You’re touching the heart of something precious, humbling, and deeply hopeful.
This conversation began with tithing, but tithing was only the doorway — the real issue is how the Church returns from shadow to substance, from mixture to purity, from Sinai to Zion.
And you’re asking the right question:
If we’ve wandered doctrinally, how do we come back?
Scripture gives us a clear and beautiful path.
Let’s walk it slowly and tenderly.
🌄 1. We return by listening again to the One who speaks from heaven
This is where Hebrews leads us:
Hebrews 12:25
See that you do not refuse Him who speaks.
The “Him” is not Moses.
Not Levi.
Not the shadows.
Not the Law.
Not the traditions.
Not the structures we inherited.
It is Christ, who speaks by His Spirit.
Returning begins not with undoing practices,
but with re-centering our hearing.
Every renewal in Scripture begins with hearing God anew:
• Samuel hearing “Speak, Lord…”
• Israel hearing the covenant again under Josiah
• The early church hearing the Spirit in Acts 13:2
• The seven churches hearing “He who has an ear, let him hear…”
All reform begins at the ear.
🧭 2. We return by rightly dividing the Word again
2 Timothy 2:15
Rightly dividing the Word of truth.
Returning begins with:
• separating Old Covenant from New
• separating shadow from substance
• separating type from fulfillment
• separating what was for Israel from what is for the Church
• separating Sinai from Zion
This requires humility, patience, and courage —
but it is a joyful journey.
When Scripture is divided rightly, clarity returns.
🔥 3. We return by letting the finished work of Christ displace everything else
Every doctrinal drift begins the moment we add anything to Christ’s sufficiency.
Hebrews is our roadmap:
Hebrews 10:14
By one offering He has perfected forever those who are being sanctified.
Christ alone:
• is our Priest
• is our Sacrifice
• is our Temple
• is our Altar
• is our Mediator
• is our Covenant
• is our Fulfillment
Anything we add — vocabulary, rituals, structures — must bow before His finished work.
Returning means putting everything under His supremacy again.
🌱 4. We return by repenting of mixture, not of ignorance
Repentance in Scripture is never shame-based.
It is freedom-based.
It means:
• turning from shadows to substance
• turning from law to grace
• turning from human structures to Spirit leading
• turning from tradition to truth
• turning from Egypt to promise
• turning from Sinai to Zion
Hebrews 6:1 calls this “repentance from dead works.”
Dead works include:
• works of the Law
• works of fear
• works of religious habit
• works done without the Spirit
Repentance is the clearing of the ground so Christ can be all.
🕊️ 5. We return by allowing the Holy Spirit to re-teach us
Jesus promised something breathtaking:
John 16:13
When He, the Spirit of truth, comes, He will guide you into all truth.
The Spirit:
• corrects
• realigns
• redirects
• illuminates
• convicts
• heals
• frees
The apostles relied entirely on this —
which is why they had clarity even when traditions pressed hard against them.
Returning requires surrender to the Spirit’s teaching,
not merely intellectual adjustment.
🧡 6. We return by recovering the apostolic mind
The apostles:
• never imposed tithing
• never rebuilt altars
• never reinstated Levites
• never used “God’s house” for buildings
• never called ministers “priests”
• never revived shadows
• never mixed covenants
Returning means returning to their pattern.
Acts 2:42
They continued steadfastly in the apostles’ doctrine…
Not in inherited tradition, but apostolic truth.
The apostles gave us the blueprint for a shadow-free church.
🌤️ 7. We return by trusting God to sustain the Church as He designed it
This is the hardest part emotionally.
Letting go of shadows feels like letting go of safety.
But it’s really letting go of bondage to walk in truth.
When the Church:
• removes mandatory tithing
• removes altars
• removes priestly vocabulary
• removes storehouse theology
• removes Sinai-based fear
• removes shadows
She does not collapse —
she resurrects.
Because Christ sustains what Christ builds.
Matthew 16:18
I will build My Church…
Returning is an act of trust that the Spirit’s way is enough.
✨ 8. We return gently, not violently
When God reforms His Church, He does so:
• patiently
• lovingly
• progressively
• by illumination, not accusation
• by invitation, not condemnation
Isaiah 42:3
A bruised reed He will not break,
and a smoldering wick He will not extinguish.
Returning is not tearing down everything instantly.
It is slowly letting the light replace the shadows.
🌺 9. We return together — pastor and people, leaders and saints
This is not a private journey.
The Church reforms when:
• Scripture is opened
• hearts are softened
• leaders submit to truth
• people hunger for freedom
• Christ is exalted above structure
Revival happens when the whole community sees Christ more clearly.
❤️ 10. Returning always leads to joy
When shadows fall away…
• giving becomes joyful
• worship becomes freer
• leadership becomes servant-hearted
• the church becomes family
• fear disappears
• guilt evaporates
• Christ becomes central
• the Spirit becomes active
• grace becomes tangible
Returning is not loss — it is resurrection.
🌄 So how do we return to the right path?
By turning our eyes fully to Christ,
our ears fully to Scripture,
and our hearts fully to the Spirit —
letting Him dismantle every shadow so the substance can shine again.
And the good news?
The road back is wide open,
and the One guiding us is gentle and faithful.