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The Apostle Restored
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THE APOSTLE:
THE MISSING GIFT
A Doctrinal Treatise on Apostolic Authority,
Bishopric, and Ecclesiastical Order
FROM THE APOSTOLIC DESK OF
REV. JOHN SHANE VAUGHN
FOUNDING APOSTOLIC OVERSEER
FIRST HARVEST MINISTRIES INTERNATIONAL
THE APOSTOLIC ASSEMBLY – HOI
“And He gave some, apostles; and some, prophets; and some, evangelists;
and some, pastors and teachers; For the perfecting of the saints, for the
work of the ministry, for the edifying of the body of Messiah.”
— Ephesians 4:11-12 (KJV)
PREAMBLE:
THE CRISIS OF
GOVERNMENTAL AUTHORITY
IN THE BODY OF MESSIAH
For nearly two thousand years, the Body of Messiah has suffered un-
der a catastrophic theological error—one that has stripped the Ekklesia
of its governmental authority, reduced apostolic ministry to a historical
relic, and replaced Yahweh’s divine order with man-made institutional
hierarchies.
This error can be stated simply: The institutional church has taught
that apostles no longer exist.
This doctrine—variously called “cessationism” regarding apostolic
ministry, or absorbed into the broader framework of “apostolic succes-
s i o n” as practiced by Rome—has produced devastating consequences:
• The removal of foundational governmental ministry from the
Body
• The substitution of ecclesiastical titles for divine callings
• The confusion of administrative offices with ascension gifts
• The loss of apostolic authority to establish doctrine, order, and
correction
• The fragmentation of the Ekklesia into countless competing sects
without governmental oversight
This treatise exists to restore biblical clarity.
We shall demonstrate from Scripture, from linguistic analysis, from
historical evidence, and from theological reasoning that:
Apostles were given by Yahshua AFTER His ascension—not before
it ended
Apostleship is an ascension gift, not a limited historical role
Bishopric (oversight) is embedded within apostleship, not superior
to it
The doctrine of “no more apostles” originated from institutional con-
venience, not biblical mandate
The five-fold ministry of Ephesians 4:11 represents levels of maturity
in the believer, not merely offices to be filled
Let it be established among our assemblies that this document rep-
resents the official doctrinal position of First Harvest Ministries In-
ternational and The Apostolic Assembly – HOI concerning apostolic
ministry and ecclesiastical government.
PART ONE:
THE ASCENSION GIFTS —
YAHSHUA’S GOVERNMENTAL
PROVISION
Article I: The Timing of the Gift
The most fundamental question that must be answered is this: When
did Yahshua give the gift of the apostle?
The institutional church has assumed that the apostles existed before
the ascension and that their office ceased with their deaths. But Scrip-
ture declares something remarkably different.
Ephesians 4:8-11 (KJV):
“Wherefore He saith, When He ascended up on high, He led captivity
captive, and gave gifts unto men. (Now that He ascended, what is it but
that He also descended first into the lower parts of the earth? He that
descended is the same also that ascended up far above all heavens, that
He might fill all things.) And He gave some, apostles; and some, prophets;
and some, evangelists; and some, pastors and teachers.”
Notice the verb tense and the timing: “When He ascended... He gave.”
This is not past tense referring to a pre-ascension appointment. This
is a description of what Yahshua did upon His ascension and what He
continues to do from His throne.
The Question That Silences Cessationism
If apostles ceased to exist after the original twelve died, why would
Yahshua—while ascending to heaven—give the gift of the apostle
when apostles were already present on earth? There was no reason to
give what already existed? Think about it!
The original disciples were already apostles. They had already
been commissioned. They had already received authority. If the gift
of apostleship was limited to those who had physically walked with
Yahshua, then the ascension gift would have been redundant,
unnecessary, and pointless.
But the text declares that He gave—as an ongoing action from His
throne—apostles, prophets, evangelists, pastors, and teachers.
The ascension gift of the apostle was not given TO the original
twelve. It was given BY Yahshua FROM His throne for the ongoing
governance of His Ekklesia.
Paul: The Proof of Post-Ascension Apostleship
The Apostle Paul stands as the irrefutable evidence that apostleship
extends beyond the original twelve and beyond physical witness
of Yahshua’s earthly ministry.
Romans 1:1 (KJV):
“Paul, a servant of Yahshua Messiah, called to be an apostle, separated
unto the gospel of Elohim.”
1 Corinthians 9:1-2 (KJV):
“Am I not an apostle? am I not free? have I not seen Yahshua Messiah
our Lord? are not ye my work in YAHWEH? If I be not an apostle unto
others, yet doubtless I am to you: for the seal of mine apostleship
are ye in YAHWEH.”
Paul was not among the original twelve. He was not present during
Yahshua’s earthly ministry. He persecuted the Ekklesia. Yet he was
called to be an apostle, separated unto the gospel, and commissioned
by the risen, ascended Messiah.
If apostleship was limited to those who physically walked with Yahsh-
ua during His earthly ministry, Paul could never have been an apostle.
But he was—and his apostleship was validated not by human ceremony
but by divine calling and apostolic fruit. Later it would be confirmed by
human ceremony in Jerusalem with the Headquarters assembly.
1 Corinthians 15:8-10 (KJV):
“And last of all He was seen of me also, as of one born out of due time.
