meets the formality of the corporate frame, and to recognize that the gap between them is the territory in which much of the assembly’s pastoral life is actually lived.

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The Typology of Asymmetrical Relationships: How Cooperation Defaults to Domination and What Conditions Permit Justice

Abstract

Relationships between parties of unequal standing are a pervasive feature of institutional, economic, and social life. Many such relationships are structurally suited to cooperative arrangement, in the sense that the parties share substantial common interest in the joint enterprise within which they operate, and in the sense that cooperative terms would produce greater aggregate value over time than the adversarial terms that typically prevail. Despite this structural fit, asymmetrical relationships default with remarkable consistency to domination by the stronger party, with the result that cooperative possibilities are systematically foreclosed even where the parties involved would benefit from realising them. This paper develops a typology of asymmetrical relationships organised by the source and character of the asymmetry, examines the structural mechanisms by which each type defaults to domination, and identifies the conditions under which cooperative arrangements have historically been sustained or reconstructed. The argument concludes that the conditions for just and mutually beneficial asymmetric relationships are demanding but identifiable, that they rarely emerge from within the dominant party’s unilateral decision, and that their cultivation generally requires a combination of structural change, moral reframing, and external accountability that the present institutional environment in many domains does not adequately supply.

Introduction

The default of asymmetric relationships toward domination is among the most consistent patterns in institutional life. The pattern operates across domains as varied as professional sports leagues and their lower divisions, retailers and their suppliers, publishers and their authors, established universities and their feeder institutions, denominational hierarchies and their congregations, metropolitan and regional governments, established firms and their subcontractors, ministerial offices and the broader membership of the bodies they serve, and many additional contexts. The recurrence of the pattern across such varied domains indicates that the underlying mechanisms are structural rather than incidental, and that the analysis appropriate to the pattern must address its structural features rather than merely the particular failings of individual dominant parties.

Earlier papers in this series have examined particular instances of the pattern, including the relationship between the Premier League and the Championship in English football and the architecture of skill formation within hierarchically organised church bodies. The present paper steps back from particular instances to develop a more general typology of asymmetric relationships, examining the conditions under which different types of asymmetry produce different defaults toward domination and the conditions under which cooperative arrangements have been or could be sustained.

The argument proceeds in four stages. The first stage develops the typology of asymmetric relationships, organising them by the source of asymmetry and identifying the characteristic features of each type. The second stage examines the mechanisms by which each type defaults to domination, identifying the structural pressures that operate in each case. The third stage considers the conditions under which cooperative arrangements have been sustained, drawing on the limited but instructive cases in which the default has been overcome. The fourth stage offers practical reflections on what the cultivation of just and mutually beneficial asymmetric relationships would require in current institutional contexts, with particular attention to the moral and theological resources that have historically informed efforts at reform.

The argument is offered in recognition that asymmetric relationships are not in themselves unjust. The relationship between parents and children, between teachers and students, between mature believers and novices, between established practitioners and apprentices, and between many other pairings is appropriately asymmetric in ways that serve the development of the weaker party rather than its exploitation. The concern of this paper is not asymmetric relationships as such but the structural drift of asymmetric relationships toward exploitative domination, and the conditions under which that drift can be resisted in service of the cooperative possibilities that the relationships otherwise contain.

The Typology of Asymmetric Relationships

Asymmetric relationships can be organised by the source and character of the asymmetry that characterises them. The typology that follows is not exhaustive, but it captures the principal types that operate in contemporary institutional life and that exhibit the default toward domination that this paper examines.

Resource-Based Asymmetry

The first type is resource-based asymmetry, in which one party possesses substantially greater financial, material, or technological resources than the other. The relationship between major retailers and their smaller suppliers exemplifies this type. The retailer has access to capital, distribution infrastructure, and consumer relationships that the supplier cannot replicate, and the supplier depends on the retailer for access to markets that the supplier cannot otherwise reach. The asymmetry is concrete and quantifiable, and it manifests in every dimension of the relationship from negotiating leverage to risk allocation.

Resource-based asymmetry is the most visible form of asymmetric relationship and the most readily analysed in conventional economic terms. It is also the form most amenable to certain kinds of intervention, because the resources in question can be measured and the redistributions or rebalancings that cooperative arrangement would require can be specified in concrete terms. The challenge of resource-based asymmetry is not analytical complexity but the political and institutional difficulty of altering arrangements that the dominant party has structured to its advantage.

Information-Based Asymmetry

The second type is information-based asymmetry, in which one party possesses substantially greater knowledge of the relevant terrain than the other. The relationship between professionals and their clients, between specialists and generalists, between insiders and outsiders, and between those who control information flows and those who depend on them all exemplify this type. The asymmetry is not necessarily a matter of resources but of access to information that the parties require for their respective participation in the joint enterprise.

Information-based asymmetry is more difficult to analyse than resource-based asymmetry because the information itself is often tacit, distributed across multiple actors, and difficult to specify in transferable terms. The dominant party often does not consciously hoard information; the information accumulates in institutional practices, professional cultures, and tacit understandings that the dominant party may not be able to articulate even when willing to share. Cooperative arrangements that would address information-based asymmetry require not merely willingness to share but the institutional work of making tacit knowledge transferable, and this work is itself substantial.

Status-Based Asymmetry

The third type is status-based asymmetry, in which one party possesses substantially greater social, professional, or institutional standing than the other. The relationship between established and emerging institutions in any field, between recognised and unrecognised practitioners, between those who set standards and those who must meet them, and between those who command public attention and those who do not all exemplify this type. The asymmetry operates through the differential weight that each party’s voice carries in shared deliberation, the differential attention that each party’s contributions receive, and the differential consequences that each party’s actions produce.

Status-based asymmetry is particularly resistant to direct intervention because status is constituted by recognition rather than by any specifiable resource or piece of information. The conferral or withdrawal of recognition is a social process that operates through diffuse mechanisms, and the cooperative arrangements that would address status-based asymmetry must engage with those diffuse mechanisms rather than with concrete redistributions. The work is correspondingly demanding, and status-based asymmetries persist long after the resource or information conditions that originally produced them have been altered.

Structural Asymmetry

The fourth type is structural asymmetry, in which the rules, procedures, and institutional arrangements within which the parties operate systematically advantage one party over the other. The relationship between parties operating under different regulatory regimes, between those who shaped the rules and those who must operate within them, between those whose interests the institutional architecture was designed to serve and those whose interests it was not, and between those who possess procedural advantages and those who do not all exemplify this type. The asymmetry is built into the architecture of the relationship rather than into the parties themselves.

Structural asymmetry is among the most consequential forms because it operates independently of any particular act by either party. The parties may behave with perfect good faith and the asymmetry will continue to operate, because it is encoded in the institutional architecture rather than in the parties’ choices. Cooperative arrangements that would address structural asymmetry require structural change, which is more difficult than behavioural change and which generally requires institutional authority that neither party may possess unilaterally.

Temporal Asymmetry

The fifth type is temporal asymmetry, in which the parties operate on different time horizons in their relationship with one another. The dominant party in many asymmetric relationships operates on shorter effective time horizons than the weaker party, because the consequences of weaker-party distress affect the dominant party only at the system level and only with substantial delay, while the weaker party is forced into immediate-term thinking by the existential character of the threats it faces. The asymmetry of time horizons compounds the other asymmetries by ensuring that the dominant party makes decisions on bases that ignore the systemic costs that those decisions produce.

Temporal asymmetry is rarely identified as a distinct form of asymmetry, but it operates across nearly all asymmetric relationships and substantially conditions how the other forms manifest. The dominant party that could in principle perceive the long-term costs of its arrangements often does not perceive them in practice because its decision-making processes operate on horizons that exclude those costs from consideration. The cultivation of cooperative arrangements requires, among other things, the alignment of time horizons across the parties, and this alignment is itself a substantial institutional undertaking.

Moral or Spiritual Asymmetry

The sixth type is moral or spiritual asymmetry, in which one party occupies a position of greater moral or spiritual responsibility than the other within the relationship. The relationship between parents and children, between teachers and students, between ministerial offices and the membership they serve, between those who hold positions of trust and those who depend upon them, and between those who have received greater understanding and those who are being formed all exemplify this type. The asymmetry is constituted by the differential responsibility that each party bears for the welfare of the other, and the relationship is properly oriented toward the development and flourishing of the party with lesser responsibility.

Moral or spiritual asymmetry is in some respects the most important form to identify clearly, because it is the form most readily distorted into exploitative domination when its proper character is misunderstood. The relationship that should serve the development of the weaker party is uniquely vulnerable to inversion into a relationship that serves the dominance of the stronger, and the inversion often occurs in ways that the dominant party may not perceive as inversion at all. The Scriptural concern with the stewardship of authority and the warning against those who lord it over the flock entrusted to them addresses precisely this vulnerability, and the recovery of a proper understanding of moral or spiritual asymmetry is among the more important tasks for any tradition that takes seriously the obligation to honour those over whom one is given charge.

These six types are not mutually exclusive. Most actual asymmetric relationships involve several types operating together, with the particular configuration determining the character of the relationship and the specific mechanisms by which it defaults to domination. The typology is useful not for sorting relationships into discrete categories but for identifying which mechanisms are operating in any particular case and which interventions might therefore address the dominant features of that case.

Mechanisms of Default to Domination

Each type of asymmetric relationship defaults to domination through structural mechanisms that operate even in the absence of conscious choice by either party. Understanding these mechanisms is essential to understanding why cooperative arrangements are so difficult to sustain and what would be required to alter the defaults.

Resource-based asymmetric relationships default to domination through the leverage that resource control provides in negotiation. The party with greater resources can offer terms that the weaker party must accept because the alternative is loss of access to the resources, and the terms can be progressively adjusted in the dominant party’s favour as the weaker party’s dependency deepens. The dominant party’s position is reinforced by the option of substituting among weaker counterparts, while the weaker party rarely has comparable substitution options. The accumulated effect across many transactions is a relationship in which the weaker party operates within constraints that progressively transfer value to the dominant party, and the cooperative possibilities that the joint enterprise contains are foreclosed by the leverage geometry that the resource asymmetry produces.

Information-based asymmetric relationships default to domination through the differential capacity of the parties to perceive and respond to the conditions of the relationship. The dominant party knows the terrain that the weaker party can perceive only partially, and the dominant party can structure interactions to exploit this differential perception. The weaker party often does not know what it does not know, and its inability to identify the information gaps that disadvantage it makes those gaps more difficult to address. The dominant party may not consciously exploit the information asymmetry, but it benefits from the asymmetry in ways that it would have to act against its own interests to correct, and the correction therefore generally does not occur without external prompting.

Status-based asymmetric relationships default to domination through the differential weight that the parties’ contributions receive in shared deliberation. The dominant party’s voice is heard, considered, and taken seriously; the weaker party’s voice is heard with greater scepticism, considered with less weight, and dismissed more readily when it conflicts with the dominant party’s perspective. The differential is rarely a matter of explicit policy; it operates through the diffuse mechanisms of attention, credibility, and recognition that the broader institutional environment confers on parties of different standing. The dominant party may not recognise the differential at all, since its own contributions receive the weight that it considers appropriate to their merit, while the weaker party experiences the differential continuously and understands that contribution and reception are not symmetric.

Structurally asymmetric relationships default to domination through the unaltered operation of the institutional architecture that produces the asymmetry. The dominant party need not act in any particular way for the structural advantages to operate; they operate continuously through the ordinary functioning of the rules, procedures, and arrangements within which both parties operate. The weaker party can act with perfect virtue and the structural disadvantages will continue to apply. The cooperative arrangements that would address structural asymmetry require alteration of the architecture itself, and the alteration generally requires either authority that neither party possesses or external intervention by parties whose interests do not align with the structural beneficiaries.

Temporally asymmetric relationships default to domination through the systematic exclusion of long-term considerations from the dominant party’s decision-making. The dominant party’s decisions are made on horizons that do not include the systemic costs of dominance, and the weaker party’s protests on grounds of long-term consequence carry no weight in a decision-making framework that does not consider those consequences. The default is not the result of any particular bad faith on the dominant party’s part; it is the structural effect of decision-making processes that have been optimised for short-term outcomes and that exclude the longer time horizons on which the cooperative possibilities of the relationship would manifest.

Morally or spiritually asymmetric relationships default to domination through the gradual inversion of the responsibility that the asymmetry properly entails. The party that should serve the development of the weaker party comes instead to be served by it, the protection that should be extended becomes the demand for protection of the dominant party’s position, and the formation that should be offered becomes the requirement of conformity to the dominant party’s preferences. The inversion is rarely sudden and rarely conscious; it occurs through the gradual accommodation of institutional practice to the convenience of the dominant party, with each particular accommodation appearing reasonable while the cumulative direction of the accommodations produces a fundamental distortion of the relationship’s proper character.

These mechanisms operate together in most actual relationships, with each reinforcing the others. The result is that asymmetric relationships drift toward domination through structural pressures that operate independently of any particular act of bad faith, and that the weaker party experiences the cumulative effect of these pressures as a continuous deterioration of its position regardless of its own conduct. The recognition that the default is structural rather than a matter of individual choice is itself important, because it identifies the level at which intervention would need to operate to alter the default.

Conditions Under Which Cooperative Arrangements Have Been Sustained

The persistence of the default toward domination across so many domains might suggest that cooperative asymmetric relationships are impossible. The historical record indicates otherwise, although the cases in which cooperative arrangements have been sustained are sufficiently rare and sufficiently demanding that they require careful examination to understand the conditions that made them possible.

Structural Symmetry of Power Within an Asymmetric Relationship

The first condition under which cooperative arrangements have been sustained is the establishment of structural symmetries that offset the underlying asymmetry of the parties. The relationship between parties of unequal resources can operate cooperatively if procedural arrangements give each party comparable voice in the decisions that govern the relationship, even though the parties remain unequal in resources. Constitutional arrangements that protect the standing of weaker parties, voting structures that prevent the dominant party from imposing terms unilaterally, dispute resolution mechanisms that operate independently of the parties’ resource differentials, and similar procedural protections all contribute to the structural symmetry that cooperative arrangement requires.

