Header
  • Home
  • About the Author
  • About the Book
  • Buy the Book
  • Blog
  • Home
  • About the Author
  • About the Book
  • Buy the Book
  • Blog

Above Correction: When Leaders Forget the Fall

  • Posted on February 13, 2026

Churches often preach about open rebuke and correction for members.

But funny how that same principle sometimes seems to stop at the pulpit.

Correction for the congregation.
Grace and silence for leadership.

And that imbalance should make us pause. The First “Untouchable” Leader

Before there was a church culture issue, there was a heaven issue.

Lucifer had position.
Lucifer had beauty.
Lucifer had influence.

Yet tradition holds that his fall came when he believed he was above order — above correction — above God Himself.

It wasn’t lack of gifting that removed him.

It was pride.

The moment someone believes their position makes them untouchable, they step into dangerous territory.

Pride + Position + No Correction = Fall.

That formula hasn’t changed.


Leaders in Scripture Were Corrected

The Bible actually gives us a very different leadership model than what some modern church cultures display.

  • Peter the Apostle was publicly corrected by Paul the Apostle in Galatians 2.
  • King David was confronted by Nathan after his sin.
  • Entire churches — including their leaders — were rebuked in Revelation.

Notice something:
Correction did not destroy their calling.
Refusal to repent would have.

Scripture never teaches that leaders are above accountability.
If anything, it teaches they are judged more strictly.


When Correction Becomes One-Sided

It becomes spiritually unhealthy when:

  • Members are rebuked publicly.
  • Leaders are shielded privately.
  • Questions are labeled rebellion.
  • Accountability is seen as dishonor.

That is not biblical order.

That is insecurity dressed up as authority.

True authority does not fear correction.
It welcomes it.

Because secure leadership knows:
Correction refines.
Pride destroys.


Humility Is the Real Anointing

Even Jesus modeled submission to the Father.

If the Son of God demonstrated humility, how can any leader claim exemption?

The strongest leaders are not the loudest.
They are the most accountable.

The safest churches are not the biggest.
They are the most transparent.

And history — both biblical and modern — shows this clearly:

When leaders refuse correction, decline follows.

When leaders embrace humility, grace flows.


Maybe the real question isn’t whether members should be corrected.

Maybe the question is:

Are leaders willing to be corrected too?

Because heaven already showed us what happens when someone with a special role believes they are above it.

Wow.

Categories: Uncategorized
Tags: Church, Facts, Leadership, NoLimits, Truth
  • Instagram

Young Faith: My Story, My Struggles, My Triumph, My Faith by Shalonda Falconer with Lorian Tompkins