For I am the least of the apostles, that am not meet to be called an apos-
tle, because I persecuted the church of Elohim. But by the grace of Elohim
I am what I am: and His grace which was bestowed upon me was not
in vain; but I laboured more abundantly than they all: yet not I, but the
grace of Elohim which was with me.”
Paul describes himself as “one born out of due time”—an anomaly, a
late addition, one who came after the expected window had closed. Yet
he was still an apostle. This proves that the window never closed.
Article II: The Five Ascension Gifts Defined
Scripture identifies precisely five ascension gifts given by the risen
Messiah to His Ekklesia:
1. Apostles (ἀπόστολος — apostolos — “sent ones”)
2. Prophets (προφήτης — prophētēs — “forth-tellers”)
3. Evangelists (εὐαγγελιστής — euangelistēs — “proclaimers of
good news”)
4. Pastors (ποιμήν — poimēn — “shepherds”)
5. Teachers (διδάσκαλος — didaskalos — “instructors”)
These five gifts are not interchangeable with other ecclesiastical offic-
es. They are not synonymous with bishop, deacon, elder, or any
other term. They are distinct governmental gifts given by Messiah
for the perfecting of the saints.
The Purpose of the Ascension Gifts
Ephesians 4:12-16 (KJV):
“For the perfecting of the saints, for the work of the ministry, for the
edifying of the body of Messiah: Till we all come in the unity of the faith,
and of the knowledge of the Son of Elohim, unto a perfect man, unto the
measure of the stature of the fulness of Messiah: That we henceforth be
no more children, tossed to and fro, and carried about with every wind of
doctrine, by the sleight of men, and cunning craftiness, whereby they lie in
wait to deceive; But speaking the truth in love, may grow up into Him in
all things, which is the head, even Messiah: From whom the whole body
fitly joined together and compacted by that which every joint supplieth,
according to the effectual working in the measure of every part, maketh
increase of the body unto the edifying of itself in love.”
Notice the duration indicated: “Till we all come...”
The ascension gifts operate until the Body reaches:
• Unity of the faith
• Knowledge of the Son of Elohim
• A perfect man
• The measure of the stature of the fullness of Messiah
Has this been achieved? Has the Body of Messiah reached perfect
unity? Perfect knowledge? Perfect maturity? The fullness of Messiah?
If not, then the ascension gifts—including apostles—remain in oper-
ation.
To claim that apostles have ceased while the Body remains divided,
immature, and tossed by every wind of doctrine is to claim that Yahs-
hua removed the very gifts He gave to solve those problems. This is
theological absurdity.
Article III:
The Heresy of Removing the
Apostle
The Foundation Cannot Be Removed From the Building
Ephesians 2:19-20 (KJV):
“Now therefore ye are no more strangers and foreigners, but fellowciti-
zens with the saints, and of the household of Elohim; And are built upon
the foundation of the apostles and prophets, Yahshua Messiah Himself
being the chief corner stone.”
The Ekklesia is built upon the foundation of the apostles and proph-
ets. What happens to a building when you remove its foundation? It
collapses.
The cessationist doctrine does not merely teach that the original
apostles have died—which is obviously true. It teaches that the
office itself has ceased, that the gift is no longer given, that the
foundation has been removed from under the building.
This is architectural impossibility and theological bankruptcy.
A foundation is not a scaffold. A scaffold is temporary—erected for
construction, then removed when the building is complete. A founda-
tion is permanent—it remains as long as the building stands.
If apostles were a scaffold, they could be removed. But Scripture
says they are a foundation. They remain until the building is
complete. And the building is not complete until the Master Builder
returns.
What Apostles Do
Apostles are not ceremonial figureheads. They are governmental
functionaries with specific responsibilities:
1. Sent Ones (Foundation Layers)
Matthew 28:19-20 (KJV):
“Go ye therefore, and teach all nations, baptizing them in the name
of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit: Teaching them to
observe all things whatsoever I have commanded you: and, lo, I am with
you alway, even unto the end of the world.”
The Great Commission is an apostolic commission. Apostles are “sent
ones”—the very meaning of the Greek word apostolos. They go where
the Ekklesia has not yet been established. They plant where nothing has
been planted. They lay foundations where no foundation exists.
2. Foundation Layers
1 Corinthians 3:10 (KJV):
“According to the grace of Elohim which is given unto me, as a wise
masterbuilder, I have laid the foundation, and another buildeth thereon.
But let every man take heed how he buildeth thereupon.”
Paul calls himself a “wise masterbuilder” (ἀρχιτέκτων — architektōn).
This is architectural language. Apostles are not decorators; they are
foundation layers. They establish the structural integrity upon which all
other ministry is built.
3. Governmental Builders
1 Corinthians 4:15-17 (KJV):
“For though ye have ten thousand instructors in Messiah, yet have ye
not many fathers: for in Messiah Yahshua I have begotten you through
the gospel. Wherefore I beseech you, be ye followers of me. For this cause
have I sent unto you Timotheus, who is my beloved son, and faithful in
YAHWEH, who shall bring you into remembrance of my ways which be
in Messiah, as I teach every where in every church.”
Paul exercises governmental authority over multiple churches. He
sends representatives. He establishes consistent doctrine across assem-
blies. He corrects error. He sets order. This is apostolic government in
action.
