Christ Above Every Personality
Scripture Reading: 1 Corinthians 1:10–17; 1 Corinthians 3:4–11
The early Christian church faced many dangers. Persecution from the Roman Empire was real, but one of the greatest threats came from within. Pride quietly divided believers as they began identifying themselves with their favorite leaders instead of with Christ. Some proudly declared, "I follow Paul," others, "I follow Apollos," and still others, "I follow Cephas" (1 Corinthians 1:12). What should have been appreciation for faithful servants became unhealthy loyalty to personalities.
Paul was shocked by this attitude. He asked a series of pointed questions: "Is Christ divided? Was Paul crucified for you? Or were you baptized in the name of Paul?" (1 Corinthians 1:13). His point was unmistakable. No human leader died for our sins. No pastor, teacher, or evangelist deserves the devotion that belongs only to Jesus Christ.
That same danger exists today.
The internet has given us access to thousands of pastors, Bible teachers, podcasters, and Christian influencers. Many are sincere servants of God who faithfully preach His Word. Their ministries can encourage, teach, and strengthen our faith. But the internet has also created a celebrity culture where personalities sometimes become more important than the message.
It is easy to become more excited about what a favorite preacher says than what Scripture actually says. We may begin quoting a speaker more often than we quote the Bible. We can become fiercely defensive of a ministry, overlooking obvious errors simply because we admire the individual. Some ministries even build their identity around one charismatic leader, whose opinions become almost unquestionable.
Jesus warned that false christs and false prophets would arise and deceive many if possible (Matthew 24:24). Paul also warned the Ephesian elders that false teachers would arise, even from within the church, drawing disciples after themselves rather than after Christ (Acts 20:29–30). A key mark of a false teacher is not merely false doctrine but the desire to gather a personal following.
Faithful Christian leaders do the opposite. Like John the Baptist, they say, "He must increase, but I must decrease" (John 3:30). Their goal is not to make disciples of themselves but disciples of Jesus.
How can we avoid becoming followers of personalities?
First, make Scripture your highest authority. Every sermon, podcast, book, or online message should be tested against God's Word. The believers in Berea were commended because they searched the Scriptures daily to verify what Paul taught (Acts 17:11). If even Paul's preaching was tested by Scripture, every modern teacher should be as well.
Second, remember that every human leader is fallible. Even the most gifted pastors have blind spots, make mistakes, and need correction. Admire faithful leadership, but never place anyone on a pedestal that belongs only to Christ.
Third, stay connected to a healthy local church. Online teaching can supplement spiritual growth, but it should never replace the accountability, fellowship, and pastoral care found within a Bible-believing church. God designed believers to grow together in community, not merely as consumers of online content.
Finally, keep your eyes fixed on Jesus. Paul later reminded the Corinthians that no one can lay any foundation other than Jesus Christ (1 Corinthians 3:11). Leaders come and go. Ministries rise and fall. Popular teachers eventually fade from the scene. But Jesus Christ remains the same yesterday, today, and forever (Hebrews 13:8).
Our faith must never depend upon the popularity or reputation of a human leader. If it does, our faith may collapse when that leader fails. But when Christ is our foundation, our faith remains secure because He never changes and never disappoints.
The church has only one Savior, one Head, and one Shepherd. Every faithful pastor points beyond himself to Christ. May we always follow the One who gave His life for us rather than merely admiring those who speak about Him.
Reflection Questions
- Have you ever found yourself admiring a Christian leader more than studying God's Word for yourself?
- How can you better test every teaching by Scripture rather than accepting it because of who said it?
- In what practical ways can you keep Christ at the center of your faith instead of any human personality?
Prayer
Heavenly Father, thank You for giving faithful pastors, teachers, and leaders to help us grow in our faith. Help us to appreciate their service without placing them above Your Son. Guard our hearts from pride, deception, and the temptation to follow personalities instead of Christ. Give us discernment to recognize truth from error, and help us to search the Scriptures daily so that Your Word remains our highest authority. Keep our eyes fixed on Jesus, the Author and Finisher of our faith, and make us faithful disciples who follow Him above all else. May our lives bring glory not to human leaders, but to Christ alone. In His precious name we pray, Amen.
More on Lesson 3: Unity in Christ
3rd Quarter Sabbath School: 1st and 2nd Corinthians




