Why False Authority Thrives — Priests Before Kings | Broken Altars | KFR Live (1 May 2026)
- William Abraham

- 20 hours ago
- 1 min read
Authority does not begin in the work. It begins at the altar.
One of the great inversions of modern Kingdom culture is the attempt to exercise kingly function without first establishing priestly position. Business, ministry, influence, leadership, and visible activity become the evidence of calling, while hearing, consecration, and obedience are quietly neglected.
Scripture presents a different order. We are priests and kings. The priest stands before the Lord and hears. The king carries what has been received. When that order is reversed, activity may continue, but authority is assumed rather than given.
This session opens the Broken Altars series by examining the relationship between identity, authority, hearing, and assignment. It explores why faith comes by hearing, why the Word must govern the work, and why activity without mandate ultimately produces lawlessness rather than Kingdom fruit.
The issue is not whether something appears successful. The issue is whether it has been authorised.
Scripture Focus
Revelation 1:5–6; 1 Peter 2:5–9; John 15:5–7; Romans 10:17; Matthew 7:21–23; Isaiah 58:6.
This session can also be viewed on:
Rumble: @The7000
Spotify: @The 7000 Kingdom Finance Seminars
Apple Podcasts: The 7000 Kingdom Finance Seminars


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