4. Order Setters
Titus 1:5 (KJV):
“For this cause left I thee in Crete, that thou shouldest set in order the
things that are wanting, and ordain elders in every city, as I had appoint-
ed thee.”
Apostles set things in order. They establish elders. They appoint
leadership. They create governmental structure where chaos previously
existed.
PART TWO:
THE BISHOP IS NOT AN
APOSTLE
Article IV: The Linguistic Deception
One of the most damaging confusions in ecclesiastical history has
been the substitution of “bishop” for “apostle”—as if the bishop is the
successor to the apostle, the continuation of apostolic ministry, the
modern equivalent of what the apostles once were.
This is linguistic and theological fraud.
The Etymology of “Bishop”
The English word “bishop” derives from the Greek word ἐπίσκοπος
(episkopos), which literally means “overseer” or “one who watches
o v e r .”
The word is a compound:
ἐπί (epi) — “over” or “upon”
σκοπός (skopos) — “watcher” or “one who looks”
An episkopos is one who looks over, who superintends, who provides
oversight. The word was used in secular Greek for governmental offi-
cials, supervisors, and administrators. It was not a religious term origi-
nally—it was an administrative term borrowed for ecclesiastical use.
From Greek episkopos came:
• Latin episcopus
• Old English biscop
• Middle English bisshop
• Modern English bishop
The related terms episcopal, episcopate, and episcopacy all derive
from the same root.
The Bishop in Scripture
The New Testament uses episkopos only five times:
1. Acts 20:28 — Elders called to oversee the flock
2. Philippians 1:1 — Bishops and deacons mentioned in greeting
3. 1 Timothy 3:1-2 — Qualifications for the office of bishop
4. Titus 1:7 — The bishop as steward of Elohim
5. 1 Peter 2:25 — Yahshua called the Shepherd and Bishop of our
souls
Notice what is NOT in this list: Ephesians 4:11.
The bishop (episkopos) is not listed among the five ascension gifts.
The ascension gifts are apostles, prophets, evangelists, pastors, and
teachers.
A bishop is therefore NOT an ascension gift.
The Critical Distinction
ASCENSION GIFT
ECCLESIASTICAL
OFFICE
ApostleBishop
ProphetElder
EvangelistDeacon
Pastor—
Teacher—
Ascension gifts are callings from Messiah. Ecclesiastical offices
are structured positions within the assembly. One is a divine endow-
ment; the other is an administrative function.
A man may hold an office without possessing a gift. A man may pos-
sess a gift without holding an office. The two categories are not identi-
cal, though they may overlap.
Article V: Bishop as Desired Office
1 Timothy 3:1-2 (KJV):
“This is a true saying, If a man DESIRE the office of a bishop, he de-
sireth a good work. A bishop then must be blameless, the husband of one
wife, vigilant, sober, of good behaviour, given to hospitality, apt to teach.”
Notice the critical word: DESIRE.
The office of bishop is something a man may desire. It is a “good
work” to be sought after. It has qualifications to be met—moral require-
ments, domestic standards, character traits.
Now compare this to apostleship:
Romans 1:1 (KJV):
“Paul, a servant of Yahshua Messiah, CALLED to be an apostle...”
1 Corinthians 1:1 (KJV):
“Paul, CALLED to be an apostle of Yahshua Messiah through the will of
Elohim...”
Galatians 1:1 (KJV):
“Paul, an apostle, NOT OF MEN, neither BY MAN, but by Yahshua
Messiah, and Elohim the Father, who raised Him from the dead.”
Paul was called—not desirous of the position. Paul was called by
Yahshua Messiah—not by human appointment. Paul was not of men,
neither by man—his apostleship was divine, not institutional.
The Fundamental Difference
BISHOPAPOSTLE
Desired officeDivine calling
Qualifications listedCalling, sending, and fruit
Human recognitionDivine commission
Local oversightRegional/global authority
Administrative functionGovernmental authority
A bishop is a man who desires an office and meets its qualifications.
An apostle is a man whom Messiah calls, sends, and commissions.
These are not the same thing.
Article VI: Bishopric Within Apostleship
The most important text for understanding the relationship between
apostleship and bishopric is found in Acts 1.
Acts 1:20 (KJV):
“For it is written in the book of Psalms, Let his habitation be desolate,
and let no man dwell therein: and his BISHOPRICK let another take.”
The word translated “bishoprick” is ἐπισκοπή (episkopē)—the office
or function of oversight. Peter is quoting Psalm 109:8 concerning Ju-
das: “Let his days be few; and let another take his office.”
What Does This Prove?
This verse demonstrates that the apostles already possessed bishopric
(oversight authority) within their apostleship. Therefore an Apostle by
calling is a Bishop by office. But a Bishop by office is not necessarily an
Apostle by calling.
Judas was an apostle. When he fell through transgression, his bishop-
ric—his office of oversight—was vacated. The apostles did not replace
Judas with a bishop; they replaced his apostolic position, which includ-
ed oversight authority.
Bishopric is included within apostleship. Apostleship is not included
within bishopric.
The greater contains the lesser. An apostle possesses episcopal
(oversight) authority as part of his apostolic mantle. But a bishop does
not possess apostolic authority merely by virtue of his episcopal office.