The historical record suggests that structural symmetry of power, where it has been established, has generally been imposed by external authority rather than negotiated by the parties themselves. The dominant party rarely accepts procedural constraints on its leverage when those constraints would diminish the value it can extract from the relationship, and the weaker party rarely possesses the leverage to insist on such constraints. The establishment of structural symmetries therefore generally requires either statutory imposition, constitutional limitation, or some other form of external authority that the parties themselves did not produce.

Effective Collective Representation of Weaker Parties

The second condition is the emergence of effective collective representation among weaker parties that can offset the dispersion which otherwise prevents them from negotiating effectively. Where weaker parties have organised themselves into bodies that can negotiate on behalf of the collective, the bargaining geometry shifts substantially and cooperative arrangements become more readily achievable.

The historical record on collective representation is complex. The conditions under which collective representation emerges are delicate, and the dominant party reliably devotes substantial resources to its prevention or dissolution. Where collective representation has been sustained, it has generally required external protection of the right to organise, internal solidarity sufficient to resist the dominant party’s pressure to defect, and competent leadership capable of negotiating effectively without succumbing to the corruptions that institutional position tends to produce. These conditions are not commonly met, and collective representation is more often a partial and contested achievement than a fully realised one.

Long-Time-Horizon Decision-Making by the Dominant Party

The third condition is the operation of decision-making processes within the dominant party that incorporate the long-term consequences of relationship arrangements. Where the dominant party considers the systemic effects of its conduct on horizons that include the eventual depletion of the weaker party, the calculation often favours cooperative arrangements over extractive ones. The cooperative arrangement preserves the weaker party as a productive partner over time, while the extractive arrangement maximises short-term value at the cost of the long-term productivity of the relationship.

The historical record suggests that long-time-horizon decision-making is rare in dominant institutions and is generally produced by either family ownership structures that internalise multi-generational concerns, religious or moral commitments that operate beyond the time horizons of conventional institutional decision-making, or external regulatory pressures that force the consideration of long-term consequences. The decision-making processes of most contemporary institutions, by contrast, operate on short horizons that systematically exclude the long-term considerations that would favour cooperative arrangements. The cultivation of long-time-horizon decision-making is therefore among the more difficult conditions to establish.

External Regulatory or Moral Authority

The fourth condition is the operation of external authority capable of imposing requirements that the parties would not otherwise accept. The authority can be governmental, professional, religious, or moral, and it operates by altering the calculations that the parties make in their conduct of the relationship. The dominant party that would otherwise extract maximum value from the weaker party may moderate its conduct under the requirements of external regulation, the standards of a professional body, the teachings of a religious tradition, or the moral pressure of a community that disapproves of exploitative conduct.

The historical record on external authority is mixed. Effective external authority has produced some of the most significant improvements in asymmetric relationships across the past two centuries, including the establishment of basic protections for workers, suppliers, tenants, and other typically weaker parties. The maintenance of effective external authority is itself a substantial undertaking, however, and the dominant parties whose conduct external authority constrains generally devote substantial resources to weakening the authority over time. The historical pattern is one of partial and contested achievement, with periods of effective external authority alternating with periods of regulatory capture and erosion.

Catastrophic System Failure as a Reform Mechanism

The fifth condition under which cooperative arrangements have sometimes emerged is the occurrence of catastrophic failures in extractive arrangements that force reform when other mechanisms have failed. The cumulative effect of weaker-party depletion eventually produces system-level breakdowns that even the dominant party cannot ignore, and the reforms that follow such breakdowns sometimes establish more cooperative arrangements that subsequent generations sustain.

This condition is not one that anyone should welcome as a reform mechanism. The cost of catastrophic failure is typically extreme, and the human cost of waiting for catastrophic failure as a means of reform is among the most consequential social costs of the broader pattern. The condition is identified here not as a recommendation but as a description of one of the historical paths by which cooperative arrangements have sometimes been established, and as a warning that the absence of other reform mechanisms tends to produce the conditions under which catastrophic failure becomes the operative mechanism by default.

Moral and Spiritual Reformation

The sixth condition is the moral or spiritual reformation of the parties or of the broader culture within which they operate. Where the dominant party comes to understand its position as constituted by responsibility for the welfare of the weaker party rather than by entitlement to extract value from it, and where the broader culture sustains and reinforces this understanding, cooperative arrangements become readily achievable. The Scriptural witness has historically been among the most consistent sources of such reformation, with its insistent attention to the responsibilities of those in positions of authority and its denunciation of those who use their positions for exploitation rather than service.

The historical record on moral and spiritual reformation is the most variable of all the conditions identified. Periods of substantial reformation have produced some of the most enduring cooperative arrangements, and traditions that have sustained their reformational vitality across generations have produced some of the most consistently cooperative institutional patterns. Periods of moral and spiritual decline, by contrast, have correlated with the deterioration of cooperative arrangements that earlier generations established, and the decline of moral seriousness in many contemporary institutional contexts is itself among the conditions that has permitted the resurgence of extractive patterns that earlier reformations had constrained.

The recovery of substantive moral vocabulary for the analysis of asymmetric relationships is therefore among the more important tasks for those who seek to cultivate cooperative arrangements in the present environment. The reduction of these relationships to purely commercial or institutional terms has impoverished the discourse and removed from consideration the categories of obligation, stewardship, and responsibility that the cooperative arrangements would require. The restoration of these categories to active institutional consideration is itself a substantial undertaking, and one that is unlikely to be accomplished without the deliberate engagement of religious and moral traditions that have preserved the relevant vocabulary across the periods when broader institutional life has neglected it.

What the Cultivation of Just Asymmetric Relationships Requires

The conditions identified above are demanding, and their combination in any particular institutional context is rare. The historical cases of sustained cooperative asymmetric relationships generally involve several of the conditions operating together, with the absence of any one of them often sufficient to permit the default toward domination to reassert itself. The cultivation of just and mutually beneficial asymmetric relationships in current institutional contexts therefore requires sustained attention to multiple conditions simultaneously, with realistic expectations about the difficulty of the work.

The first practical requirement is honest analysis of the actual conditions operating in any particular relationship. The typology developed earlier in this paper provides a framework for such analysis, and its application to particular cases generally reveals that multiple types of asymmetry are operating together and that the mechanisms producing the default toward domination are correspondingly multiple. The temptation to address only the most visible form of asymmetry, while leaving the others to operate, generally produces partial and unstable reforms that revert to the underlying default once the visible reforms have run their course.

The second practical requirement is the establishment of structural protections for the weaker party that operate independently of the dominant party’s good will. The historical record suggests that arrangements depending on the continued good will of the dominant party are unstable, because the dominant party’s incentives shift over time and successor leaders within the dominant party may not share the commitments of those who established the original arrangements. Structural protections that operate independently of particular individuals and that constrain the dominant party’s leverage even when the dominant party would prefer to act otherwise are the more durable form of protection, and the work of establishing such protections is among the more important practical priorities for any reform effort.

The third practical requirement is the development of effective representation for the weaker party. The forms that such representation can take are various, including formal collective bargaining structures, professional bodies that represent practitioner interests, advocacy organisations that articulate community concerns, and other arrangements suited to the particular context. The historical record suggests that no single form of representation is universally effective and that the appropriate form depends on the character of the relationship and the resources available to the weaker party. The cultivation of representation is itself a substantial undertaking, and its sustainability depends on the establishment of the structural protections that prevent the dominant party from suppressing the representation once it emerges.

The fourth practical requirement is the cultivation of long-time-horizon decision-making within the dominant party. This is the requirement most resistant to direct intervention, because it concerns the internal decision-making culture of an institution rather than its formal arrangements. The historical record suggests several mechanisms that have sometimes succeeded in cultivating long time horizons, including the establishment of ownership structures that internalise multi-generational concerns, the integration of ethical and religious commitments into institutional decision-making, the establishment of advisory bodies that explicitly represent long-term considerations, and the development of measurement systems that surface the long-term consequences of decisions. None of these mechanisms is reliably effective, and their cultivation requires sustained attention from leadership within the dominant party that itself accepts the long-time-horizon framework.

The fifth practical requirement is the maintenance of effective external authority that can intervene where the parties’ own arrangements prove inadequate. The form of such authority varies by context, including governmental regulation, professional standards, religious accountability, and moral pressure from broader communities. The historical record suggests that no form of external authority is permanently stable and that all forms tend to be eroded over time by the parties whose conduct they constrain. The maintenance of external authority is therefore itself a continuous undertaking, requiring ongoing attention to the conditions under which the authority operates effectively and the threats that erode its capacity over time.

The sixth practical requirement is the recovery and maintenance of substantive moral vocabulary for the analysis and conduct of asymmetric relationships. The reduction of these relationships to commercial or institutional terms removes from consideration the categories of obligation, stewardship, and responsibility that the cooperative arrangements presuppose, and the cultivation of cooperative arrangements is correspondingly impeded where the vocabulary that would support them has been lost. The recovery of moral vocabulary is itself a substantial undertaking, and it cannot be accomplished by formal institutional measures alone. It requires the active engagement of religious, philosophical, and cultural traditions that have preserved the relevant categories across the periods when broader institutional life has neglected them, and it requires the work of articulating those categories in terms that contemporary institutional contexts can engage.

The Scriptural witness has historically been among the most fruitful sources of such moral vocabulary. The consistent attention of Scripture to the obligations of those in positions of authority, the warnings against those who oppress the poor, the commendations of those who deal justly with their servants and labourers, the framework of stewardship within which all positions of responsibility are understood, and the broader vision of a community in which the strong bear the burdens of the weak rather than imposing burdens upon them all provide resources for the analysis and conduct of asymmetric relationships that purely secular vocabularies have struggled to replicate. The recovery of these resources, where they have been neglected, is among the more important contributions that religious traditions can offer to the broader work of cultivating cooperative asymmetric relationships in the present environment.

The Particular Difficulty of Reform Within Existing Relationships

The conditions identified above are relatively easier to establish in new relationships than in existing ones. The pattern of an existing asymmetric relationship reflects accumulated arrangements that the dominant party has structured to its advantage, accumulated expectations on both sides that adjust slowly to alternative arrangements, and accumulated institutional habits that resist alteration. The cultivation of cooperative arrangements within an existing extractive relationship is therefore substantially more difficult than the establishment of cooperative arrangements in a new relationship, and the difficulty compounds with the duration and depth of the existing arrangement.

Several specific obstacles operate with particular force in the reform of existing relationships. The dominant party has developed expectations of the value extraction that the existing arrangement permits, and the reduction of that value extraction is experienced as loss rather than as the establishment of a more sustainable arrangement. The weaker party has often developed dependencies on the existing arrangement that make the transition to alternative arrangements costly, even when the alternative arrangements would be preferable in steady state. The institutional infrastructure surrounding the relationship has been shaped by the existing arrangement, and the transition to alternative arrangements requires the alteration of supporting infrastructure that the existing arrangement supports.

The most substantial obstacle is often the formation of the parties themselves within the existing arrangement. The dominant party’s leadership has been formed within an institutional culture that treats the existing arrangement as natural, and its capacity to perceive alternative arrangements is correspondingly limited. The weaker party’s leadership has often been formed within the same culture, with similar limitations, and the weaker party’s membership has often been formed in ways that make alternative arrangements unfamiliar and unconvincing. The reformation of the parties’ self-understanding is itself a generational work, and its completion within any reform effort is generally partial rather than complete.

These obstacles do not make reform impossible, but they make reform demanding and slow. The historical cases of successful reform within existing relationships have generally required sustained effort across decades, the cultivation of leadership within the relevant parties capable of perceiving and pursuing alternative arrangements, the establishment of external pressure sufficient to maintain reform momentum across periods of resistance, and the patient work of altering the institutional infrastructure that supports the existing arrangement. The expectations brought to such work should be calibrated accordingly, and the temptation to declare reform complete on the basis of partial achievements should be resisted.

Conclusion

The default of asymmetric relationships toward domination is among the most consistent patterns in institutional life, operating across domains as varied as economic, professional, educational, governmental, and ecclesial contexts. The pattern is structural rather than incidental, produced by mechanisms that operate independently of any particular act of bad faith by the dominant party, and reinforced by the institutional environments within which most contemporary asymmetric relationships are conducted.

The typology developed in this paper identifies six principal types of asymmetric relationship organised by the source of the asymmetry, including resource-based, information-based, status-based, structural, temporal, and moral or spiritual asymmetries. Most actual relationships involve several types operating together, and the mechanisms by which each type produces the default toward domination correspondingly compound. The analysis of any particular relationship requires attention to the multiple types operating within it, and the design of cooperative arrangements requires attention to the multiple mechanisms that the cooperative arrangements would need to address.

The conditions under which cooperative asymmetric relationships have been sustained are demanding and rarely complete. They include the establishment of structural symmetries of power, the emergence of effective collective representation among weaker parties, the operation of long-time-horizon decision-making within dominant parties, the maintenance of effective external authority, occasional reform through catastrophic system failure, and the moral and spiritual reformation of the parties or of the broader culture within which they operate. Most sustained cooperative arrangements have involved several of these conditions operating together, and the absence of any one has often been sufficient to permit the default toward domination to reassert itself.

The cultivation of just and mutually beneficial asymmetric relationships in current institutional contexts therefore requires sustained attention to multiple conditions simultaneously, with realistic expectations about the difficulty of the work. The practical requirements include honest analysis of the actual conditions operating in particular relationships, the establishment of structural protections that operate independently of the dominant party’s good will, the development of effective representation for weaker parties, the cultivation of long-time-horizon decision-making within dominant parties, the maintenance of effective external authority, and the recovery and maintenance of substantive moral vocabulary for the analysis and conduct of asymmetric relationships.

The Scriptural witness offers resources for the analysis and conduct of asymmetric relationships that purely secular vocabularies have struggled to replicate. The consistent attention of Scripture to the obligations of those in positions of authority, the framework of stewardship within which all positions of responsibility are understood, and the vision of a community in which the strong bear the burdens of the weak rather than imposing burdens upon them all provide categories that the cultivation of cooperative arrangements requires. The recovery of these categories, where they have been neglected, is among the more important contributions that traditions which have preserved them can offer to the broader work of institutional reform.

