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My High View of Church Kept Me From Church


I went the whole summer of 1980 without attending church.  That's right.  The whole summer, and I never missed it, a seemingly shameful confession from a seminary student. (I won't name the seminary I attended at the time because I don't want to disgrace them but it was a Baptist seminary in Denver.)

 

Now wait.  Before you pray for my soul; hear the reasons.  Hear the irony.  Ironically, I had, in the previous few years, developed an extremely high view of church and it was because of this high view  that I refused to attend.

 

I hadn't always had a high view.  I was led to Christ in the early seventies when Christians were making an important distinction between attending church and  "really knowing Jesus."  Sure, we still needed some fellowship but basically the new and cool relationship with God Himself was enough. 

 

Naturally it didn't take long for me to fall flat on my face and realize that this relationship doesn't work too well without help from other forgiven sinners.  I began studying the New Testament's teaching on the church.  I figured there must be some reason why church was talked about so much.  As it turned out I found a lot of reasons and most of them were issued in the form of commands.

 

There was the command to worship together (I Tim 2).  There was the command to disciple others (Matt. 28:19-20).  There was the command to hold each other mutually accountable (Eph. 5:21).  There was the command to submit to church authorities (Heb 13:17) (ouch).  There was the command to use our gifts for the betterment of the body (I Cor   12) . There was the command  to reach out to the surrounding community (Acts 1, Rom 10).

 

 

At the time, I ran a para-church campus ministry at UC Santa Barbara.  For those who need a definition here, "para-church" is an invented expression to justify organizations which are church like  but not church titled.   To their credit, such entities were created to meet a need which the "real church" had overlooked.   Examples are numerous from Christian Business Men's Association to Navigators to Inter-Varsity, to Campus Ambassadors,  my own organization.  Now mind you, C.A. was a bit different in that it strongly encouraged church involvement as part of the discipleship program.  In fact, part of my job was to inform students that simply attending a church on Sunday morning was not enough.  One must get authentically and biblically involved.  The problem, of course, was that if any of my students ever took this notion seriously, they would be more committed to their  churches and less committed to C.A., a scary idea since frankly, I needed them to keep our ministry going.  Besides, if I was doing the job of leading students to Christ and training them in leadership, why should some other organization waltz in and take the bread which they never helped bake? 

 

Still, I was conscientious enough to teach on the importance of church involvement and as a part of that teaching I made it very clear that we (Campus Ambassadors, Santa Barbara) were not a church. To my surprise a student openly disagreed  right in the middle of my church seminar.

 

"But we do all these things you said were important," he insisted.  "We have mutual accountability and worship.  We use our gifts and reach out to our  community the campus."

 

I must admit,  it made me think.  I thought about our weekly evening Bible Study-Fellowship time, recalling an observation which I had never paid too much attention to.   It occurred to me that if we were meeting on Sunday morning instead of Monday nights;  if an organ were being played instead of a guitar; if we were meeting in a chapel instead of my living room; if I were dressed in a suit instead of jeans and a tee-shirt, if I were giving my message from a podium, rather than a chair; everyone would view us as a church.   And yet, not one of those visible familiarities is a New Testament test.  They are, instead, optional traditions.   

 

 

I didn't admit it at the time, but the  whippersnapper, know it all student  was right.  We have done funny things today with labels.  We defend the existence of para-church groups on the basis that the church isn't getting the job done.  Well, if an organization is acting more like a church than the church maybe it is the church   (I don't think I could say that again in one breath.)

 

My purpose here is not to get into a lengthy discussion of campus ministry.  It’s just that my para-church background was an excellent atmosphere with which to think through the myths and preconceptions we have about Christian community. 

 

The New Testament word for church is "ecclessia" referring to "a called out assembly of people."   It is fitting that the church has a simple definition because it has an important task and important tasks don't need complication. Our task? To bring people into the family of God and treat them like family.

 

Admittedly, some of the confusion comes from different usages of the term. "Church" was used in both a universal  and a local  sense.  Universally, it referred to all born again Christians, past present and future, dead or alive, adopted by God as His children, making up a family which is so close positionally, that it is viewed by God in a singular sense. For example, Paul called this church  the bride of Christ (Eph. 5:25 ) 

 

At the same time, the New Testament referred to local churches.  In Acts 14:13 Paul appointed "elders in "every church."  These local assemblies have the same purpose as the larger body, only on a smaller scale.  The universal church reaches the world.  The local church reaches its neighborhood (or at least starts there).