Paul Never Sought Consecration as Bishop
It is remarkable that Paul—the greatest church-planting apostle—
never sought or received consecration as a bishop. Why?
Because his bishopric flowed from his apostleship, not the other way
around.
Paul governed doctrine. He established elders. He corrected error. He
set order across multiple churches. He exercised every function of epis-
copal oversight—not because he held the office of bishop, but because
he was an apostle, and apostolic authority includes oversight.
An apostle does not need to be elevated to bishopric. His episcopal
authority is already embedded in his apostolic calling.
PART THREE:
THE ORIGIN OF THE “NO
MORE APOSTLES” DOCTRINE
Article VII: The Catholic Replacement
Where did the doctrine originate that apostles no longer exist?
It did not come from Scripture—as we have demonstrated, Scripture
teaches the opposite.
It came from institutional necessity.
The Catholic Development
As the early church institutionalized, it developed a hierarchical
structure centered on the bishop as the supreme local authority. The
Bishop of Rome eventually claimed supremacy over all other bishops,
becoming the Pope.
But a problem existed: if apostles still functioned, they would
possess authority superior to bishops. The apostle is a founda-
tional gift; the bishop is an administrative office. The apostle establishes
doctrine; the bishop oversees its application. The apostle has regional
or global authority; the bishop has local jurisdiction.
For the bishop to reign supreme, the apostle had to be eliminated—
not physically, but doctrinally.
The Catholic Church developed the doctrine of apostolic
succession—the teaching that bishops are the successors of the apos-
tles, inheriting their authority through an unbroken chain of ordina-
tion from the original twelve.
This doctrine served two purposes:
1. It elevated the bishop by claiming he possessed apostolic author-
ity
2. It eliminated the apostle by claiming the office had transitioned to
the episcopate
The Catholic teaching became this: You had to have seen Yahshua
personally to be an apostle. Since no one alive has seen Yahshua,
there can be no more apostles. The bishops are the successors who car-
ry forward apostolic authority.
This is theological sleight of hand.
The Protestant Inheritance
When the Protestant Reformation occurred, the Reformers chal-
lenged many Catholic doctrines—transubstantiation, papal authority,
indulgences, purgatory—but they largely inherited the Catholic as-
sumption about apostles.
Furthermore, the Reformers developed cessationism as a polemical
tool against Rome. The Catholic Church claimed ongoing miracles,
healings, and supernatural manifestations. The Protestants, seeking to
discredit these claims as “pious frauds,” argued that the miraculous gifts
had ceased with the apostles.
The logic went like this:
• The apostles possessed miraculous gifts
• The apostles are no longer with us
• Therefore, miraculous gifts are no longer given
• Catholic claims of miracles are therefore false
Cessationism was not developed from careful biblical exegesis. It was
developed as anti-Catholic polemic. The doctrine served a strategic
purpose: to delegitimize Catholic miracle claims by arguing that the
age of miracles had ended.
• But in eliminating Catholic miracles, the Reformers also elimi-
nated:
• The gift of apostleship
• The gift of prophecy
• The gifts of healing
• The gift of tongues
• All supernatural operations of the Spirit
• They threw out the apostolic baby with the Catholic bathwater.
Benjamin Warfield and the Codification of Cessationism
The formal theological codification of cessationism came largely
through Benjamin Breckinridge Warfield (1851-1921), a Presbyterian
theologian at Princeton Seminary. In his 1918 work Counterfeit Mira-
cles, Warfield argued that:
1. Miracles served to accredit the apostles as bearers of divine reve-
lation
2. Once the canon of Scripture was complete, miracles were no
longer needed
3. Since only apostles could confer spiritual gifts, the gifts ceased
with the apostles’ deaths
4. Any post-apostolic claims of miracles are therefore counterfeit
Warfield’s arguments became the standard defense of cessationism in
Reformed and fundamentalist circles. His influence extended through-
out evangelical Christianity, shaping the assumptions of denomina-
tions, seminaries, and pulpits for generations.
But Warfield’s arguments contain fatal flaws:
Flaw 1: Scripture never states that miracles existed only to accredit
apostles. The purpose of gifts is for “the perfecting of the saints” (Ephe-
sians 4:12) and “the profit of all” (1 Corinthians 12:7).
Flaw 2: Scripture never states that only apostles could confer gifts.
Ananias—who was not an apostle—laid hands on Paul (Acts 9:17).
Timothy received a gift through the laying on of hands by the presby-
tery (1 Timothy 4:14).
Flaw 3: The completion of the canon is nowhere presented in Scrip-
ture as the trigger for the cessation of gifts. The passage often cited—1
Corinthians 13:10 (“when that which is perfect is come”)—refers to the
perfect spirit body awaiting all the saints.
Flaw 4: The historical record contradicts Warfield. Miracles, healings,
prophecies, and tongues are documented throughout church histo-
ry—by Irenaeus, by Tertullian, by Augustine (who reversed his earlier
skepticism after witnessing healings in his own church), by the desert
fathers, and continuing to the present day.