The deeper observation that emerges from this analysis is that cooperative asymmetric relationships are achievable but not common, and that their achievement requires conditions that the present institutional environment does not adequately supply. The work of cultivating those conditions is the work of patient institutional reform, sustained moral seriousness, and the steady articulation of the cooperative possibilities that asymmetric relationships otherwise contain. Such work has produced significant results in some contexts and across some periods, and the historical record provides grounds for measured hope that it can produce results again. The grounds for hope, however, do not relieve the present generation of the work that the cultivation of cooperative arrangements requires, and the work itself is the only path by which the cooperative possibilities of asymmetric relationships are actually realised.

The cost of continuing to default to domination, where cooperation is structurally available, is paid disproportionately by the weaker parties in each relationship and ultimately by the institutional systems within which both parties operate. The recognition of this cost, and the willingness to undertake the demanding work that its avoidance requires, is itself among the more important reformations that current institutional life requires, and the recovery of that recognition is among the more important contributions that the analysis offered in this paper attempts to support.

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The Equipping Architecture and the Trickle-Down Architecture: A Theological and Institutional Analysis of Skill Formation in the Body of Christ

Abstract

This paper examines the structural tension between two architectures of skill formation that may operate simultaneously within hierarchically organised church bodies. The first architecture is the equipping model articulated in Ephesians 4, in which ministerial gifts are given for the perfecting of the saints toward the work of the ministry, with the broader body understood as the primary site of ministry activity. The second architecture is an implicit trickle-down model in which institutional investment in skill formation is concentrated at the ministerial layer on the assumption that benefits will propagate downward to the general membership through the ordinary operations of preaching, teaching, and pastoral care. The paper specifies the implicit trickle-down model as it operates in practice, examines its tension with the equipping architecture as Scripture presents it, identifies the structural mechanisms by which the trickle-down architecture sustains itself even where it is not consciously chosen, and considers the consequences of operating under the trickle-down architecture without compensating institutional investments in member-level skill formation. The argument is offered in a context where ministerial conferences receive sustained institutional attention while comparable targeted efforts for the skill development of general members are not currently in evidence. The asymmetry of institutional investment is itself a phenomenon worthy of analysis, and the paper proposes that the asymmetry reflects assumptions about the locus of ministry that the Scriptural witness does not endorse.

Introduction

Church bodies organised on hierarchical principles routinely invest substantial institutional resources in the development of ministerial skill. General conferences of elders, ministerial training programs, retreats for paid and unpaid ministers, continuing education curricula, and similar vehicles consume meaningful portions of the institutional calendar and budget. The investment is presented and understood as contributing to the development of the body as a whole, with the assumption that improvements in ministerial capacity will manifest in improvements in the spiritual life and practical capacity of the broader membership.

The transmission mechanism by which ministerial improvement is supposed to produce member improvement is rarely articulated explicitly. It operates as an unstated assumption embedded in conference planning, budget allocation, and the institutional treatment of skill development as a category. Where the assumption is examined, it generally takes the form of a trickle-down model: better-skilled ministers produce better preaching, better counselling, better pastoral care, and better example, and the cumulative exposure of members to these improved outputs produces a more spiritually mature and practically capable membership over time.

The trickle-down model has internal coherence and is partially supported by ordinary observation. Members who hear well-prepared sermons do learn from them. Members who receive wise counselling do benefit from it. Members who observe ministerial example do sometimes pattern their own conduct accordingly. The model is not absurd, and dismissing it as ineffective would overstate the case.

This paper argues, however, that the trickle-down model is inadequate as a complete theory of how the body’s skills develop, that it sits in significant tension with the architecture of skill formation that Ephesians 4 articulates, and that its inadequacy is masked rather than addressed by the absence of comparable institutional investment in member-level skill formation. Where ministerial development is the only significant institutional investment in skill formation that a church body undertakes, the trickle-down assumption is doing far more work than it can sustain, and the body’s long-term development is being shaped by an architecture that Scripture does not endorse.

The analysis proceeds in five stages. The first stage specifies the implicit trickle-down model with sufficient precision to permit analysis. The second stage examines the equipping architecture of Ephesians 4 and the broader apostolic pattern. The third stage identifies the structural mechanisms by which the trickle-down architecture sustains itself in institutional life. The fourth stage analyses the consequences of operating under the trickle-down architecture in the absence of compensating member-level investment. The fifth stage considers what a more adequate institutional architecture might look like, and what obstacles stand between current arrangements and that more adequate architecture.

Specifying the Implicit Trickle-Down Model

The trickle-down model of skill formation in church bodies operates as a set of unstated propositions that together produce a coherent institutional architecture. The propositions are rarely articulated as a system, but they can be reconstructed from the patterns of institutional investment, the structure of conference planning, and the categories within which skill development is discussed.

The first proposition is that skill formation is appropriately concentrated at the ministerial layer of the body. Ministers, paid and unpaid, are the proper objects of institutional skill development effort. General members are not the proper objects of comparable effort, and institutional attention to their skill formation either takes derivative forms, such as Sabbath School materials produced by the ministerial layer for member consumption, or is treated as outside the scope of formal institutional planning altogether.

The second proposition is that skill formation at the ministerial layer produces benefits at the member layer through the ordinary operations of ministerial activity. The transmission mechanism is not specified in detail, but it is assumed to operate through preaching, teaching, counselling, pastoral example, and the broader rhythm of congregational life. The transmission is assumed to be reasonably efficient, to be reasonably comprehensive in its coverage of member development needs, and to operate at a sufficient bandwidth to produce meaningful member-level change over time.

The third proposition is that the appropriate measure of institutional skill formation effort is the development of the ministerial layer itself. Conferences are evaluated by what ministers learned, by how ministerial capacity was extended, and by what the ministerial corps now collectively possesses that it did not possess before. The downstream consequences for member development are assumed to follow rather than measured directly, and the absence of measurement is itself part of the architectural pattern.

The fourth proposition is that the body’s life is appropriately understood as concentrated in ministerial activity. Sermons, services, counselling sessions, ordinations, weddings, funerals, hospital visits, and the formal pastoral interactions between ministers and members constitute the body’s life in its visible and consequential form. Member activity outside these contexts, while perhaps spiritually important to the individual member, does not constitute the body’s life in the same way and is not the appropriate object of institutional skill development effort.

The fifth proposition is that members develop primarily by receiving from ministers. The member is the recipient of ministerial output, the audience of ministerial teaching, the beneficiary of ministerial care. The member’s own contribution to the body’s life is real but is conceived as receptive rather than active, with active functions reserved for ministerial offices and treated as derivative of those offices when performed by members.

These five propositions, taken together, constitute a coherent institutional architecture. The architecture is rarely defended on its merits because it is rarely articulated. It operates as the unexamined background of institutional planning, and its examination in this paper is therefore a matter of making explicit what is already operative rather than introducing a new framework into the discussion.

A particular feature of the trickle-down architecture as it operates in many church bodies, including the context within which this paper is offered, is the asymmetry of institutional investment. Substantial resources are devoted to ministerial conferences, training, and skill development. Comparable resources are not devoted to targeted skill development for the general membership. The asymmetry is so consistent across institutional contexts and so embedded in routine operations that it ceases to be visible as a choice and becomes simply the way things are arranged. The absence of member-level skill development efforts is rarely noticed because there is nothing to compare it to within the institutional pattern. The presence of ministerial development efforts is rarely questioned because their absence would be conspicuous.

The asymmetry is itself a significant fact. A body that invested comparably in member-level skill development would not necessarily abandon ministerial development; it would conduct both. The fact that institutional bodies almost universally conduct the former without the latter, rather than conducting both, indicates that the trickle-down architecture is not merely operating as a transmission mechanism alongside other forms of investment but is functioning as the principal or exclusive theory of how member-level skills develop. The trickle-down architecture has therefore taken on a load-bearing role that its actual transmission capacity may not be adequate to sustain.

The Equipping Architecture of Ephesians 4

The fourth chapter of Ephesians articulates an architecture of skill formation that differs substantially from the trickle-down model just specified. The relevant section reads, in summary, that Christ gave some apostles, prophets, evangelists, and pastors and teachers, for the perfecting of the saints, for the work of the ministry, for the edifying of the body of Christ, until all come in the unity of the faith, unto a perfect man, unto the measure of the stature of the fulness of Christ. The passage proceeds to describe a body that grows by what every joint supplies, with the increase of the body proceeding from the working in due measure of every part.

Several architectural features of this passage are worth noting carefully.

The ministerial gifts are explicitly described as given for the perfecting of the saints. The verb translated as perfecting carries the sense of equipping, fitting out, making complete, and the broader semantic field includes the mending of nets and the setting of bones. The ministerial gifts are therefore developmental in their function. Their purpose is to bring the saints to a condition of completeness and capability that they would not otherwise possess. They are not given so that the ministerial offices may themselves possess the completeness and capability while the saints remain in a permanent condition of dependence.

The work of the ministry is then explicitly assigned to the saints. The grammatical structure of the passage places the saints rather than the ministerial offices as the agents of the work of the ministry. The ministerial gifts equip the saints, and the saints perform the work of the ministry. This grammatical structure is not incidental; it is the architectural backbone of the passage. The ministry is the work of the body, performed by the saints whom the ministerial gifts have equipped. The ministerial offices are not the location of the ministry but the developmental support that prepares the location of the ministry.

The body’s growth is described in terms of the working of every part. The increase of the body proceeds from the contribution of each member according to its function. The body is not a structure in which a few central organs perform the body’s life while the remaining members are passive tissue; it is a structure in which every joint supplies and every part works in due measure. The architectural picture is one of distributed activity, with the ministerial gifts serving particular coordinating and developmental functions within a body whose life is genuinely distributed across the whole membership.

The goal of the equipping is described in terms of the maturity of the saints, articulated as their attainment of the unity of the faith, the knowledge of the Son of God, the perfect man, and the measure of the stature of the fulness of Christ. The success of the ministerial gifts is measured not by the development of the ministerial offices themselves but by the maturity of the saints whom they equip. A ministerial corps that grew in skill while the saints remained in spiritual infancy would not represent the success of the equipping ministry as Ephesians 4 describes it; it would represent its failure.

The broader Pauline corpus reinforces this architectural picture. The discussion of spiritual gifts in 1 Corinthians 12 describes a body in which gifts are distributed across the membership, with various members contributing prophecy, teaching, exhortation, healing, helps, governments, and many other functions. The discussion of body life in Romans 12 makes the same architectural assumption, with members exhorted to exercise their distinct gifts according to the grace given to them. The pastoral epistles, while addressing particular instructions to ministerial offices, assume throughout a body in which member activity is the principal expression of the body’s life and ministerial offices serve developmental and coordinating functions within that broader activity.

The book of Acts records the historical operation of this architecture in the early decades of the church. The expansion of the gospel after the persecution at Jerusalem proceeded through the activity of believers who were not in any formal sense ministers, scattered across the Mediterranean world by circumstance and carrying the gospel with them as they went. The growth of the church in many regions occurred through household-level activity, through the witness of believers in their daily occupations, and through the practical mercy that ordinary members extended to one another and to outsiders. The apostolic ministry served to consolidate, instruct, and coordinate what the broader body was already doing, rather than to substitute for activity that the broader body was not undertaking.

The equipping architecture, as Scripture presents it, is therefore not a model in which the body’s life occurs at the ministerial layer with members as recipients of what occurs there. It is a model in which the body’s life occurs across the whole membership, with the ministerial gifts serving to equip the saints for the ministry that the saints themselves perform. The measure of ministerial success is the maturity of the saints, and the measure of the body’s health is the working in due measure of every part.

The Tension Between the Architectures

The contrast between the equipping architecture and the trickle-down architecture is not merely a matter of emphasis or institutional preference. The two architectures rest on different assumptions about the locus of ministry, the nature of member life, the purpose of ministerial offices, and the appropriate measures of institutional success.

Under the equipping architecture, ministry occurs across the whole body, with the ministerial offices preparing the saints for the ministry that the saints themselves perform. Under the trickle-down architecture, ministry occurs primarily at the ministerial layer, with members receiving the products of ministry rather than performing it.

Under the equipping architecture, member life is the primary location of the body’s spiritual activity, with ministerial offices supporting and coordinating that activity. Under the trickle-down architecture, member life is the receptive layer in which the products of ministerial activity are absorbed.

Under the equipping architecture, ministerial offices are developmental, with their success measured by the maturity of the saints. Under the trickle-down architecture, ministerial offices are productive, with their success measured by the quality of what they themselves produce.

Under the equipping architecture, institutional investment in skill formation should be concentrated wherever it most efficiently advances the maturity of the saints, including investments directed at the saints themselves where those would be more efficient than indirect investments through the ministerial layer. Under the trickle-down architecture, institutional investment in skill formation is properly concentrated at the ministerial layer, with member development assumed to follow.

The two architectures can produce some overlap in practical outcomes. A church body operating under the trickle-down architecture will produce some genuine member development as a downstream consequence of its ministerial investment, and a church body operating under the equipping architecture will conduct some ministerial development as part of its broader investment in skill formation. The architectures are not mutually exclusive in every particular outcome.

They are nonetheless meaningfully different in their structural features and in their consequences over time. A body operating consistently under the trickle-down architecture will, across decades, produce a different kind of membership than a body operating consistently under the equipping architecture. The differences will accumulate slowly and may not be visible at any particular moment, but they will manifest in the body’s overall capacity, in the distribution of activity across the membership, in the dependency relationships between members and ministers, and in the body’s capacity to sustain its life through periods of ministerial scarcity or institutional disruption.

The Asymmetry of Institutional Investment as a Diagnostic

The principal diagnostic question for any particular church body is whether its institutional investment in skill formation reflects the equipping architecture or the trickle-down architecture. The question can be addressed through reasonably direct observation of institutional patterns.