 

Back to the summer of 1980.  I was a summer school student, living in Santa Barbara for most of the year and living in Denver for only a few months.  Fellow C.A. staff on a similar schedule seemed to feel that it was proper to attend church on Sunday morning.  The previous summer I had done likewise, out of habit and guilt mostly.  This summer I was analyzing the situation.  Why go to church?  For teaching?  I have five seminary classes this summer.  I believe that's enough teaching?  OK fellowship.  But the C.A. staff were getting together every Wednesday night for a potluck, Bible Study and prayer time.  OK. involvement.  Well sure, if there was a church that wanted to trust some ministry to someone who is only going to be here for a few months but I hadn't found such a church and Denver, for most of the year was not my community.  As it turned out, Sunday became my morning to sleep in.

 

I have never regretted it .  Again, it came as a result of a high view of church.  Don't misunderstand me.  There would have been nothing wrong if I had wanted to attend.  But it was not necessary because it was not community involvement.  My hope is that by discovering what the church isn't we will have a more accurate understanding of what the church is.  Anyway, I still saw the Rockies that summer.  Luckily for me, chipmunks don't sing hymns.

 

 

 

 

Other blogs about Christianity from Bob Siegel:

 

Does Jesus Belong on the College Campus?

 Try To Follow This Logic: If God Exists, God is Real.

 

Does the Bible Really Speak About the Future?

 What is the Unforgivable Sin and How Do I Know If I've Committed It?

 Does The Bible Teach An Age of Accountability?

 Was Jesus Gay?

 How Should We Pray For Healing?

Is The DaVinci Code Something to be Taken Seriously?

 How Does One Become a Christian?

 My Brief Time In the Occult

 How Do We Know Which Manuscript Copies Truly Belong In The Bible?

Does The Bible Teach That God Is Everything or that God Created Everything?

 Was Jesus A False Prophet?

 Why Are There Different Versions of the Bible?

 Three Questions That Test Your Friend's Opinions

 Subsiding All The Passion Over "The Passion"

 Cherry Picking Our Doctrines

 St. Bob's Epistle To The Calvinists

 Oh, That Horrible Christianity!

 Was Judas Forgiven?

 Oh Yeah? Well David Did Alot of Stupid Things

 If You Don't Like Her, Take It Up With Jesus

 Calling God Allah: What's In A Name?

 How To Cause A Muslim Freudian Slip

 Behavior Not Even A Christian Apologist Can Defend

 Evidently Christians Don't Hold A Monopoly On Stupidity

 I'm Not Doing It For the Warthog and the Pine Cone

 Is Persecution Good For The Church?

 A Pro-Choice Christmas Card?

 The No Longer Sacred Santa

 Can A Christian Be Pragmatic?

 Now Kids, Keep The Name of the Holiday a Secret

 Are Christian Ministers Just In It For The Money?

 Christianity, Judaism and Islam: Comparison

 Is Mormonism Really a Cult? Let's Finally Settle This Once and For All

 How a Reformed Jew Became an Evangelical Christian Part One

 Are Christians Expected to Keep the Sabbath?

 If The Gospel Was Fake, This Would Have Been A Really Dumb Thing To Include

 Did Jesus Really Claim To Be God?

 Did Jesus Really Claim to be The Messiah?

 The Prayer Game

 Can The Existence of God Be Proven?

 Can't I Accept Christ On My Deathbed?

 The Day God Gave Me One Hundred Dollars (And Believe Me; I didn't Deserve It)

 Is Tithing Really Biblical?

 The Day A Scholar Said Scholars Aren't Scholarly

 Of course the Trinity is Impossible! Haven't You Ever Studied Math?

 Jesus Didn't Rise! Wait Until You Hear How They Decided

 Did Jesus Fulfill Bible Prophecy? Isaiah 53

Was Jesus The Promised Messiah? Daniel 9

Does God Have a Sense of Humor?

I Rolled Down The Window So God Could Hear Me A Little Better

Why Do Most People Think God Will Not Talk?

A Biblical Case For Authentic Healing: No, I Don't Mean That "Name It, Claim It" Nonsense.

He Told Me My Prayer Was Not A Valid Prayer

 

 

 

 

Scripture taken from THE HOLY BIBLE

New International Version  NIV

Copyright  1973, 1979, 1984 by International Bible Society

Used by permission of Zondervan Publishing House.

All rights reserved.

 


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