Article VIII: The Continuing Apostolic
Ministry
Apostles in the New Testament Beyond the Twelve
The New Testament identifies multiple apostles beyond the original
twelve:
• Paul — “called to be an apostle” (Romans 1:1)
• Barnabas — “the apostles, Barnabas and Paul” (Acts 14:14)
• James the Lord’s brother — “other of the apostles saw I none, save
James the Lord’s brother” (Galatians 1:19)
• Andronicus and Junia — “who are of note among the apostles”
(Romans 16:7)
• Apollos — implied apostleship (1 Corinthians 4:6-9)
• Silvanus and Timothy — “we might have been burdensome, as
the apostles of Messiah” (1 Thessalonians 2:6-7)
• Epaphroditus — “your messenger” (Philippians 2:25, where “mes-
senger” is apostolos)
If apostleship was limited to the twelve who physically accompanied
Yahshua, none of these could be apostles. Yet Scripture calls them apos-
tles.
The Marks of Apostleship
2 Corinthians 12:12 (KJV):
“Truly the signs of an apostle were wrought among you in all patience,
in signs, and wonders, and mighty deeds.”
The marks of apostleship are:
• Patience — endurance through suffering and opposition
• Signs — supernatural attestation and revelations.
• Wonders — miraculous demonstrations and divine favor
• Mighty deeds — powerful works and provision
These marks are not limited to the first century. Wherever these
marks appear, apostolic ministry is present. Wherever men are
called by Messiah, sent to establish what has not been established,
laying foundations, setting order, governing doctrine, and operating in
signs and wonders—there is apostleship.
The Apostolic Succession Within Scripture
2 Timothy 2:2 (KJV):
“And the things that thou hast heard of me among many witnesses, the
same commit thou to faithful men, who shall be able to teach others also.”
This verse presents four generations of transmission:
• Paul — the apostle
• Timothy — who heard from Paul
• Faithful men — to whom Timothy commits what he received
• Others — whom the faithful men will teach
This is apostolic succession—not through episcopal ordination, but
through the transmission of apostolic doctrine and authority to faithful
men who continue the work.
The apostolic ministry does not end with the death of apostles. It
continues through those they have trained, commissioned, and sent.
The pattern multiplies; the authority extends; the foundation remains.
Article IX: Receiving Apostolic Authority and
Apostolic Reward
One of the most neglected teachings in the modern church concerns
the reception of apostolic ministry. YAHSHUA Himself established a
principle that the institutional church has largely ignored:
Matthew 10:41 (KJV):
“He that receiveth a prophet in the name of a prophet shall receive a
prophet’s reward; and he that receiveth a righteous man in the name of a
righteous man shall receive a righteous man’s reward.”
The key word is receive—not believe, not agree with, not like—but
receive.
Apostolic Blessing Is Unlocked by Recognition
This is not flattery. This is not submission theater. This is discern-
ment.
You cannot receive what you refuse to recognize.
If someone receives an apostle merely as:
• a teacher → they receive teaching
• a pastor → they receive care
• a speaker → they receive information
But if they receive him as an apostle, they receive apostolic
grace.
The reward is according to the office recognized. This distinction is
critical: The reward is not payment, The reward is impartation
Apostolic reward includes:
• Alignment — being brought into proper governmental order
• Establishment — being grounded on a firm foundation
• Authority to build — receiving delegated power to construct
• Spiritual covering — protection under apostolic government
• Trans-local grace — blessing that extends beyond local boundar-
ies
• Endurance through warfare — strength to withstand opposition
This is why YAHSHUA ties reward to recognition, not merit. The
blessing flows through the office received, not the gift observed.
Why Apostles Are Often Rejected First
This was one of the strongest insights in understanding apostolic
reception:
Apostles are the hardest gift to receive, because they don’t
merely inspire—they rearrange.
Prophets disturb sin. Pastors disturb comfort. Apostles disturb struc-
ture.
So many people unknowingly block apostolic blessing by reducing
apostles to:
• “just another minister”
• “just a teacher”
• “just a leader”
They receive truth—but not government. They receive
words—but not foundation.
Recognition Happens Before Fruit Is Fully Seen
This nuance matters deeply:
Fruit proves apostleship over time
But recognition activates blessing in the moment
In other words:
Fruit answers the question: “Was this truly apostolic?”
Recognition answers the question: “Will I benefit from it?”
Many in Scripture missed apostolic reward not because the apostle
lacked authority—but because they refused to receive him as such.
The Danger and Necessity of This Teaching
This teaching can be abused. Which is why Scripture balances it with:
Testing
Time
Fruit
Plurality of elders
But abuse does not negate truth.
You can reject false apostles without rejecting apostleship itself.
The quiet conclusion is this: Those who receive apostolic grace will
build. Those who reject it will cycle.
They’ll keep learning. Keep attending. Keep consuming. But never
establish.
Article X: Paul’s Defense of His Apostleship
Paul did not merely claim apostleship—he defended it. And his de-
fense provides the template for understanding how true apostleship is
justified.
Paul Did Not Inherit Apostleship—He Was Arrested by It
Paul never claims apostleship by succession. He never appeals to
Jerusalem pedigree. He never leans on human authorization.
He goes straight to this:
Galatians 1:1 (KJV):
“Paul, an apostle, not of men, neither by man, but by Yahshua Messiah,
and Yahweh the Father, who raised Him from the dead.”
That line is a jurisdictional declaration.
Paul was not:
• voted in
• appointed by committee
• ordained by hierarchy
• He was interrupted, confronted, and commissioned.
