“Now
the church is not wood and stone, but the company of people who believe in
Christ.” Martin Luther
When you think about it, it’s fun yet a bit
silly. Whenever I attend a professional ball game, along with everyone else, I’m
caught up attempting to guess how many fans are attending. As you know, about
halfway through the game, they place up on the scoreboard several options for
the attendance. Fans are encouraged to guess how many are there. I’m not a very
good guesser, but it’s encouraging to me when it’s a high attendance.
Do you remember a few years back when there
was a concern that professional baseball might die from a lack of popularity? I
hope that day never comes. I love baseball. Of course, my first love is the
Atlanta Braves. I’m thankful that the Brewers are in the National League so I
can see my home town team periodically play when they come to Milwaukee.
There’s just something very special about attending a baseball game.
Many Christians think church is like that.
They think church is all about attending. It’s not. If you think
about it in our technologically driven world attending church is a bit stupid and
lots of people have figured that out. The trend is growing as fewer and fewer people
are attending church.
You may have even asked the question yourself:
Why bother? That’s also why if there’s
a “competitive” option (family event, ballgame, weary from work, etc.), people skip
out on attending church. Yet, we’d rarely skip work or having our children
attend school for the same reasons we skip attending church. For example, an
entire family will skip church if one family member is sick. Can you imagine
that conversation with the school attendance office? “Yes, our children’s baby
sister has a cold so our other two won’t be attending either. After I hang up
with you, I’m calling work because neither my spouse nor I will be attending
today because of our sick one year-old.”
The reason that doesn’t work is even though
we may language it that way, it’s totally unacceptable to just attend school or attend work. And we all know this. If your child merely attended school, you’d soon receive
calls from his teacher. “Mr. ______, we have a problem. Johnny is attending but
he’s not engaging in class. He won’t bring his books, refuses to interact and
won’t do his homework.” If you only attended
work but never actually worked, you’d soon find that you didn’t have a work
place to attend.
The commonly accepted model of church in
America is an unbiblical one. In fact, it’s a sinful one. The New Testament
knows nothing of “attending” church
if you’re part of the Church; that is if you’re a believer and know Jesus
Christ as your personal Savior. Today, as there were in the early church, there
will be seekers, those who have not yet committed their lives to Christ attending church. But Jesus doesn’t give
His followers the option to attend church. Add to that, in today’s culture, attending
is kind of silly.
Think about it. Why get dressed, take the
time to drive and use up fuel to attend. Everyone has either a TV or the
Internet. Most have a smart phone. It doesn’t make sense to attend church. If you’re attending, in light
of the time, expense and convenience, a logical question is: “Why go to church?”
While our church doesn’t yet stream its services
online, you can download last week’s sermon from our web site. And if you want an
immediate church experience, millions of churches do and you can access almost
any church you want, anywhere, anytime. Free. That all brings us back to the
question: Why attend church? Why
even bother?
Let me say this very simply – DON’T. Jesus does not want us to attend
church; He calls us to something so much better and greater. We are the church and
that must change everything. Merely attending church doesn’t make you much of a
church because sitting in a back row consuming church doesn’t make you very
good at being the church.
The
New Testament teaches that being the church has everything to do with living
your life for Christ, demonstrating God’s love by loving and serving others,
and sharing your faith with those who don’t know Him. That’s very different
than consuming church sitting in a back row, which you can just as easily do sitting
at home in your pajamas.
The compelling biblical reason that a Christian should go to church each
Sunday is that you’ve moved from being a consumer
to being a contributor. You don’t go
to be served, you go to serve. There’s something deeply biblical about that, so let’s
start with the basics.
First
if you’re a Christian, church is not something you attend. It’s
something you are. You can’t disassociate from church as a Christian any more
than you can disassociate from humanity as a person. You don’t go to church, you are the
church. Most of the New Testament is not about the teachings of Jesus,
but about the work of the church that Jesus initiated and ordained. Without
inundating you with Bible verses that prove my point, you’d have to discard the
majority of the New Testament to argue that the church was about filling a seat
just attending. Or, that it was a nonessential.
Second,
the metaphors in the New Testament for the church indicate commitment, unity
and participation. Terms like army, temple, body...to name a few,
demand commitment and unity. The Bible compares us to a family. Because Jesus
loves us so much, we are to love each other. Because He’s so committed to us,
we’re to be committed to each other. Family gatherings aren’t optional, they’re
anticipated. The family also has idiosyncrasies and sins. Because we’re family,
we love, forgive and help each other grow past them. When there’s a problem, we
don’t go down the street looking for a new family. Each member contributes and
participates. We look forward to welcoming new family members. In fact, we get
very excited about them. We encourage each other and sacrifice for each other.
So
to be a little blunt, if you’re looking for a church to attend, this isn’t it. That’s a ball game. At Grace, we’re
committed to what Scripture teaches – that we’re family. Because Jesus loves us
and we love Him, we love each other. Just as He is committed to us, by His
grace we are committed to Him and our brothers and sisters in Christ. That’s
the church!
Can we help you spiritually? Can we help you know Jesus better? Please check out more resources on our church's web page, Gracechurchwi.org. Or, call us at 262.763.3021. If you'd like to know more about how Jesus can change your life, I'd love to mail you a copy of how Jesus changed my life in "My Story." E-mail me at Carson@gracechurchwi.org to request a free copy. Please include your mailing address. "
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