A body operating under the equipping architecture will conduct ministerial development efforts and will also conduct comparable targeted efforts for the skill development of its general membership. The latter will not consist merely of materials produced by ministers for member consumption, although such materials may be a component of the broader effort. It will include gatherings, classes, retreats, and instructional programs directed at member-level skills, planned with member-level input, and measured by member-level outcomes. The institutional calendar will reflect this dual investment, with member development programs holding meaningful position alongside ministerial conferences. The institutional budget will reflect this dual investment, with member development programs receiving allocations comparable to those received by ministerial development programs.

A body operating under the trickle-down architecture will conduct ministerial development efforts without comparable targeted efforts for member skill development. The institutional calendar will be dominated by ministerial events, with member-level events either absent or limited to receptive contexts in which members hear ministerial output. The institutional budget will be dominated by ministerial development allocations, with member development receiving either no specific allocation or allocations directed primarily at producing materials that ministers will deliver to members. The institutional planning process will treat ministerial development as a category requiring sustained attention and member development as a category that will follow naturally from ministerial development without requiring separate institutional planning.

The diagnostic is straightforward to apply, and its application in many institutional contexts produces a clear result. The asymmetry of institutional investment is conspicuous wherever the diagnostic is honestly applied, and the result indicates that the body in question is operating under the trickle-down architecture rather than under the equipping architecture, regardless of whatever theological commitments it formally articulates.

The author’s observation that no targeted efforts for the skill development of general members are currently being promoted or planned within his own ecclesial context is consistent with this diagnostic result. The General Conference of Elders, with its focus on improving the skills of paid and unpaid ministers, is conducting legitimate work within its own scope. The absence of comparable targeted efforts for member skill development indicates, however, that the institutional architecture within which the conference sits is operating under the trickle-down model rather than the equipping model. The conference is not the problem; the architecture within which the conference exists, without the complementary member-level investment that the equipping architecture would require, is the matter that this paper identifies as worthy of examination.

Mechanisms by Which the Trickle-Down Architecture Sustains Itself

The persistence of the trickle-down architecture in church institutional life is not a matter of conscious adherence to a defended theory. It is the product of structural mechanisms that operate independently of explicit theological commitment and that often persist in tension with the formal theological commitments of the body operating under the architecture. Understanding these mechanisms is essential to any analysis of how the architecture might be altered.

The first mechanism is the institutional bias of the planning process. Ministerial conferences and training programs are planned by ministers, with the natural consequence that ministerial development receives greater attention in the planning than member development. The bias is not a matter of bad faith; it reflects the ordinary tendency of any planning body to focus on the development needs that its own members most directly perceive. A planning body composed of ministers will perceive ministerial development needs vividly and will perceive member development needs only as those needs filter through the ministerial perspective. The architectural consequence is that ministerial development efforts are planned in detail while member development efforts are either left unplanned or are planned only in derivative ways that reflect ministerial assumptions about what members need.

The second mechanism is the absence of feedback loops connecting ministerial development to member outcomes. Ministerial conferences are evaluated by ministerial participants, with success measured by what the participants themselves learned and how they themselves were developed. The downstream consequences for member development are not measured directly because there is no mechanism for measuring them, and the absence of measurement permits the assumption of effective transmission to operate without empirical challenge. A body that measured member-level skill development outcomes alongside its ministerial development efforts would be in a position to evaluate whether the trickle-down was actually occurring; a body that does not measure member-level skill development outcomes operates with an unfalsifiable assumption of effective transmission.

The third mechanism is the professional formation of the ministerial corps as a corps. Ministerial conferences serve to maintain shared standards, reinforce institutional culture, and provide career and morale support for ministers. These purposes are legitimate and necessary, but they are also self-sustaining. A ministerial corps that has been formed through repeated participation in ministerial conferences will naturally continue to plan ministerial conferences as the principal vehicle for skill formation, because the conferences have shaped the corps’s understanding of what skill formation looks like. Alternative architectures appear unfamiliar and unconvincing to a corps whose own development has occurred through the existing architecture.

The fourth mechanism is the distortion of member self-understanding produced by sustained operation under the trickle-down architecture. Members who have been formed within the trickle-down architecture come to understand the body’s life as something the ministers do for them, spiritual development as something they receive rather than something they pursue, and their own gifts as auxiliary rather than essential. The distorted self-understanding then produces members who do not request, plan, or expect targeted member-level skill development, because the architecture in which they have been formed does not present member-level skill development as something that ought to occur. The members who would otherwise be the constituency demanding equipping investment have been formed not to demand it.

The fifth mechanism is the substitution of the ministerial conference for the equipping function it nominally serves. The conference is presented and understood as part of the equipping ministry, and its sustained operation produces an institutional sense that equipping is occurring. The actual equipping of the saints, as Ephesians 4 describes it, is a different and more demanding work than the conduct of ministerial conferences, and its absence is masked by the visible presence of the conferences. The institution can therefore feel that it is doing the work of equipping while in fact conducting only the ministerial development half of an architecture that the equipping work would require to be doubled.

The sixth mechanism is the moral and theological cover that ministerial development provides for the absence of member development. Ministerial development is a defensible institutional priority. Its conduct can be justified in straightforwardly theological terms, presented in conference materials and reports, and pointed to as evidence of institutional seriousness about skill formation. The absence of comparable member development is not visible in the same way and does not produce equivalent demand for justification. The institution is therefore protected from the question of why it conducts only the ministerial half of the architecture by the visible legitimacy of the ministerial work it is conducting.

These mechanisms operate together rather than independently. They reinforce one another, and they produce an institutional pattern that is stable across decades even where the body’s formal theological commitments would suggest a different architecture. The recognition that the trickle-down architecture is sustained by these mechanisms rather than by considered theological judgement is itself an important step toward the possibility of an alternative architecture, because it identifies the specific points at which institutional change would need to occur.

Consequences of Sustained Operation Under the Trickle-Down Architecture

A church body that operates consistently under the trickle-down architecture across decades will manifest several consequences that compound over time and that may not be visible at any particular moment.

The first consequence is the development of a passive membership. Members formed within the architecture come to understand their spiritual lives as something received rather than something undertaken, and their participation in the body’s life as primarily attendance and consumption rather than active contribution. The passive membership is not unspiritual, in the sense that members may sincerely value what they receive and may live morally serious lives in response to it. The passive membership is, however, structurally limited in its capacity to perform the body’s ministry as Ephesians 4 describes it, because its formation has not equipped it to do so.

The second consequence is the concentration of dependency on the ministerial layer. Members increasingly rely on ministers for matters that the equipping architecture would have prepared them to address themselves. Spiritual counsel, Scriptural interpretation, the discipleship of one’s own family, the encouragement and admonition of fellow members, and the various functions that the apostolic writings assume to be distributed across the membership become functions that members understand as belonging properly to the ministerial layer and that they do not undertake themselves. The dependency is mistaken for a healthy honouring of the ministerial role, but it is in fact the symptom of an arrested development that the trickle-down architecture has produced and not corrected.

The third consequence is the brittleness of the body under stress. A body whose ministry occurs across the whole membership has substantial reserves of capacity that can sustain the body’s life through periods of ministerial scarcity, institutional disruption, persecution, or scattering. A body whose ministry is concentrated at the ministerial layer has thin reserves and depends critically on the continued availability of ministerial activity. The historical record of the church in periods of severe testing has consistently demonstrated the value of distributed ministry capacity, and the bodies that have sustained their witness through such periods have generally been bodies whose member-level skill formation was substantial. Bodies whose member-level skill formation was thin have generally not sustained their witness equally well.

The fourth consequence is the distortion of the ministerial role itself. Ministers operating under the trickle-down architecture come to understand themselves as the location of the ministry rather than as equippers of those who perform the ministry. The ministerial vocation is correspondingly distorted, with success measured by the quality of ministerial performance rather than by the maturity of the saints. The distortion is not the fault of individual ministers, who have themselves been formed within the architecture; it is the structural effect of the architecture on those whom it places at its centre. The recovery of a more apostolic understanding of the ministerial vocation requires institutional change, not merely individual reform of ministerial attitudes.

The fifth consequence is the difficulty of generational transmission. A body whose life is concentrated at the ministerial layer transmits to its rising generation the architecture that produced its current state, including the assumption that ministry occurs at the ministerial layer and that members are properly recipients. The rising generation is therefore formed into the same architecture, and the cycle continues. The capacity for the body to undertake architectural reform diminishes over generations as the alternative architecture becomes increasingly unfamiliar to those who have been formed within the existing one.

The sixth consequence is the gradual divergence between the body’s actual life and the apostolic pattern that it formally professes. The body may continue to teach Ephesians 4 as Scripture, may continue to articulate the equipping function of ministerial offices, and may continue to affirm the priesthood of all believers in its formal theological statements. The actual operation of the body diverges progressively from these formal commitments, and the divergence eventually becomes a source of cognitive dissonance for members who notice it and a source of institutional inertia for those whose responsibility would be to address it.

These consequences are not the inevitable outcomes of any particular conference or any particular institutional decision. They are the cumulative effect of sustained operation under the trickle-down architecture across decades, and they accumulate quietly. The point at which they become visible is generally the point at which they are already substantial, and their reversal at that point is more difficult than their prevention would have been at an earlier stage.

Toward a More Adequate Architecture

A more adequate architecture of skill formation in the body would not abandon ministerial development. Ministers do require development, conferences are an appropriate vehicle for some of that development, and the body genuinely benefits from a more skilled ministerial corps. The criticism of the trickle-down architecture is not a criticism of ministerial development as such; it is a criticism of ministerial development as the principal or exclusive institutional investment in skill formation.

A more adequate architecture would supplement ministerial development with comparable institutional investment in member-level skill formation. The investment would take the form of gatherings, classes, retreats, and instructional programs directed at the skills that the apostolic writings assume to be distributed across the membership. These would include serious Scripture study at a level beyond what Sabbath sermon attendance produces, the practical skills of family worship and discipleship, the capacity for hospitality and mercy ministry, the formation for witness in workplace and neighbourhood contexts, the spiritual care of one’s own family members, and the practical operations of mutual encouragement and admonition that the New Testament describes as belonging to every member.

A more adequate architecture would treat ministerial development and member development as complementary investments in the same body rather than as substitutes for one another. It would measure ministerial conference success not only by the development of ministers themselves but by demonstrable downstream effects on the body’s broader capacity. It would build feedback loops that connected institutional investment in skill formation to outcomes at the member level, and it would adjust its investment patterns when the outcomes proved disappointing.

A more adequate architecture would invite member-level concerns into the planning of skill formation efforts, rather than allowing all such planning to be conducted by ministers whose perspective is shaped by ministerial roles. It would recognise the institutional bias of ministerial planning processes and would compensate for that bias through deliberate inclusion of member-level perspectives in the planning of any skill formation work that the institution undertakes.

A more adequate architecture would recover the apostolic understanding of the ministerial vocation as equipping rather than performing the ministry. It would treat the success of the ministerial layer as measured by the maturity of the saints, and it would shape ministerial conferences toward producing ministers who understood themselves and were measured in this way. It would resist the structural pressures by which the ministerial corps comes to understand itself as the location of the ministry, and it would treat those pressures as a defect to be corrected rather than as a natural feature of institutional life.

A more adequate architecture would, finally, take seriously the consequences of sustained operation under the existing architecture and would understand reform as a substantial undertaking rather than a matter of incremental adjustment. The passive membership, the concentrated dependency, the brittleness under stress, the distorted ministerial role, the impaired generational transmission, and the divergence from the apostolic pattern are not problems that small reforms can address. They are the cumulative consequences of an architecture whose alteration would require sustained institutional commitment across multiple decades.

Obstacles to Architectural Reform

The obstacles to moving from the trickle-down architecture to the equipping architecture are themselves substantial, and they are mostly the obverse of the mechanisms by which the trickle-down architecture sustains itself.

The institutional planning process is conducted by ministers, who do not naturally perceive member-level skill formation needs and who are not themselves formed in ways that would generate proposals for member-level investment. Reform requires that the planning process be structurally altered to include member-level perspectives, and the alteration is itself a structural change that the existing planning process does not generate from within itself.

The absence of feedback loops connecting ministerial investment to member outcomes means that the existing architecture cannot generate the data that would prompt its own reform. Reform requires that feedback loops be established, and the establishment of those loops is itself a structural change that the existing architecture does not naturally produce.

The professional formation of the ministerial corps as a corps means that the corps’s understanding of skill formation is shaped by the existing architecture, and reform requires that the corps come to understand skill formation differently. The reformation of professional understanding is a slow and demanding work, and it generally requires either external pressure or extraordinary internal leadership to produce it.

The distorted self-understanding of the membership means that the constituency that would otherwise demand equipping investment has been formed not to demand it. Reform requires that the membership be reformed in its self-understanding, which is a generational work and which depends in significant part on the very member-level skill formation that the existing architecture has not provided. The chicken-and-egg structure of this obstacle is among the most difficult features of the reform problem.

The substitution of ministerial conferences for the equipping function they nominally serve means that the institution feels itself to be doing the work of equipping while conducting only half of it. Reform requires that the institution come to understand the inadequacy of its current efforts, which is a recognition that the existing architecture actively obscures.

The moral and theological cover that ministerial development provides for the absence of member development means that the institution is protected from the questions that would prompt reform. Reform requires that the protection be removed, which depends on someone or some group articulating the missing dimension in terms that the institution can hear. The present paper is offered as one such articulation, but the broader work of bringing the architectural question into institutional consciousness is a substantial undertaking.

The cumulative force of these obstacles is that architectural reform is difficult and slow, and that bodies operating under the trickle-down architecture tend to continue operating under it across long periods even when individual members and ministers within them perceive the inadequacy of the existing arrangements. The recognition that reform is difficult is not a counsel of despair; it is a clarification of what is actually required, so that those who undertake the work do so with realistic expectations rather than with the assumption that small adjustments will produce large outcomes.

Conclusion

The contrast between the equipping architecture of Ephesians 4 and the implicit trickle-down architecture under which many church bodies actually operate is more than a difference of emphasis. It is a difference about where the body’s life occurs, about what the ministerial offices are for, and about what institutional investment in skill formation is supposed to accomplish. The equipping architecture, as Scripture presents it, locates the body’s ministry in the saints whom the ministerial gifts equip, and it measures ministerial success by the maturity of the saints. The trickle-down architecture, as it operates in much institutional life, locates the body’s ministry at the ministerial layer and assumes that benefits will propagate outward through ordinary ministerial activity.