Apostleship begins when YAHWEH takes jurisdiction over a man’s
life.
“Have I Not Seen YAHSHUA?”—Witness, Not Timeline
Paul asks this rhetorically:
1 Corinthians 9:1 (KJV):
“Am I not an apostle? am I not free? have I not seen Yahshua
Messiah our Lord?”
This was not nostalgia. It was legal testimony of the personal and
intimate calling of an Apostle, it happens when Christ Himself chooses
a man to work through.
Paul’s encounter on the Damascus road was not a vision for encour-
agement—it was a court summons.
He was:
blinded
stripped
re-assigned
sent
Apostles are not volunteers. They are apprehended men. Their en-
tire lives are set apart for one mission and it is noticeable to all.
“The Churches Are My Letter”—Fruit as Evidence
Here is where reception and recognition tie together:
2 Corinthians 3:2 (KJV):
“Ye are our epistle written in our hearts, known and read of all men.”
Paul’s proof wasn’t charisma. It wasn’t eloquence. It wasn’t popularity.
It was living structures that still stood.
Churches. Elders. Doctrine. Order.
That is apostolic fruit—not excitement, but continuity.
Signs, Suffering, and Scar Tissue
Paul says something almost offensive to modern ears:
2 Corinthians 12:12 (KJV):
“Truly the signs of an apostle were wrought among you with all pa-
tience, in signs, and wonders, and mighty deeds.”
Notice the order:
1. Perseverance first
2. Power second
Paul didn’t say: “Look at my miracles.”
He said: “Look at what survived the war.”
Apostolic authority leaves scar tissue, not applause.
Apostles Are Recognized by Reception—Not Self-Assertion
This is where it ties directly into receiving an apostle in the name of
an apostle.
Paul says plainly:
1 Corinthians 9:2 (KJV):
“If I be not an apostle unto others, yet doubtless I am to you: for the seal
of mine apostleship are ye in YAHWEH.”
Catch that.
Apostleship is relationally sealed. It activates where it is received. It
bears fruit where it is recognized.
You cannot receive apostolic blessing while denying apostolic office.
Why Paul Had to Defend His Apostleship at All
This is the uncomfortable part:
Paul defended his apostleship because false apostles were already
operating.
2 Corinthians 11:13 (KJV):
“For such are false apostles, deceitful workers, transforming themselves
into the apostles of Messiah.”
Paul defended his office not for ego, but to protect the churches
from lawlessness.
The Conclusion of Paul’s Defense
Apostleship is not proven by claim, but it is activated by reception. It
is justified by commission, and confirmed by what remains standing.
Paul didn’t ask to be believed. He asked to be discerned.
And those who received him as an apostle did not merely receive
teaching—they received foundation.
PART FOUR:
THE FIVE-FOLD MINISTRY AS
LEVELS OF MATURITY
Article XI: A Revolutionary Understanding
The traditional interpretation of Ephesians 4:11 views the five-fold
ministry as five distinct offices—five separate categories of persons who
serve different functions in the Body.
But there is another way to understand this text—one that has pro-
found implications for how we understand spiritual maturity and
ministry development.
What if the five ascension gifts represent levels of maturity in the
believer?
Consider this possibility: perhaps not every believer is ready to
receive the ministry of an apostle or a prophet. Perhaps some are only
ready for the ministry of a teacher or an evangelist.
The Progression of Ministry
Think of spiritual maturity as a progression:
EVANGELIST — The entry-level minister. The evangelist proclaims
the good news to those who have not yet heard. This is the ministry of
introduction, of first contact, of bringing the lost to initial faith. Every
believer can function as an evangelist at some level—sharing their testi-
mony, proclaiming the gospel, inviting others to faith.
TEACHER — The second level. The teacher grounds new believers in
the fundamentals of faith. This is the ministry of instruction, of impart-
ing knowledge, of establishing doctrinal foundations. Not every believ-
er is ready to teach; teaching requires knowledge, understanding, and
the ability to communicate truth effectively.
PASTOR — The third level. The pastor shepherds, feeds, protects, and
cares for the flock after they have been evangelized and taught. This is
the ministry of nurture, of guidance, of ongoing relationship. Not every
teacher is ready to pastor; pastoring requires patience, love, commit-
ment, and the heart of a shepherd.
PROPHET — The fourth level. The prophet speaks what YAHWEH
is saying in the moment. This is the ministry of revelation, of divine
communication, of hearing and declaring the heart of Elohim. Not
every pastor is ready to prophesy; prophecy requires intimacy with
YAHWEH, spiritual sensitivity, and the courage to speak uncomfort-
able truths.
APOSTLE — The fifth level. The apostle establishes, governs, cor-
rects, and orders. This is the ministry of foundation, of government,
of setting things in order. Not every prophet is ready for apostleship;
apostleship requires seasoning, authority, wisdom, and the calling of
Messiah Himself.
The Believer’s Journey
Under this understanding, the five-fold ministry describes not merely
offices to be filled but stages of maturity through which believers prog-
ress.
A new believer may begin by evangelizing—sharing their newfound
faith with others.
As they grow, they may become teachers—instructing others in what
they have learned.
As they mature further, they may become pastors—taking responsi-
bility for the care of others.
