Monday, February 19, 2007

Yes You Have To

...not neglecting to meet together, as is the habit of some, but encouraging one another, and all the more as you see the Day drawing near
(Hebrews 10:25 – ESV)

Do you have to go to church to be a Christian? The answer to this is simple, but the reality of what this question is trying to point out isn’t as simple as it may seem, because many are not focusing on what is really meant by this question. To simply answer the question, then, do you have to go to church to be a Christian? The answer is no.

However, lets now propose a different, more pointed question that actually gets to the heart of the matter. Do you have to go to church when you are a Christian? The answer is yes. Lets state them together, so that you may think about this, and begin to realize where we are going next. Do you have to go to church to BE a Christian? No. Do you have to go to church WHEN you’re a Christian? Yes.

Now people can get all up in arms about this statement, but what they are doing is focusing on the legal aspect of it, not the spiritual aspect of it, and they fail to recognize that their spiritual lives will indeed suffer if they are not in church. Period. God knows it, everyone else knows it, and you know it.

What many people fail to realize is the benefit of just being there. It is very much like when I counsel couples; I always get them to commit to praying together at night before they go to bed. I am sure many of them wonder why this is so important. They probably feel like this exercise, as they might call it, has little chance of actually helping them.

However, what they are doing in their fleshly minds is trying to reason out why this is valuable inherently, and come to believe that the prayers won’t solve anything. They are looking at the prayers as some sort of vehicle that will magically deliver a message or some innate power that will get them to the next level. The answer isn’t always in the prayer by itself, it is that we honor God by doing it, and then He begins to line up the events and situations that will help us overcome the obstacles.

People are looking at the prayer itself, and wondering, what can that possibly do, I need money right now, or I need this or that to stop happening, or I need a job. It isn’t that He will give you a message right then and there, that this and this is what you should do, though He may, it is that this and this will start happening, all in response to your obedience to worship God and honor Him with prayer. You are leaving it on Him, in a way. You are coming in to His presence, as a couple, and the mere fact that you do this, becoming more intimately involved with God together, is why God becomes more intimately involved in your situation.

Church is the same way. The message may not have all that jazz for you in your mind, and the music may not move you as much as what is in your CD player right now, but that is only part of the plan God has for church. If you will just submit to God and commit, really now, to the local church, God will commit to your local lives. When you miss church you are not simply missing the message, you are missing the method.

The leading God gives is not only through the probing eye of the pastor, and not only through the community of believers assembled there, it is also just by attending yourself, in that God will then attend to your wants as you have attended to what He wants. Participating in church precipitates the providence and provision of God. When you open the doors of your will, then God will open the doors of your opportunity.

24 comments:

Even So... said...

I'm talking to you

ann said...

Thank You for this message, how timely - again...
No church for me yesterday, because a child was ill, and I feel this void of not being able to go.
And prayer, what a wonderful gift of God...
My other son needed skates, and we could not go to buy any, because the younger one is ill... And a neighbour came, out of the blue (?), with skates - her son's feet are too big for them, and we got them almost for free, without even going out :)
Small things, big things, He works all things for good...

Carla Rolfe said...

"they fail to recognize that their spiritual lives will indeed suffer if they are not in church. Period. God knows it, everyone else knows it, and you know it."

This is the part that Lone Ranger Christians try so hard to deny. They'll go online and "do church" there, and there are plenty of "online pastors" to tell them they're just fine. I wonder if you have addressed this before, or would consider addressing it in the future? I'd like to read your thoughts on that.

Even So... said...

Yes, Carla, I have, and will be adressing it again...thanks for coming over, God bless...

Hope and pray your little ones get well soon, Anne...

Even So... said...

I'll probably put up the post tomorrow...

Even So... said...

Actually, we have 8 posts dealing with the topic of why you must go to church, 4 of which have not been posted yet...

I believe I will place all 8 permanently in the sidebar for reference...

Anonymous said...

While I WHOLEHEARTEDLY believe this to be "truth", I will tell you that some of my most negative, frustrating, disappointing, hurtful (shall I go on?) experiences have been in church. Does that change what God expects from me....no, but the church does need to get back to its' "first love"...and quit being "busy" with "stuff" that causes quarreling and divisions. This "junk" has caused many a tender-hearted person to just give up on it (church).

Of course this is just my opinion based on my church-life experiences.

One Sheep's Voice said...

AMEN!!!!
Thanks JD.
Oh, I got those boxes today. Still trying to figure out of they got there when the same things came here to the house. ???

Even So... said...

"Nellie"...we will be addressing those very issues in upcoming posts...sorry if church people have hurt you, and yes, truly there aren't too many "real" churches these days... there is a post called "sandpaper people" on this site you may want to take a look at...it will be one of the 9 (miscounted earlier) posts that will be permanently linked on the sidebar soon...

Even So... said...

Oh, also look at "dead men can dance" which is in the "recent vision" box in the sidebar, at least for today and tomorrow, then in January's archives...

Ah yes, I have cheaply gotten to 10 comments again...

:-)

jazzycat said...

Good post,
I have been studying this verse about meeting together in order to present my view on the sacraments in a small group on tough questions at my church.

Let me ask a question. If a group of ten to twenty people with no trained or ordained pastors form a house church in a remote location in the rocky mountains, do they have the authority and should they perform the sacraments of baptism and the Lord's supper at their house church services?

Even So... said...

Good question, Jazzy, and if all those things, all of them, were in that one situation I would say yes, if there was no reason otherwise, such as they split from a church or whatever.

More tomorrow, we have several posts coming up...

jazzycat said...

J.D.
Thanks, that is my opinion as well, but my pastor a very good and Godly man has offered the opposite opinion. I think when I develope the situation fully for him, he will have to agree. But, we will see. We both love to debate Biblical doctrine when we find differences.

Anonymous said...

jazzycat - One of my questions would be, "who/Who does the training and ordaining?" (little "w" versus big "W")

Even So... said...

I will be discussing Communion and discerning the Lord's Body and drinking unworthily in an upcoming post -
Communing With Death - look for it soon...

jazzycat said...

Little w vs. big W? Explain please.....

Even So... said...

I guess that the big "W" would mean God, and the little "w" would mean men...I do want to see the point of that, though...

Anonymous said...

jazzycat asked if the group had the "authority" to perform the sacraments in the absence of untrained, unordained, pastors. I'm just wandering whom or what qualifies a person. Is it an earthly institution or divine appointment?

Even So... said...

It is subjective and objective, no man takes the honor unto himself as the author of Hebrews states, but this possibly subjective "call" will be evidenced by the objective confirmation of the assembly of believers to whom they are called. The gifts of that calling will be evident to others, and they will be fruitful in such an endeavor.

jazzycat said...

J.D.
That makes sense and I believe my pastor will affirm that position when I present him with the airtight scenario of no other suitable choices within a reasonable distance.

Anonymous said...

Even So

I agree that makes sense but how many denominations choose pastors in this manner?

Anonymous said...

I guess my question is, "How did it get from the way it was in the early church to the way it's done in today's denominations?" Who trained and ordained way back then and why is it so different today?

Even So... said...

Good question, but perhaps that is another post and comment thread...

Even So... said...

Ministry development is not necessarily a bad thing...