The diagnostic that distinguishes the two architectures is the presence or absence of comparable institutional investment in member-level skill formation. A body that conducts both ministerial development and targeted member development is operating, at least in part, under the equipping architecture. A body that conducts ministerial development without comparable member development is operating under the trickle-down architecture, regardless of its formal theological commitments. The asymmetry of institutional investment in many church bodies, including the context within which this paper is offered, indicates that the trickle-down architecture is the operative one, and the absence of any current targeted efforts for member skill development confirms the diagnosis.

The trickle-down architecture sustains itself through structural mechanisms that operate independently of explicit theological commitment, including the institutional bias of ministerial planning, the absence of feedback loops, the professional formation of the ministerial corps, the distorted self-understanding of members, the substitution of ministerial conferences for the equipping function, and the moral cover that ministerial development provides for the absence of member development. These mechanisms produce an architecture that is stable across decades and that is difficult to reform from within.

The consequences of sustained operation under the trickle-down architecture compound over time and include the development of a passive membership, the concentration of dependency on the ministerial layer, the brittleness of the body under stress, the distortion of the ministerial role, the difficulty of generational transmission, and the gradual divergence between the body’s actual life and the apostolic pattern that it formally professes. These consequences are not visible at any particular moment, but they accumulate steadily, and their reversal at the point of recognition is more demanding than their prevention at an earlier stage would have been.

A more adequate architecture would supplement ministerial development with comparable member-level skill formation, treat the two as complementary, build feedback loops connecting institutional investment to member outcomes, include member-level perspectives in planning, recover the apostolic understanding of the ministerial vocation as equipping, and undertake reform as a substantial multi-decade work. The obstacles to such reform are themselves substantial and are mostly the obverse of the mechanisms by which the existing architecture sustains itself, but the recognition of the obstacles is itself a step toward the work that addressing them would require.

The General Conference of Elders that prompted the analysis offered in this paper is conducting legitimate work within its own scope. The improvement of ministerial skill is a real good and a real benefit to the body that the conference serves. The architectural question concerns not the conference but the broader pattern of institutional investment within which the conference sits. Where ministerial development is conducted without comparable member-level investment, the trickle-down assumption is doing more work than its actual transmission capacity can sustain, and the body’s long-term development is being shaped by an architecture that the apostolic writings do not endorse. The recovery of the equipping architecture is the proper response to this recognition, and the present paper is offered as one contribution to the work that such recovery would require.

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The Pathology of Adversarial Asymmetry: How Institutions of Unequal Standing Default to Competition Where Cooperation Would Serve Both

Executive Summary

Across a striking range of institutional contexts, pairs or networks of organisations that are formally engaged in shared enterprise nonetheless structure their relationships adversarially rather than cooperatively, with predictable harms accruing disproportionately to the weaker party. The pattern is not confined to any single sector. It appears in professional sports leagues and their lower divisions, in publishing houses and their authors, in major retailers and their suppliers, in established universities and their feeder institutions, in denominational hierarchies and their congregations, in metropolitan and regional governments, in established firms and their subcontractors, and in many further contexts. In each case, the parties share substantial common interest in the success of the joint enterprise, and in each case the stronger party adopts a posture toward the weaker that extracts short-term value at the cost of the long-term health of the system. This paper identifies the recurring structural mechanisms that produce this pattern, examines several illustrative domains, considers why the pattern persists despite its evident costs, and offers some observations on what tends to break it. The argument proceeds without claiming that asymmetric relationships must be adversarial or that cooperation is universally available; rather, it claims that the default to adversarial structure is more pervasive and more damaging than the parties typically recognise, and that the asymmetry of harm is itself among the most consistent findings across cases.

The Structural Pattern

The pattern under examination has a recognisable shape. Two or more institutions exist in a relationship that contains both shared and divergent interests. The shared interests typically concern the long-term viability of the system within which both operate: the integrity of a market, the credibility of a profession, the health of a supply chain, the stability of a community, the cultural standing of a shared enterprise. The divergent interests concern the immediate distribution of value generated by the system: revenue shares, pricing terms, governance influence, recognition, the assignment of risk and cost.

Where the parties are of comparable standing, negotiation over the distribution of value typically operates within constraints that protect the shared interests, because each party has both the leverage and the incentive to insist on terms that preserve the common enterprise. Where the parties are of unequal standing, the stronger party can extract terms that gradually erode the conditions under which the joint enterprise functions, and the weaker party lacks the leverage to insist on protection. The result is a relationship in which the adversarial frame dominates the cooperative one, in which short-term distributional outcomes are systematically favoured over long-term systemic health, and in which the weaker party absorbs disproportionate harm not only because it receives a smaller share of the value but because it bears most of the volatility and most of the costs of systemic stress.

Several mechanisms reliably produce and sustain this pattern.

The first is the asymmetry of exit options. The stronger institution typically has alternatives to any particular weaker counterparty, while the weaker institution has either no alternative to the stronger or a small number of alternatives that are themselves structurally similar. A major retailer can replace a supplier; the supplier cannot easily replace the retailer. A premier league can negotiate without the second tier; the second tier cannot construct an equivalent product without the premier. A publishing house can replace an author; the author cannot easily reach equivalent distribution without the publisher. The exit asymmetry produces a bargaining asymmetry that compounds across every interaction.

The second is the asymmetry of time horizons. Stronger institutions tend to operate on shorter effective time horizons in their relationships with weaker counterparts, because the consequences of weaker-party distress affect the stronger party only at the system level and only with substantial delay. A retailer that drives a supplier to bankruptcy faces no immediate consequence and may face no consequence at all if a replacement supplier is available; the cumulative effect of a depleted supplier base manifests only over years and is often attributed to other causes when it does. The weaker party, by contrast, is forced into immediate-term thinking by the existential character of the threats it faces, which further reduces its capacity to negotiate for long-term protection.

The third is the asymmetry of narrative authority. Stronger institutions typically control the framing within which the relationship is understood by external observers, regulators, and the public. The narrative usually credits the stronger party with the value created by the joint enterprise and treats the weaker party as a contingent supplier of inputs. This narrative shapes the regulatory environment, the professional discourse, and even the self-understanding of the parties themselves. Weaker parties often internalise the narrative and accept terms that the narrative presents as natural, even where the underlying economic facts would support different terms.

The fourth is the dispersion of weaker-party interests. Stronger institutions are typically concentrated and well-organised, while weaker counterparts are typically numerous, geographically dispersed, and organised only weakly if at all. Collective action problems among weaker parties prevent the formation of negotiating coalitions that could partially offset the bargaining asymmetry, while the stronger party faces no equivalent collective action problem because its interests are already concentrated within a single institution.

The fifth is the capture of intermediate institutions. Regulators, industry bodies, and dispute resolution mechanisms that nominally exist to balance the parties are typically funded, staffed, and influenced disproportionately by the stronger institutions. The intermediate institutions develop incentives to preserve the stronger party’s preferred arrangements even where their formal mandate would point toward more balanced outcomes. This is not necessarily a matter of corruption in any narrow sense; it is more often the slow accommodation of regulatory and adjudicative cultures to the perspectives of the parties they interact with most frequently and most consequentially.

The sixth is the moral hazard of asymmetric absorption. When the system experiences stress, the weaker party absorbs the cost first and most fully, which protects the stronger party from the feedback that would otherwise prompt adjustment. The stronger party therefore continues behaviours that would be self-correcting in a more symmetric arrangement, while the weaker party adapts by depleting reserves, accepting riskier commitments, and tolerating practices that further undermine its position.

These six mechanisms typically operate together rather than independently. They are mutually reinforcing, and the institutional habits they create tend to harden over time as parties on both sides adjust their expectations and operations to match.

Illustrative Domains

Football League Architecture

The companion paper to this one examined the relationship between the Premier League and the Championship in detail. The structural features identified there exemplify the broader pattern: a closed top tier negotiating media rights independently of the lower tier on which it depends for its competitive structure; a distribution arrangement that produces a sixteen-to-one revenue ratio between top-flight and non-parachute Championship clubs; a parachute regime that mitigates the worst symptoms of the gap while preserving and indeed entrenching its causes; and a sustained pattern of insolvency events at lower-tier clubs that the upper-tier institution treats as exogenous to its own arrangements rather than as their predictable consequence. The asymmetry of harm is total: Premier League clubs have not collapsed, while Championship and lower-tier clubs collapse with regularity, and the supporter communities that have built decades of identity around those clubs absorb the human cost of the structural arrangement.

Publishing and Authorship

Trade publishing exhibits a closely related pattern. Publishers and authors share a common interest in the production and circulation of books, and the entire enterprise depends on a continuous flow of new authors entering the system and developing over multiple titles. The economic terms on which the relationship operates, however, have shifted decisively toward the publisher across recent decades. Advances have compressed across most of the market while concentrating at the top; standard royalty rates have declined relative to the production economics that historically supported them; rights packages have expanded in scope without proportionate expansion in compensation; and the marketing investment that determines a book’s commercial success is concentrated on a small number of titles per season, with the remainder receiving little support and absorbing the consequences of the under-investment in their reception.

The author bears the volatility of the system: when a book underperforms, the author absorbs the reputational consequence that affects future advances, while the publisher diversifies across a list. When the publishing house misjudges a market, the author whose book launches into that misjudgement absorbs the cost. When industry-wide pressures squeeze margins, the squeeze is passed downstream to authors more readily than upstream to retailers or distributors. The pattern of mid-list author attrition that the industry has experienced for a generation is the predictable cumulative effect of these arrangements, and the long-term cost is the depletion of the author development pipeline on which the industry depends for its future.

Retail and Supplier Networks

Major retailers operate within supplier relationships that exhibit the same structural features. The retailer holds disproportionate negotiating power because suppliers depend on shelf access for survival while the retailer can substitute among suppliers within most categories. Payment terms have lengthened across recent decades, transferring working capital risk from retailers to suppliers. Slotting fees, promotional contributions, and chargebacks transfer further costs downstream. Returns policies and category management practices transfer inventory risk and product development risk in the same direction.

The supplier base of major retail networks has correspondingly thinned over time. Smaller suppliers have exited or been absorbed; remaining suppliers have consolidated to reach the scale necessary to absorb the cost transfers; product variety and innovation have reduced as suppliers concentrate on the limited number of products they can carry within the constrained margins available. The retailer benefits in the short term from improved cost terms; the cost of the depleted supplier ecosystem manifests in product staleness, supply fragility, and the loss of the regional and specialty suppliers that historically distinguished one retailer’s offering from another. The recent supply chain disruptions exposed how thin the supplier base had become, and the remediation costs have substantially exceeded the cumulative savings the squeezing had produced.

Higher Education and Feeder Institutions

The relationship between elite universities and the secondary schools, community colleges, and regional universities that feed students and faculty into them exhibits the pattern in a less commercial but no less consequential form. Elite universities benefit from the developmental work performed by feeder institutions: the early identification of talent, the foundational instruction that prepares students for advanced work, the production of the doctoral students and early-career faculty who supply the elite institutions’ staffing pipelines. The compensation that flows back to the feeder institutions, whether in financial, reputational, or institutional terms, is minimal.

Feeder institutions absorb the costs of student development and the attrition of the most talented faculty members to elite recruitment. The narrative authority of elite institutions presents the talent flow as a natural meritocratic outcome, obscuring the developmental work that produces the talent in the first place. Regional universities that have spent decades developing strong departments find those departments routinely raided by elite institutions whose recruitment offers exceed the regional institution’s capacity to match. The cumulative effect is a higher education system in which institutional resources are progressively concentrated at the top while the developmental capacity that the top institutions depend on is progressively depleted.

Established Firms and Subcontractors

The relationship between established firms and the network of contractors, freelancers, and small firms that perform much of their actual work exhibits the same dynamic. The established firm controls access to clients and the prestige that allows the work to be done at premium rates. The subcontractor performs the work itself, often at compensation levels that reflect the firm’s bargaining power rather than the subcontractor’s contribution. Payment terms favour the firm. Risk allocation favours the firm. The intellectual property generated in the course of the work flows to the firm. The reputational benefits accumulate to the firm.

When economic conditions tighten, the firm protects its core staff by reducing subcontractor utilisation; when conditions improve, the firm increases utilisation without restoring the subcontractors who exited during the downturn. The subcontractor population is therefore subject to a volatility that the firm experiences only in attenuated form, with the subcontractors who survive multiple cycles increasingly drawn from those with independent financial reserves rather than from those whose work is most valuable to the firm.

Metropolitan and Regional Governance

Metropolitan governments and the regional jurisdictions that surround them exhibit a comparable pattern in many countries. The metropolitan core captures the economic activity, the prestige, and the political attention; the surrounding region provides the workforce, the infrastructure corridors, the watersheds, the recreational space, and frequently the disposal sites for the costs the core does not absorb itself. Regional jurisdictions are typically smaller and weaker negotiators, often dependent on metropolitan economic linkages for their own viability, and find themselves accepting terms in transportation, environmental, and economic development arrangements that systematically transfer cost outward and benefit inward.

The pattern manifests in the well-documented phenomenon of regional infrastructure decline alongside metropolitan investment, in the difficulty of negotiating equitable water and waste arrangements across metropolitan-regional boundaries, and in the steady demographic pattern of regional population decline as residents relocate to the metropolitan area whose costs they had been absorbing. The metropolitan area benefits in the short term from the cost externalisation; the long-term cost of the depleted regional environment manifests in workforce shortages, infrastructure stress, and the cultural and political fractures that increasingly characterise metropolitan-regional relationships in many countries.

Denominational Hierarchies and Local Congregations

Within ecclesial structures, the relationship between denominational headquarters and local congregations frequently exhibits the same pattern, although the spiritual character of the relationship complicates straightforward analysis. Headquarters institutions depend on local congregations for the financial flow that sustains the central organisation, for the membership that constitutes the denomination’s claim to representation, and for the pastoral and missional work that gives the denomination its purpose. Local congregations depend on headquarters for credentialing, for shared resources, and for the connection to wider fellowship that distinguishes a denominational identity from purely local independence.