As they deepen in intimacy with YAHWEH, they may function as
prophets—hearing and declaring His voice.
And those who reach the fullness of ministry maturity may be called
as apostles—establishing, governing, and setting order in the Body.
Not All Reach All Levels
This does not mean every believer will become an apostle. Most will
not. The progression requires:
Divine calling at each level
Faithful stewardship of previous callings
Character development
Spiritual growth
Increasing responsibility
Proven fruit
Some will function their entire lives as teachers. Some will serve
faithfully as pastors. Some will prophesy until Messiah returns. Not ev-
ery believer is called to apostleship—but the office exists for those who
are called, and the calling has not ceased.
Scripture Support for Progressive Ministry
1 Corinthians 12:28 (KJV):
“And Elohim hath set some in the church, first apostles, secondarily
prophets, thirdly teachers, after that miracles, then gifts of healings, helps,
governments, diversities of tongues.”
Notice the ordering: first apostles, secondarily prophets, thirdly
teachers. This suggests a hierarchy of importance or authority, not
merely a random listing.
The apostle is first—not first chronologically, but first in authority, in
governmental weight, in foundational importance.
Article XII: The Recovery of Governmental
Order
Why This Matters
The restoration of proper understanding concerning apostolic minis-
try is not an academic exercise. It has profound practical implications
for the government of the Ekklesia.
Without apostles, the Body lacks:
• Foundational authority
• Governmental order
• Doctrinal correction
• Expansion into new territories
• The setting of things in order
• With bishops substituted for apostles, the Body receives:
• Administrative management instead of governmental authority
• Institutional maintenance instead of apostolic advance
• Human recognition instead of divine calling
• Local oversight without foundational power
• Hierarchy without heaven’s backing
The difference is the difference between a living organism and a reli-
gious organization—between a Spirit-filled Body and a board-directed
institution—between the government of heaven operating on earth and
the government of men pretending to represent heaven.
The Need for Both
Let it be clearly stated: Bishops are needed and the office is vital.
The Scripture presents the office of bishop as a “good work” to be
desired. Bishops provide oversight, stability, doctrine, and order within
local assemblies. They are shepherds who care for the flock, teachers
who ground believers in truth, administrators who manage the practi-
cal affairs of the Ekklesia.
But bishops do not replace apostles.
The two are different categories serving different functions:
APOSTLEBISHOP
Ascension giftDesired office
Divine callingAdministrative position
Foundation layerLocal overseer
Multi-church authoritySingle assembly oversight
Establishes new worksMaintains existing works
Sets doctrineApplies doctrine
Governmental authorityAdministrative authority
Both are needed. One does not cancel the other. One does not replace
the other.
When apostleship is reduced to a title chase or replaced with cere-
monial offices, the Ekklesia loses government, expansion, and apostolic
order.
PART FIVE:
OFFICIAL DECLARATION
Article XIII: The Position of
First Harvest Ministries International
Be it therefore known and declared that First Harvest Ministries
International and The Apostolic Assembly – HOI affirm the following
doctrinal positions:
Section 1: On the Continuity of Apostolic Ministry
We affirm that the ascension gift of the apostle, given by Yahshua
Messiah upon His ascension to the right hand of the Father, continues
to operate in the Body of Messiah until the Body reaches the unity of
the faith and the measure of the stature of the fullness of Messiah.
We reject the doctrine of cessationism as applied to apostolic minis-
try, recognizing it as a post-biblical development rooted in institutional
convenience and anti-Catholic polemic rather than in scriptural teach-
ing.
Section 2: On the Distinction Between Apostle and Bishop
We affirm that the apostle and the bishop are distinct categories—the
apostle being an ascension gift of Messiah, the bishop being an admin-
istrative office within the assembly.
We reject the doctrine that bishops are successors to the apostles or
that the episcopal office has replaced the apostolic gift.
We affirm that bishopric (oversight authority) is embedded within
apostleship—an apostle possesses episcopal authority as part of his
apostolic mantle—but the reverse is not true: a bishop does not possess
apostolic authority merely by virtue of his episcopal office.
Section 3: On the Marks of Apostleship
We affirm that apostleship is marked by:
Divine calling, not human appointment
Being sent by Messiah, not commissioned by institution
Foundation laying in virgin territory
Governmental authority over multiple assemblies
The setting of doctrine and order
Signs, wonders, and mighty deeds
Apostolic fruit—churches established, lives transformed, the gospel
advanced
We reject merely ceremonial or titular claims to apostleship that lack
these marks.
Section 4: On the Five-Fold Ministry
We affirm that the five ascension gifts—apostles, prophets, evan-
gelists, pastors, and teachers—remain in operation until the Body of
Messiah reaches maturity.
We further affirm that these gifts may represent levels of spiritual ma-
turity through which believers progress, not merely offices to be filled
by different categories of persons.
We reject any teaching that reduces the five-fold ministry to mere
titles, that eliminates any of the five gifts as no longer operative, or that
substitutes institutional offices for divinely given gifts.
Section 5: On Apostolic Authority Within This Ministry
We affirm that Rev. John Shane Vaughn functions in the apostol-
ic office as Founding Apostolic Overseer of First Harvest Ministries
International, having been called by Messiah, sent to establish works
where none existed, having laid doctrinal foundations, having set order
in assemblies, and having borne apostolic fruit over nearly forty years
of ministry.
