Books

Building a Fireproof Church
1 Corinthians — a pastoral, Christ-centered commentary with clear application for the local church.
Foreword
Every church faces fire. Some fires come from outside — cultural pressures, hostility toward the gospel, or the slow pull of compromise. Others flare up from within — division, pride, sin, or misplaced loyalties. A fireproof church is not one that avoids flames, but one that endures them.
In 1 Corinthians 3, Paul describes the church as God’s building. Each believer is a worker, each life a material laid on the foundation of Christ. But he warns that “every man’s work shall be made manifest: for the day shall declare it, because it shall be revealed by fire” (1 Corinthians 3:13, KJV). Wood, hay, and stubble cannot withstand the flames; only gold, silver, and precious stones endure. A fireproof church, then, is one built on Christ alone, with a unity and holiness that no trial can consume.
The chapters that follow grew out of my weekly sermons on 1 Corinthians. My goal is not to provide a technical commentary, nor a polished theological treatise, but a pastoral journey through God’s Word. Each chapter seeks to explain the text clearly, connect it to the struggles of the Corinthian church, and draw practical lessons for us as we seek to be faithful in our own generation.
You will notice the rhythm of preaching in these pages — extended passages of Scripture, exposition that presses into both heart and mind, and applications that call us not just to think differently, but to live differently. My prayer is that this book feels less like reading a lecture and more like walking through the Scriptures together as a congregation, listening to Paul’s voice and, above all, to the voice of the Holy Spirit.
A fireproof church is not built on charisma, programs, or human wisdom. It is built on Christ — crucified, risen, and reigning. My hope is that as you read, you will be encouraged to stand firm in Him, to love His people more deeply, and to see the church not as fragile but as unshakable when rooted in the gospel.