Gospel artists often make the worst pastors — and Tasha Cobbs is another example of why this needs to be talked about.
Just because someone can sing powerfully, move a crowd emotionally, sell records, win awards, or lead people into a worship atmosphere does not mean they are biblically qualified to shepherd God’s people.
Original video: https://www.youtube.com/live/gJF9SOcJLH8?si=cmpvvaiNMP_B5uUG
There is a major difference between being gifted and being qualified.
A person can have a beautiful voice and still lack sound doctrine. A person can lead a packed room in worship and still mishandle Scripture. A person can make people cry during a song and still not be equipped to rightly divide the Word of truth.
That is the problem with celebrity Christianity. We take singers, entertainers, influencers, and popular personalities and automatically elevate them into spiritual leadership simply because they have a platform. But the Bible gives clear qualifications for pastors, elders, and teachers — and those qualifications are not based on vocal ability, popularity, album sales, or emotional stage presence.
In this video, we are talking about Tasha Cobbs and the broader issue of gospel artists being placed in pastoral roles when their doctrine, public ministry, and spiritual leadership should be tested carefully by Scripture.
The church has become far too impressed with talent.
But talent is not the same as truth.
Anointing is not measured by how many runs someone can do in a song. God’s approval is not proven by crowd response. A worship moment is not automatically biblical because people felt something. And a gospel artist should not be treated like a pastor simply because they are famous in church culture.
This is not about attacking Tasha Cobbs personally. This is about asking a serious biblical question:
Are we elevating people because they are biblically qualified, or because they are gifted and popular?
Too many people confuse musical gifting with spiritual maturity. They confuse emotion with the Holy Spirit. They confuse influence with calling. They confuse celebrity access with ministry authority.
And when that happens, the church suffers.
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Just because someone can sing powerfully, move a crowd emotionally, sell records, win awards, or lead people into a worship atmosphere does not mean they are biblically qualified to shepherd God’s people.
Original video: https://www.youtube.com/live/gJF9SOcJLH8?si=cmpvvaiNMP_B5uUG
There is a major difference between being gifted and being qualified.
A person can have a beautiful voice and still lack sound doctrine. A person can lead a packed room in worship and still mishandle Scripture. A person can make people cry during a song and still not be equipped to rightly divide the Word of truth.
That is the problem with celebrity Christianity. We take singers, entertainers, influencers, and popular personalities and automatically elevate them into spiritual leadership simply because they have a platform. But the Bible gives clear qualifications for pastors, elders, and teachers — and those qualifications are not based on vocal ability, popularity, album sales, or emotional stage presence.
In this video, we are talking about Tasha Cobbs and the broader issue of gospel artists being placed in pastoral roles when their doctrine, public ministry, and spiritual leadership should be tested carefully by Scripture.
The church has become far too impressed with talent.
But talent is not the same as truth.
Anointing is not measured by how many runs someone can do in a song. God’s approval is not proven by crowd response. A worship moment is not automatically biblical because people felt something. And a gospel artist should not be treated like a pastor simply because they are famous in church culture.
This is not about attacking Tasha Cobbs personally. This is about asking a serious biblical question:
Are we elevating people because they are biblically qualified, or because they are gifted and popular?
Too many people confuse musical gifting with spiritual maturity. They confuse emotion with the Holy Spirit. They confuse influence with calling. They confuse celebrity access with ministry authority.
And when that happens, the church suffers.
Software I use (Ecamm) Sign up with this link: https://www.ecamm.com/mac/ecammlive/?fp_ref=christopher23
AFFILIATES
Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/shop/allthingstheology
Covenant Eyes: https://covenanteyes.sjv.io/zNYmqG
Join this channel to get access to perks:
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCrLO95wGXUW0fY00Rss4aGw/join
Website: kdubtru.com
Music: https://open.spotify.com/artist/1TohVbZFbpZsW5yubbhYm3
Subscribe & click ???? for notifications of premieres and live
streams!
Follow me on social media:
Twitter.com/kdubtru
Facebook.com/allthingstheology
instagram.com/kdub.tru/
SUPPORT:
Patreon.com/kdubtru
Listen on podcast: https://anchor.fm/allthingstheology
Email for interviews or booking:
allthingstheology@gmail.com
- Catégories
- vidéos/films
- Mots-clés
- Tasha Cobbs, Gospel artist, William Murphy
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