We affirm that this apostolic authority includes episcopal oversight—
the authority to govern doctrine, establish elders, correct error, and set
order—flowing from the apostolic calling, not from a separate episco-
pal consecration.
Article XIV: Application for the Assemblies
How This Doctrine Shall Be Applied
The title “Apostle” or “Apostolic Overseer” shall be recognized as
legitimate within our assemblies, not as a title of prestige but as a de-
scription of function and calling.
The office of Bishop shall be recognized as a vital administrative
function within local assemblies, distinct from but not superior to
apostolic authority.
Teaching on the five-fold ministry shall include instruction on both
the continuity of all five gifts and the possibility that they represent
levels of maturity through which believers may progress.
Cessationism shall be identified as a doctrinal error when it is pre-
sented as biblical truth within our assemblies.
Apostolic authority shall be exercised in the establishment of new
works, the ordination of elders, the correction of doctrine, and the
setting of order—in accordance with biblical patterns and under the
headship of Yahshua Messiah.
Episcopal authority shall be exercised in local oversight, pastoral care,
doctrinal instruction, and administrative management—in submis-
sion to apostolic oversight and in accordance with the qualifications of
Scripture.
CONCLUSION:
THE FOUNDATION REMAINS
The institutional church has built an entire theological system on the
assumption that apostles no longer exist. This assumption has no scrip-
tural warrant. It developed from institutional convenience, was weap-
onized as anti-Catholic polemic, and has been codified by theological
systems that prioritize tradition over text.
But Scripture speaks clearly:
“He gave some, apostles...”
He gave. Past tense describing the action taken at ascension. Present
reality for the continuing Ekklesia.
The gift was given. The gift remains. The foundation stands. The
apostles continue.
Let the Ekklesia arise and receive what Messiah has given.
Let the government of heaven operate on earth.
Let the foundational ministries be restored.
Let the Body grow unto the measure of the stature of the fullness of
Messiah.
And let it be known that we, The Apostolic Assembly – HOI, stand
upon this foundation—apostolic, governmental, ordered by heaven,
and advancing unto the coming of the King. Another Truth is
RESTORED.
Sealed and Declared from the Apostolic Desk of
Rev. John Shane Vaughn
Founding Apostolic Overseer
First Harvest Ministries International
The Apostolic Assembly – HOI
MARANATHA
To YAHWEH alone be the glory
APPENDIX A: KEY SCRIPTURES ON
APOSTOLIC MINISTRY
On the Giving of the Gift
Ephesians 4:8-11 — “When He ascended... He gave some, apostles”
1 Corinthians 12:28 — “Elohim hath set some in the church, first
apostles”
On Paul’s Apostleship
Romans 1:1 — “Paul, called to be an apostle”
1 Corinthians 9:1-2 — “Am I not an apostle?... the seal of mine apos-
tleship are ye”
Galatians 1:1 — “Paul, an apostle, not of men, neither by man”
1 Corinthians 15:8-10 — “Last of all He was seen of me also”
On the Foundation
Ephesians 2:19-20 — “Built upon the foundation of the apostles and
prophets”
1 Corinthians 3:10 — “I have laid the foundation”
On Bishopric
Acts 1:20 — “His bishoprick let another take”
1 Timothy 3:1-2 — “If a man desire the office of a bishop”
Titus 1:5-7 — “Ordain elders... for a bishop must be blameless”
On the Duration of the Gifts
Ephesians 4:12-13 — “Till we all come... unto the measure of the stat-
ure of the fullness of Messiah”
On the Marks of Apostleship
2 Corinthians 12:12 — “The signs of an apostle were wrought among
you”
On Apostolic Succession
2 Timothy 2:2 — “The same commit thou to faithful men, who shall
be able to teach others also”
APPENDIX B: GLOSSARY OF TERMS
Apostle (apostolos): A “sent one”; one called and commissioned by
Messiah to lay foundations, establish churches, set doctrine, and govern
with authority.
Bishop (episkopos): An “overseer”; one who provides administrative
oversight and pastoral care within a local assembly or region.
Bishopric (episkopē): The office or function of oversight; the admin-
istrative authority of a bishop.
Cessationism: The doctrine that certain spiritual gifts—including
apostleship, prophecy, tongues, and healing—ceased with the death of
the original apostles or the completion of the biblical canon.
Continuationism: The doctrine that all spiritual gifts described in the
New Testament continue to operate in the present age.
Ascension Gift: One of the five ministry gifts given by Yahshua Mes-
siah upon His ascension: apostle, prophet, evangelist, pastor, teacher
(Ephesians 4:11).
Five-Fold Ministry: The five ascension gifts of Ephesians 4:11, given
for the perfecting of the saints until the Body reaches maturity.
Apostolic Succession: (1) The Catholic/Orthodox doctrine that bish-
ops inherit apostolic authority through an unbroken chain of ordina-
tion; (2) The biblical concept that apostolic teaching and authority is
transmitted to faithful men who continue the work (2 Timothy 2:2).
Episcopal: Relating to or characterized by bishops; derived from
episkopos.
Presbyter (presbuteros): An “elder”; a mature leader in the assembly;
often used interchangeably with episkopos in the New Testament.