The flow of resources and influence in many denominational structures has nonetheless tilted toward headquarters across recent generations, with congregational contributions sustaining administrative structures whose direct service to the contributing congregations has often diminished. Decisions affecting congregational life are often taken centrally with limited congregational input, and congregations that resist central decisions discover that the formal structures of accountability flow downward more readily than upward. The harms accrue disproportionately to the weaker party, with congregational decline absorbed locally while denominational headquarters preserve their staffing and their programs through reserves, property dispositions, and reduced grants to the congregations from which the original revenue had flowed. The Scriptural pattern of the church as a body in which each member contributes according to its function and is honoured according to its need stands in tension with these institutional dynamics, and the recognition of that tension is itself among the resources that ecclesial reformers across history have drawn upon in seeking renewal.

Other Domains

The pattern extends well beyond the cases examined here. Hospital systems and the independent physicians and clinics that interact with them exhibit it. Streaming platforms and the musicians and filmmakers whose work they distribute exhibit it. Major sports leagues and the lower-tier developmental leagues that feed them exhibit it across multiple sports. Defence contractors and their tiered supplier networks exhibit it. Academic publishers and the scholars who produce their content without compensation while paying for access to the products of their own labour exhibit it in an especially stark form. Tech platforms and the application developers who build on their interfaces exhibit it. The list is not exhaustive, and the recurrence of the pattern across such varied domains is itself evidence that the underlying mechanisms are structural rather than incidental.

Why the Pattern Persists

A reasonable observer might expect adversarial-asymmetric arrangements to self-correct over time. The stronger party should recognise that depleting the weaker party damages the system on which both depend, and rational long-term self-interest should drive the stronger party toward more cooperative terms. This expectation is sometimes met but more often disappointed, and the reasons are themselves structural.

The stronger party rarely experiences the cost of system depletion as a salient operational pressure. The cost manifests slowly, attributes diffusely, and is often absorbed by replacement weaker parties whose entry refreshes the system without requiring structural reform. The author who exits trade publishing is replaced by another author; the supplier who exits a retail relationship is replaced by another supplier; the football club that collapses is replaced by another club’s promotion; the regional institution that declines is replaced in the consciousness of the dominant institution by the next one in line. The stronger party therefore receives no clear signal that its arrangements are unsustainable, and its decision-makers, whose careers and incentives operate on time horizons shorter than the depletion cycle, have no immediate reason to alter behaviour.

The weaker party’s perspective is constrained in symmetrical fashion. The party that recognises the systemic problem is rarely the party with the leverage to change it, and the parties with leverage have already adjusted to the arrangement and benefit from it. The collective action problem among weaker parties prevents them from organising the bargaining capacity that would be necessary to alter terms, and the dispersion of weaker parties means that those most affected are typically least able to coordinate action.

The narrative environment around the relationship reinforces the existing arrangement. The stronger party’s framing presents its dominant position as the natural reflection of its superior contribution, and the weaker party’s predicament as the consequence of its own deficiencies rather than of structural arrangements. This framing is amplified by the regulatory and academic institutions whose perspectives have accommodated to the dominant party’s view, and it shapes the self-understanding of weaker parties to the extent that they often accept terms that the framing presents as inevitable.

The pattern persists, in short, because every structural feature of the relationship works against its correction, and because the parties best positioned to correct it have the least incentive to do so. The pathology is stable in the technical sense: deviations from it tend to revert rather than to compound.

What Tends to Break the Pattern

Despite the structural stability of adversarial-asymmetric arrangements, the pattern is sometimes broken. The cases in which it breaks are themselves instructive about the conditions necessary for change.

External regulatory intervention has produced the most consistent pattern-breaking outcomes across the domains examined. Where a regulator with genuine authority and independence has imposed structural changes that the parties would not have negotiated on their own, the resulting arrangements have generally proven more stable and more productive than what they replaced. The success of such interventions depends critically on the regulator’s insulation from capture by the dominant party, and the historical record suggests that this insulation is difficult to maintain across long periods.

Existential threat to the dominant party occasionally produces cooperative reform. When the stronger party’s own viability is threatened by some external development, the calculus of system preservation shifts and arrangements that had previously been impossible become urgent. The cooperative arrangements that emerge under such pressure tend to be more durable than those negotiated under more comfortable conditions, because all parties have internalised the system-level stakes.

The emergence of effective collective representation among weaker parties has occasionally altered the bargaining geometry sufficiently to produce reform. The conditions under which such representation emerges and sustains itself are delicate, and the historical pattern is that collective representation among weaker parties is generally easier to establish than to sustain, with the dominant party reliably devoting substantial resources to its dissolution.

Catastrophic system failure, finally, has sometimes produced reform when other mechanisms have failed. The cumulative effect of weaker-party depletion eventually produces system-level breakdowns that even the dominant party cannot ignore, and reform follows the breakdown. The cost of the breakdown itself, however, is typically extreme, and the human cost of waiting for catastrophic failure as a reform mechanism is among the most consequential social costs of the broader pattern.

A final consideration concerns the moral and spiritual resources that have historically informed reform efforts. The Scriptural witness consistently presses against the structural exploitation of the weaker by the stronger, from the prophetic denunciations of those who grind the faces of the poor through the apostolic instruction that those whom we count less honourable are to receive abundant honour. The recognition that the asymmetric extraction of value from the weaker party for the benefit of the stronger is not merely inefficient but unjust, and that systems built upon it are subject to a moral judgement that operates independently of the system’s commercial success, has been among the more reliable resources from which reformers have drawn over centuries. The contemporary tendency to frame these relationships exclusively in commercial or institutional terms has impoverished the discourse and reduced the resources available for reform, and the recovery of a more substantive moral vocabulary may itself be a precondition for the cooperative arrangements that the present moment requires.

Conclusion

The default of asymmetric institutional relationships toward adversarial structure is among the most consistent and most damaging patterns in contemporary institutional life. It appears across domains as varied as professional sports, publishing, retail, higher education, denominational governance, and metropolitan-regional relations, and the structural mechanisms that produce it operate similarly across these otherwise dissimilar contexts. The harms produced fall disproportionately on the weaker parties, whose volatility and depletion are absorbed into the system in ways that protect the stronger parties from the feedback that would otherwise prompt adjustment. The pattern is structurally stable and rarely self-corrects, with reform typically requiring external intervention, existential pressure, effective collective representation, or catastrophic failure.

The deeper observation is that institutional relationships of unequal standing are not condemned to adversarial structure. The cooperative alternative is generally available in principle, often available in detailed design, and sometimes available in practice. What is missing is typically not the institutional design but the will to adopt it, and the will is missing because the parties best positioned to adopt cooperative arrangements are those with the least immediate incentive to do so. The recognition that the adversarial default is a choice rather than a necessity, and that the choice is being made continuously by parties whose interests it appears to serve in the short term while damaging the systems they depend on in the long term, is among the more important first steps toward institutional arrangements that honour the actual interdependence that the cooperative frame already recognises.

The cost of continued adversarial defaults is paid disproportionately by the weaker parties in each relationship, but it is ultimately paid by the systems themselves, including by the stronger parties whose dominance becomes meaningless when the structures that sustained it have eroded beyond repair. This recognition does not by itself produce reform, but it may at least clarify what is at stake when reform is declined.

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Cooperative Media Rights and the Championship: Financial Implications of a Unified Negotiating Architecture for English Professional Football

Executive Summary

English professional football currently operates a bifurcated media rights market in which the Premier League negotiates as a closed shop of twenty clubs while the English Football League negotiates separately for the seventy-two clubs across the Championship, League One, and League Two. The resulting revenue gap between the Premier League and the Championship is the largest such cliff edge in any major European league system, and the parachute payment regime exists primarily to manage the financial discontinuity that this competitive negotiating posture creates. This paper considers what would change for Championship clubs if the Premier League and the EFL — or at minimum the Premier League and the Championship — pooled their media rights into a single cooperative negotiating vehicle with a redistribution formula determined collectively rather than imposed adversarially. The principal findings are that Championship baseline revenues would rise materially; the wage-to-revenue ratio crisis endemic to the division would moderate; parachute payments could be reduced or eliminated without producing the financial collapses they presently mask; ownership profiles would shift toward more patient capital; player development and stadium infrastructure spending would become more sustainable; and competitive balance within the Championship would improve. The principal risks are that aggregate rights revenue could fall if the Premier League’s prestige premium is diluted in international markets, that distributional disputes would consume governance bandwidth, and that the cooperative arrangement would require either voluntary Premier League buy-in or statutory compulsion that the league has historically resisted.

The Current Bifurcated System

The Premier League sells its domestic and international media rights through a process designed to maximise the value of the top division as a discrete product, with the proceeds distributed among its twenty member clubs according to a formula combining equal shares, merit payments based on final league position, and facility fees based on televised appearances. Across the most recent rights cycles, central distributions to even the bottom club in the Premier League have approached and in some cycles exceeded one hundred ten million pounds per season, with the top clubs receiving in the region of one hundred seventy to one hundred eighty million pounds before commercial and matchday revenues are added.

The Championship, by contrast, operates under a separately negotiated EFL rights deal that distributes a fraction of this amount across a larger number of clubs. Championship clubs receive central distributions of approximately eight million pounds per season in the typical recent cycle, supplemented for relegated clubs by parachute payments that taper across two or three years and that reach approximately forty million pounds in the first post-relegation year. The non-parachute Championship club therefore competes against rivals receiving between four and six times its central revenue in any given season, with the parachute clubs additionally enjoying the residual squad value, infrastructure, and commercial relationships of recent top-flight participation.

This structural gap drives the wage-to-revenue ratio pathology that the Championship has exhibited for more than a decade. Average Championship wages have routinely consumed more than the entirety of operating revenue across the division, with individual clubs reaching ratios of two hundred percent or more as owners underwrite losses in pursuit of promotion. The financial collapses at Bury, Macclesfield, Wigan, Reading, Derby, Birmingham, Bolton, Portsmouth, and others over the past two decades are not idiosyncratic failures of management but predictable expressions of an economic geometry in which the prize for crossing one threshold so vastly exceeds the consequence of failure that rational owners adopt strategies that look irrational only if one ignores the prize structure.

The Premier League’s defence of this arrangement rests on three claims: that the top division is a distinct global product whose value would be diluted by association with lower-division content; that the existing solidarity payments to the EFL already represent a meaningful redistribution; and that the open negotiating market between the two leagues has produced the highest aggregate broadcasting revenues in world football and that interference with this market risks reducing the total value to be redistributed.

The Cooperative Model in Outline

A cooperative media rights regime would replace the current parallel negotiations with a single negotiating entity — perhaps a joint venture of the Premier League and the EFL, perhaps an independent commercial arm answerable to both, perhaps a body created by statute as part of the framework of the proposed independent football regulator — empowered to sell domestic and international rights across both divisions as a unified or coordinated product. Clubs in both divisions would receive distributions according to a formula negotiated collectively rather than imposed by the upper division on the lower.

Several distribution architectures are conceivable. A pure egalitarian distribution would split aggregate central revenues equally across all participating clubs, which neither league would accept and which would create perverse incentives at the top. A graduated formula on the Bundesliga model would combine an equal-share component, a current-table-position component, a multi-year-performance component, and possibly a youth-development component, producing distributions that varied substantially across the league system but without the cliff edge that presently exists at the relegation line. A floor-and-ceiling model would set a minimum distribution that any club in either division would receive and a maximum that any club would receive, with the spread between them dramatically narrower than the present sixteen-to-one ratio between top Premier League and non-parachute Championship clubs.

For the purposes of analysing implications for Championship clubs, the precise formula matters less than the structural shift it represents: the gap between the bottom of the Premier League and the top of the Championship would compress, and the parachute payments that currently soften this gap would become redundant or reducible. The remainder of this paper assumes a moderate cooperative model in which Championship central distributions roughly triple from current levels, the Premier League floor falls modestly, and the parachute regime is phased out across a transition period.

Implications for Championship Club Finances

Baseline Revenue and the Sustainability Floor

The most immediate implication is that the Championship floor revenue rises from approximately eight million pounds in central distributions to a level closer to twenty-five or thirty million pounds, depending on the precise formula and the aggregate value of the cooperative deal. For the average Championship club with matchday and commercial revenues in the fifteen to twenty-five million pound range, this represents a doubling of total revenue and pushes the median club from the structurally insolvent position it currently occupies into a position where wages within standard ratios become payable from operating income rather than from owner injections.

The implications of this for club going-concern viability are substantial. The question that has dominated Championship finance for two decades — whether an owner is willing to fund losses long enough for either promotion or sale — recedes in importance, because the median club no longer requires loss-funding to operate. Clubs become viable businesses on their own revenue rather than perpetual loss centres awaiting a rare and lottery-like promotion event.

Wage Structure and the Compression of the Pay Cliff

The current wage structure in the Championship is shaped by two anchoring forces: the floor wage that Championship clubs can afford from their own resources, and the ceiling wage that parachute clubs can pay using their residual Premier League distributions. Players and agents calibrate expectations against the latter, while clubs without parachute money attempt to compete by either accepting lower wages or by underwriting wage commitments their revenue cannot support.

A cooperative model compresses this structure from both ends. The non-parachute floor rises with the higher central distribution. The parachute ceiling falls or disappears as the parachute regime is phased out. The distribution-wide wage compression makes Championship wages more affordable on their own terms and also reduces the wage step-up between Championship and Premier League play, which in turn reduces the marginal revenue gain from promotion and therefore reduces the incentive for the speculative all-in spending strategies that have produced the worst financial collapses.

Players currently treat the Championship as a transit zone in which they accept lower wages only because Premier League wages are visible above and parachute clubs offer interim pay scales that approach Premier League levels. A flatter distribution makes the Championship a destination in itself rather than a waiting room, and wage demands calibrate to the new structural reality.

Parachute Payment Reform

The cooperative model permits and indeed requires substantial reform of the parachute regime. Parachute payments exist to manage the discontinuity created by relegation under the bifurcated system. If the discontinuity is materially reduced by the cooperative distribution, the parachute regime can be reduced proportionately. In a fully developed cooperative model, parachute payments could be eliminated entirely, with clubs simply moving between distribution tiers according to their division and current performance.

The competitive consequences of this reform are significant. The two-tier Championship that presently exists — parachute clubs and everyone else — collapses into a single competitive division. Promotion races become more open because they are no longer dominated by clubs that began the season with two to three times the central revenue of the median competitor. The competitive balance improvement is itself a commercial asset: a more unpredictable Championship may command higher rights values than the current one in which the bookmaker favourites at the start of August are usually drawn from a pre-identified pool of recently relegated clubs.

The transitional question is how to handle clubs presently relying on parachute commitments. A phased reduction over four or five years would allow contracts to wind down naturally and would replace declining parachute payments with rising central distributions, leaving most clubs net better off in cash terms after transition.

Owner Profile and Patient Capital

Championship ownership has trended over the past fifteen years toward speculative and leveraged structures, with owners frequently arriving with promotion-and-flip business plans premised on the discontinuous revenue gain from Premier League entry. This ownership profile has produced repeated financial scandals, occasional asset-stripping behaviour, and a sustained level of supporter mistrust that has motivated the broader football governance reform agenda.

The cooperative model alters the owner economic calculus. If Championship clubs are viable on their own revenue, the case for ownership shifts from speculation on a binary promotion event to operation of a sustainable business with upside. The investor profile attracted to such a business is fundamentally different from the speculator profile attracted to the current arrangement: longer time horizons, lower leverage tolerance, more interest in commercial development and academy productivity, and less interest in the wage-driven gambling characteristic of the current Championship cycle.

This shift would not occur immediately. Existing ownership structures persist until ownership changes hands, and many existing owners would resist the structural change because their original business plans depended on the speculative model. Over a decade, however, the ownership profile of the Championship would shift toward what is observable in the Bundesliga 2, where club ownership skews more toward regional commercial interests and toward fan-trust structures than toward speculative international capital.

Asset Values

The asset values of Championship clubs in the current system are highly bimodal. Clubs near promotion command significant valuations on speculative grounds; clubs in mid-table or struggling command low valuations and frequently change hands at distress prices. Player asset values are similarly distorted by the wage cliff and the desperation premium of clubs chasing promotion at the deadline.

A cooperative model produces asset value compression in the same direction as wage compression. Club valuations rise from the bottom because operational viability rises; valuations fall from the top because the speculative promotion premium shrinks. Player valuations stabilise because the marginal revenue from a promoted player decreases. The aggregate valuation of the division probably rises because financial stability and predictable cash flows command higher multiples than speculative loss-funding.

Implications for Player Markets and Squad Building

The cooperative model changes the squad-building logic of Championship clubs in several ways. The current model rewards assembling a squad designed to peak in a specific promotion window, often through short-term loans, free transfers from relegated Premier League squads, and high-wage gambles on aging former top-flight players. Squad cohesion, youth integration, and long-term planning are systematically deprioritised because the financial reward structure is sharply concentrated on the promotion event.

Under cooperative redistribution, squad-building strategies that emphasise development, retention, and gradual quality improvement become economically viable. The Championship moves closer to the developmental role that the Bundesliga 2 plays in the German system, where many clubs sustain competitive squads through internal academy production and stable scouting networks rather than through annual reconstruction efforts.

The transfer market effects extend across the league system. Premier League clubs currently treat the Championship as a thin pipeline because most Championship players are either too expensive given their development risk or too low-quality given the wage distortion. A more financially stable Championship producing players in cohesive systems generates a thicker pipeline of viable transfer targets, which benefits Premier League clubs as well as the Championship clubs that produce and sell the players.

Infrastructure, Stadia, and Long-Term Investment

Stadium and training-ground investment in the Championship is currently constrained by the volatility of revenue and the high probability of relegation following the loss of parachute payments. Clubs that have invested heavily during a temporary period of Premier League or parachute revenue have repeatedly found themselves with infrastructure debt servicing that exceeds their post-relegation operational capacity. The list of clubs in this position over the past two decades is substantial.

A stable Championship revenue floor permits stadium and infrastructure investment on payback horizons that match the actual amortisation profiles of such investments. Twenty-year debt on a stadium expansion or a training ground rebuild can be serviced by operational revenues that are not contingent on a particular division status, and the lender risk profile improves accordingly. The cost of capital for Championship clubs falls because the business risk falls.

The supporter experience implications are real if less easily quantified. Stadium infrastructure across the Championship is generally aging, and substantial portions of the matchday product reflect investment cycles that ended a generation ago. A stable revenue environment supports the gradual modernisation that the current speculative environment defers indefinitely.

Comparative Reference: The Bundesliga DFL Model

The German DFL operates a unified rights model across the Bundesliga and the 2. Bundesliga that approximates the cooperative architecture under discussion. Aggregate rights revenue is lower than Premier League aggregate rights revenue, but the distribution across the two divisions is materially flatter. The 2. Bundesliga floor club receives a distribution that supports operational viability without owner injections, and the wage-to-revenue ratios in the German second tier are typically in the seventy to ninety percent range rather than the over-one-hundred-percent range characteristic of the Championship.

Several features of the German experience are directly relevant. First, the cooperative model has not prevented the Bundesliga from being a globally significant league, although its commercial revenues lag the Premier League by a substantial margin. The causal direction here is contested: the bifurcated English model may produce higher aggregate revenue, or the Premier League’s revenue lead may derive primarily from the English language, the historical strength of English football brands, and other factors that would persist under a cooperative model. Second, the German second division operates with notably lower financial volatility, fewer insolvency events, and longer-tenured ownership than the Championship. Third, promotion and relegation in the German system function without parachute payments and without producing the cycle of post-relegation collapses that the English system has normalised.

The German experience does not prove that an English cooperative model would produce identical results, because the legal, regulatory, and ownership environments differ. But it does provide an existence proof that a cooperative architecture across two professional divisions can sustain a competitive top division, support a financially stable second division, and operate without parachute payments.

Risks, Counterarguments, and Implementation Concerns

The strongest counterargument to the cooperative model is that aggregate media rights revenue might fall under cooperative bargaining. The Premier League’s prestige premium in international markets is genuine and is at least partly attributable to the league’s identity as a closed product with global star concentration. If a cooperative deal markets a combined Premier League and Championship product, international broadcasters might pay less than the present Premier League aggregate, even if more than the present Championship aggregate, with the net effect uncertain. A reasonable response is that rights could continue to be sold as differentiated tiers within a cooperative framework — international buyers continue to buy the top-division product as such, with cooperative redistribution applied to the proceeds — but the Premier League clubs would object that any redistribution constitutes a transfer from their negotiated value to clubs they did not include in the bargain.

A second counterargument is that the cooperative model reduces the incentive for sustained competitive ambition in the Championship, because the relative rewards for promotion fall. This argument has some force but is weaker than it appears: the prestige and international visibility of Premier League participation remain substantial even with compressed financial gaps, and many Bundesliga 2 clubs sustain genuine promotion ambitions despite the smaller financial differential of German promotion.

A third concern is governance complexity. A cooperative negotiating body across forty-four or ninety-two clubs requires conflict resolution mechanisms, voting structures, and dispute procedures that the current bifurcated arrangement avoids. The historical inability of the Premier League and the EFL to agree on even modest redistribution increases under existing arrangements suggests that voluntary movement to a cooperative model is unlikely without statutory compulsion. The Football Governance Bill and the proposed independent regulator provide a possible vehicle for such compulsion, although the current draft of that legislation does not extend to media rights pooling.

A fourth concern is that the cooperative arrangement might prove unstable. Premier League clubs would face continuing pressure from European league participation and from the recurring spectre of breakaway competitions. If an attractive alternative arrangement presented itself, the Premier League clubs might leave a cooperative arrangement they had been compelled to enter, with substantial transitional damage to Championship clubs whose business models had adjusted to cooperative distributions.

Governance Architecture Required

A workable cooperative model requires governance structures that the current arrangement does not provide. A joint commercial entity would need a board structure that gave both divisions meaningful representation without permitting either to dominate; a distribution formula sufficiently transparent and stable that clubs could plan investment over multi-year horizons; a dispute resolution mechanism for the inevitable disagreements over formula application; and a relationship to the broader regulatory environment that prevented the cooperative arrangement from being captured by either short-term Premier League interests or short-term EFL political dynamics.

The most promising institutional vehicle is probably a statutory entity created in conjunction with the independent regulator, with rights pooling mandated by law and distribution formula subject to regulatory approval but not regulatory imposition. This architecture preserves club autonomy in negotiating the formula while preventing the regulatory capture that would result from leaving the formula entirely in the hands of the same parties whose adversarial bargaining produced the present situation.

Conclusion

The financial implications of cooperative media rights for Championship clubs are substantially positive across most relevant dimensions. Baseline revenues rise materially; wage-to-revenue ratios moderate toward sustainability; parachute payments become reducible; ownership profiles shift toward patient capital; squad-building strategies become longer-term; infrastructure investment becomes financeable; competitive balance improves; and the recurring insolvency events that have damaged supporter communities and the credibility of English football governance become less frequent. The principal countervailing risks concern aggregate rights revenue effects in international markets and the governance challenges of cooperative negotiation across forty-four clubs with divergent immediate interests.

The deeper structural observation is that the Championship’s present financial pathology is not an accident of management but a direct consequence of a media rights architecture that treats the two divisions as competitors rather than as components of a single league system. Where the financial reward for crossing the divisional boundary is permitted to grow without limit, rational owners will adopt strategies that produce regular financial collapses, and the human costs of those collapses — to supporters, to local communities that have built decades of identity around their clubs, to employees whose livelihoods depend on club survival — will continue to accumulate. The cooperative model addresses this pathology at its source by reducing the discontinuity rather than by mitigating its symptoms through parachute payments that distort the very competition they are meant to preserve. Whether the Premier League will accept such a model voluntarily, accept it under regulatory compulsion, or successfully resist it indefinitely will be among the more consequential governance questions facing English football over the coming decade.

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White Paper: Flexible Apportionment of Power as a Response to Peripheral Condition

Abstract

This white paper addresses the constitutional and institutional question implied by the cumulative argument of the preceding papers: what would a flexible apportionment of power within the Canadian federation, and within the province of Newfoundland and Labrador, look like if it were designed to recognize the value of peripheral areas, to mitigate the conditions that produce the experience of exploitation in those areas, and to remain responsive to changes in the development and population of different regions over time? The question is constitutional in its scope but practical in its motivation: the constraint families catalogued in Volume II, the extraction-retention asymmetries documented across this project, and the primate-rest divide examined in the preceding papers together produce a structural condition that no programme of rural development, no fiscal transfer, and no policy reform can permanently relieve in the absence of an underlying institutional architecture configured for the purpose. The paper proceeds by identifying the design principles such an architecture would require, the constitutional and sub-constitutional instruments through which those principles could be realized, the mechanisms of flexibility that would allow the architecture to adapt to changing conditions, and the principal obstacles to its adoption. The argument is that the architecture in question is not utopian; it is constructed from elements that are individually present in various existing federal arrangements, in Canada and elsewhere, but that have not been combined and applied to the Canadian peripheral question in the manner the cumulative analysis of this project recommends.

I. The Question Properly Posed

Discussions of federal balance in Canada have, since Confederation, alternated between two registers. The first is the register of formal constitutional division, conducted through royal commissions, first ministers’ conferences, intergovernmental agreements, and, on rare occasions, constitutional amendment. The second is the register of fiscal arrangement, conducted through equalization formulas, transfer payments, programme-specific cost-sharing, and the ad hoc accommodations through which the federation has handled its periodic asymmetric demands. The two registers interact, but they are rarely integrated, and the cumulative effect is a federation whose constitutional architecture is difficult to amend, whose fiscal arrangements are negotiated continuously without reference to underlying constitutional principles, and whose peripheries find themselves addressed through whichever register happens to be available rather than through the register their condition requires.

The question this paper addresses is whether a flexible apportionment of power is possible — flexible in the sense that it can adjust to changing conditions without requiring constitutional amendment for each adjustment, but principled in the sense that the adjustments are governed by stable criteria rather than by the political contingencies of any given negotiation. The criterion that should govern such an apportionment, on the cumulative argument of this project, is the recognition that peripheral status is a relational property, that it produces specific constraint conditions on the territories that occupy it, and that the legitimate response to those conditions is not their elimination — peripheries cannot be abolished by fiat — but their compensated accommodation through institutional arrangements that retain in the periphery a fair share of the value the periphery generates and a fair voice in the decisions that affect it.

A flexible apportionment so understood would have to operate at two levels simultaneously: the federal level, between Ottawa and the provinces, and the sub-provincial level, between the provincial capital and the non-primate territory. The two levels are analytically distinct but practically interlocked, because the constraints that produce peripheral condition operate at both, and because any reform at one level that ignores the other will simply relocate the problem rather than address it.

II. Design Principles for Flexible Apportionment

Five principles, developed from the analytical framework of this project, would govern the architecture in question.

The first is the principle of relational recognition. Peripheries are not defined by their distance from a centre in absolute terms but by their relational position within a system of flows — fiscal, demographic, cultural, infrastructural — whose direction and magnitude can be measured. An apportionment of power configured for peripheral conditions would explicitly recognize this relational position in its institutional design, rather than treating all sub-units as formally equivalent regardless of their actual position in the relevant flows. The principle does not require differential rights or unequal citizenship; it requires that the institutional arrangements applied to a given territory take account of that territory’s actual position rather than assuming a uniform position that does not, in fact, obtain.

The second is the principle of retained value. A periphery whose generated value is captured at the centre and returned, if at all, in the form of programmatic transfers will experience itself as exploited regardless of the rhetoric in which the transfers are couched. The architecture must therefore include mechanisms by which a defined share of value generated in the periphery is retained in the periphery as of right, not as of grant, and the retention mechanism must be insulated from political reversal at the centre. The principle is familiar from resource-revenue arrangements in other federations and from indigenous land claims agreements in Canada itself; what is required is its generalization to peripheral territories more broadly.

The third is the principle of voice proportionate to stake. Peripheries that are demographically small but economically or geographically substantial are systematically under-represented in legislatures whose composition is driven by population alone. The Canadian Senate was designed, at Confederation, partly to address this problem; its actual functioning has not, on most assessments, achieved the design intent. An apportionment of power configured for peripheral conditions would include institutional mechanisms — whether reformed upper chambers, intergovernmental councils with formal authority, or jurisdiction-specific constitutional protections — through which peripheral stake is given voice that is not simply proportional to peripheral population.

The fourth is the principle of subsidiarity with capacity. Decisions affecting a territory should be made as close to that territory as is consistent with the substantive competence required to make them well, and the architecture must include the resourcing necessary for local and regional bodies to exercise the competence that subsidiarity assigns to them. Subsidiarity without capacity is a transfer of responsibility without a transfer of means, and produces the worst combination of local accountability for outcomes and central control over the resources required to achieve them. The principle is well-established in European federal theory and has partial expression in Canadian indigenous self-government arrangements; its extension to non-indigenous peripheral territories would require deliberate institutional development.

The fifth is the principle of revisable allocation. Allocations of power that cannot be adjusted in response to changing conditions become, over time, sources of grievance whether or not they were appropriate when established. The architecture must therefore include mechanisms through which the allocation can be revised on a regular basis, in response to demographic change, economic change, and changes in the circumstances of the territories themselves, without requiring constitutional amendment for each revision. The mechanism is, in practical terms, the most demanding of the five principles, because it requires the federation to accept that its institutional arrangements are provisional in a way that constitutional federations have generally found difficult to accept.

III. Federal-Level Instruments

At the federal level, the architecture that these principles imply would consist of several interlocking instruments, none of which would be wholly novel but several of which would represent significant departures from current practice.

A reformed upper chamber, configured to give peripheral territories voice proportionate to stake rather than to population, would be the most visible instrument. The current Senate, despite its formal regional composition, does not function as a peripheral-voice institution; senators are appointed by the federal Prime Minister, and the chamber’s actual operation is shaped by partisan considerations rather than by regional ones. Reforms that have been proposed at various points — elected senators, equal regional representation on the Australian or American model, or a chamber composed of provincial and territorial delegates on the German Bundesrat model — each address different aspects of the problem, and the appropriate Canadian solution is likely to combine elements of several. The essential feature is that the chamber’s composition reflects peripheral stake and its powers include genuine influence over legislation affecting peripheral territories, not merely a delaying capacity.

A second instrument is a formal intergovernmental council with legislative or quasi-legislative authority over a defined set of subjects. First Ministers’ Conferences and Council of the Federation meetings exist but operate without formal authority and produce, at most, communiqués that the federal government and the provinces are not bound to honour. A council with formal authority over equalization, major infrastructure, and intergovernmental fiscal arrangements, with weighted voting that gives peripheral provinces and territories a greater share of decisional weight than their population alone would warrant, would institutionalize the voice-proportionate-to-stake principle without requiring constitutional amendment, provided that the council’s authority were established through ordinary legislation supported by complementary provincial legislation.

A third instrument is a generalized retained-value mechanism for natural resource revenue. The 1985 Atlantic Accord and its 2005 amendment established the principle that offshore oil revenues from the Newfoundland continental shelf are, for fiscal purposes, treated as if they were on-shore provincial resources, with consequent retention by the province. The principle was hard-won and remains imperfectly implemented, but it is in operation. Its generalization to other resource sectors — hydroelectric production, mineral extraction, fisheries — and its extension to a federally-recognized retention floor that all peripheral provinces and territories could rely on regardless of negotiating leverage, would convert what is currently an ad hoc arrangement into a structural feature of the federation. The extension would require federal legislation and, in some cases, provincial complementary legislation; it would not require constitutional amendment.

A fourth instrument is jurisdiction over sub-provincial territories of distinct character. Labrador, the northern reaches of the prairie provinces, the northern portions of Ontario and Quebec, and the indigenous territories that span provincial boundaries together constitute a class of sub-provincial peripheries whose conditions resemble each other more than they resemble the conditions of the provinces in which they are formally located. The federation has handled this fact unevenly, through territorial creation in the case of Nunavut, through indigenous self-government arrangements in many cases, and through ordinary provincial administration in most others. A more systematic approach would recognize sub-provincial peripheral status as a category warranting specific federal attention, not by removing such territories from their provinces but by establishing federal-provincial frameworks specific to their condition. Labrador’s position within Newfoundland and Labrador is the case of most direct relevance to this project, and is taken up below.

IV. Sub-Provincial Instruments

Within Newfoundland and Labrador, the architecture would require sub-provincial instruments addressing the primate-rest divide and the distinct position of Labrador within the province.

The first sub-provincial instrument is the formal recognition of Labrador as a distinct constitutional entity within the province. The recognition would not require Labrador’s separation from the province, which would carry costs that most Labrador residents have not, on the available evidence, judged worth incurring. It would, however, require a provincial framework in which Labrador’s geographic, demographic, and economic distinctness is acknowledged in the structure of provincial government rather than addressed only through the contingent attention of governments headquartered in St. John’s. Mechanisms might include a Labrador chamber within the provincial legislature, a Labrador minister with constitutional rather than discretionary status, or a Labrador-specific provincial-territorial relationship modelled on the relationship between Greenland and Denmark. The choice among these mechanisms is less important than the principle that Labrador’s position within the province is institutionally recognized rather than left to the goodwill of provincial governments whose electoral incentives lie elsewhere.

The second sub-provincial instrument is regional governance with substantive authority. The province has, at various points, experimented with regional development bodies, regional health authorities, and regional school boards, with mixed results. The general pattern has been that regional bodies are established with administrative responsibilities but without taxing authority, without significant capital budgets, and without protection against subsequent consolidation. Regional governance with substantive authority would require the assignment to regional bodies of revenue sources adequate to their responsibilities, of capital authority sufficient to make long-horizon decisions, and of institutional protection against arbitrary reversal by provincial governments responding to short-term fiscal pressures.

The third sub-provincial instrument is the integration of indigenous governments into the provincial architecture as full partners rather than as stakeholders. The Nunatsiavut Government, established under the 2005 Labrador Inuit Land Claims Agreement, has the institutional capacity and the territorial reach to function as a peer government to the province within its area of jurisdiction. The Innu Nation, the NunatuKavut Community Council, and the Mi’kmaq governance structures on the island similarly represent capacity that exceeds the level of consultative engagement that the current provincial framework affords them. Integration as full partners would require formal intergovernmental agreements with binding effect, shared decisional authority over matters affecting indigenous territories, and resourcing adequate to the responsibilities the agreements assign.

The fourth sub-provincial instrument is the deliberate decentralization of provincial institutional capacity. Provincial departments, regulatory bodies, post-secondary programmes, and major-employer headquarters do not have to be located in St. John’s, and the policy presumption that they should be is itself one of the constraints that the architecture is meant to address. The decentralization of institutional capacity to Corner Brook, to Happy Valley-Goose Bay, to Gander, to Grand Falls-Windsor, and to other regional centres, on a scale sufficient to alter the gravitational structure of provincial employment, would produce over time the multi-node topology that the preceding paper identified as a precondition of genuine rural development.

V. Mechanisms of Flexibility

The architecture must remain responsive to changes in the conditions of the territories it governs. Static arrangements, however well-designed at their inception, become rigid over time and produce grievances of their own. Three mechanisms of flexibility warrant identification.

The first is periodic review with binding effect. Every fiscal arrangement, every intergovernmental agreement, and every assignment of authority within the architecture would be subject to scheduled review at intervals appropriate to the subject matter — five years for ordinary fiscal arrangements, ten years for major intergovernmental agreements, twenty-five years for the foundational elements of the architecture itself. The reviews would be conducted by bodies whose composition reflects the principles of the architecture, with peripheral representation weighted according to the voice-proportionate-to-stake principle, and their conclusions would have binding effect within defined limits. The mechanism is familiar from the Canada Health Transfer arrangements and from various indigenous self-government agreements; its generalization across the architecture would convert ad hoc renegotiation into systematic review.

The second is conditional formula adjustment. Many of the relevant fiscal and institutional parameters can be expressed as formulas whose inputs change automatically with measurable conditions: equalization formulas, retained-value floors, intergovernmental transfer levels, regional funding allocations. Formula-based adjustment removes a substantial fraction of the parameters from political renegotiation while preserving responsiveness to actual conditions. The mechanism is technically demanding — formulas can produce perverse incentives if poorly designed, and the politics of formula construction are not less contested than the politics of explicit negotiation — but its successful application in equalization and in the territorial formula financing arrangements demonstrates its feasibility in principle.

The third is graduated jurisdictional transfer. The assignment of authority between levels of government does not have to be all-or-nothing. Authority over a given subject can be transferred in stages, with intermediate stages in which authority is shared, in which the receiving body has consultative authority short of decisional authority, or in which the authority is exercised jointly with capacity-building support from the transferring body. The mechanism allows the architecture to respond to the development of capacity in receiving bodies — the Nunatsiavut Government, regional governance bodies, indigenous governments more generally — without requiring either premature transfers that exceed receiving capacity or indefinite delays that prevent capacity from developing.

VI. The Question of Exploitation

The white paper’s framing question included a specific element worth addressing directly: the architecture should be configured so as not to make peripheral territories feel exploited. The framing is appropriate, because the experience of exploitation is itself a political fact with consequences for the federation regardless of whether the underlying objective conditions warrant the description. But the framing also requires care, because an architecture designed primarily to manage the experience of exploitation, rather than the conditions that produce it, will be perceived as cosmetic and will fail to achieve even its narrow objective.

The architecture proposed here is designed to address the conditions, on the assumption that the experience will follow. The retained-value principle ensures that a measurable share of generated value remains in the territory that generates it. The voice-proportionate-to-stake principle ensures that the territory has institutional means to resist arrangements that would extract from it without its consent. The subsidiarity-with-capacity principle ensures that decisions affecting the territory can be made within the territory by bodies with the means to make them well. The revisable-allocation principle ensures that arrangements that come to be experienced as inequitable can be revised without requiring revolutionary measures. Together, these principles do not eliminate peripheral status — that is not within the gift of any institutional arrangement — but they do produce conditions in which peripheral status is compensated, voiced, and adjustable rather than uncompensated, voiceless, and fixed.

The cases catalogued across this project — the 1969 Churchill Falls contract, the Voisey’s Bay arrangement, the iron ore routing through Quebec, the Atlantic Accord, the 1992 cod moratorium, the lighthouse divestment — share a common feature: each was, in its time, defended on the ground that it represented the best arrangement available given the constraints. Each was, in its time, accepted by Newfoundland and Labrador governments that judged the alternative to be worse. And each has, over time, generated the experience of exploitation that the framing question asks the architecture to address. The pattern indicates that the experience is not produced by individual transactions in isolation but by the cumulative effect of transactions conducted within an architecture that lacks the principles identified above. An architecture that incorporated those principles would not eliminate hard transactions, but it would conduct them on terms that did not, by their very structure, produce the cumulative grievance that the present architecture has produced.

VII. Obstacles

Three categories of obstacle warrant identification, in the interest of analytical honesty about the prospects of the architecture proposed here.

The first is constitutional. Several elements of the architecture — Senate reform in particular, but also the formal recognition of sub-provincial peripheral status — would be facilitated by constitutional amendment of a kind that the Canadian federation has, since the failure of the Meech Lake and Charlottetown rounds, treated as politically unattainable. The architecture has been designed, where possible, to operate through ordinary legislation and intergovernmental agreement rather than through constitutional amendment, but the absence of a constitutional dimension limits the durability of arrangements that ordinary legislation can be used to construct.

The second is interest-based. The current architecture produces concentrated benefits for identifiable groups — incumbent suppliers, primate-city institutions, the federal departments that administer programmatic transfers under existing rules — and reform would impose costs on those groups that they will resist through the political channels available to them. The resistance is not illegitimate; in a representative system, organized interests are entitled to defend themselves. But the resistance must be acknowledged as a structural feature of the reform problem, not as an incidental obstacle that can be managed through better communication.

The third is conceptual. The architecture proposed here requires a vocabulary for thinking about federalism that is not currently dominant in Canadian political discourse. The dominant vocabulary treats federalism as a matter of provinces against the federal government, with peripheral conditions handled, when they are handled at all, through ad hoc accommodation. The vocabulary required for the architecture proposed here treats federalism as a multi-level system in which peripheral conditions are a recognized feature warranting specific institutional response. The vocabulary exists in academic and policy literatures, but it has not penetrated the operational discourse of intergovernmental relations to the extent that the architecture’s adoption would require. The development of that vocabulary is itself a precondition of the architecture’s realization, and is part of what the broader project of which this paper is a component is intended to contribute.

VIII. Conclusion

A flexible apportionment of power that recognizes the value of peripheral areas, that does not produce in those areas the experience of exploitation, and that responds to changes in their development and population over time, is constructable from elements that are individually present in existing federal arrangements. The constructive task is to combine those elements according to principles that the cumulative analysis of this project has developed: relational recognition, retained value, voice proportionate to stake, subsidiarity with capacity, and revisable allocation. The federal-level instruments through which the architecture would be realized include a reformed upper chamber, a formal intergovernmental council, a generalized retained-value mechanism, and frameworks specific to sub-provincial peripheries. The sub-provincial instruments include the constitutional recognition of Labrador’s distinct position, regional governance with substantive authority, the integration of indigenous governments as full partners, and the deliberate decentralization of provincial institutional capacity. The mechanisms of flexibility include periodic review with binding effect, conditional formula adjustment, and graduated jurisdictional transfer.

The architecture is demanding, and the obstacles to its adoption are substantial. It is, however, a coherent response to a coherent problem, and it has the analytical advantage of being constructed from principles whose application is intelligible across the cases this project has examined. The white papers that follow take up specific dimensions of its implementation, beginning with the fiscal arrangements that would be required to give the retained-value principle operational force in the post-2041 period.


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