Friday, October 16, 2009

Why Quitting on the Church is Quitting on Christ

I recently received a question from a dear friend asking me to comment on a blog post entitled, "Why I Do Not Attend Church." The author of the blog is a woman who refers to herself as Jean. Her view that there is no more true local church made up of true Christians is not unique. This is a growing trend in American Christianity. As people become disillusioned with the imperfections in the church, they abandon it and attempt to keep their personal relationship with Christ apart from the church. George Barna, well-known Christian pollster and cultural analyst, has written a book about the trend: Revolution (Greg Gilbert has written a helpful review of the book). A more thorough treatment of the subject would be helpful, but in order to respond in a timely way to the question posed to me, I'll deal specifically with the most serious problems with the blog post reference above.


In the New Testament, the universal church (all true believers everywhere) is not easily distinguished from the local church (a local assembly of believers who join together for worship and the pursuit of “the unity of the faith and the knowledge of the Son of God” [Eph. 4:13]). By my count, the Greek word for church (ekklesia) appears 77 times in the New Testament. 67 of those are in reference to local churches. Jean is giving up on the local church but seeking to maintain her commitment to the universal church. She says concerning true Christians, “There may be a few here, one there, two there and so on,” and these few are scattered "all over the earth." So she concludes that there is no way to assemble a true church in this present day and age: “We have to wait for the next life when we will all be together with our Lord Jesus Christ.” If Jean is right about this then the express New Testament purpose of the church has failed. The church is supposed to be a demonstration in the present age to the rulers, authorities, principalities and powers in heavenly places that Christ has conquered Satan at the cross, redeemed a people for himself, and is going to rule in uncontested fashion one day. It is the church that represents that victory. It is the church that sends that message (Ephesians 3:8-10). If believers are so sparse that assembly in this life is hopeless, then the existence of the church is not sending a message of victory to principalities and powers.


Furthermore, when Paul wants to instruct the true church, he does not compose a letter to be sent to the four winds, hoping that the few isolated Christians out there will stumble upon it. Rather, he writes to local congregations. He writes to the church at Corinth, Philippi, Thessalonica, Colossae, Ephesus, etc. When Jesus wants to speak to his people, he addresses his words to seven local congragations (Revelation 2-4) For Paul, the local congregation is a localized expression of the universal church. The two concepts cannot be neatly divided. When Paul instructs the church concerning the way the various parts of the body work together for the edification of the whole, this can only have meaning in a local congregation where believers in Christ actually assemble together and work together for the progress of the gospel (1 Corinthians 12). Jesus also addresses the church in a way that only makes sense when understood in terms of the local congregation. In Matthew 18:15-17, Jesus gives instructions for how a believer is to deal with a sinning brother in Christ. The final step in the process is to take it “to the church,” and if the brother still will not repent, the church is to treat him as a Gentile and a tax collector (an outsider). To whom will Jean take the case of a sinning brother if the other steps in Jesus’ instructions do not bring him to repentance? In her understanding of the church, she can only wait for heaven.


On another note, when the New Testament speaks of the church as the body of Christ, that imagery is used with respect to the universal church (Eph. 1:19-23) and the local church (1 Corinthians 12, Ephesians 4:11-16 – this is clearly a local church situation because of the way Paul speaks of the individuals in the church working together toward “unity of the faith and knowledge of the Son of God”). If the universal church is the body, so also is the local church. To reject the local church is to reject the body of Christ. To say that there is no longer any such thing as a true local church is to say that the body of Christ is no longer present in the world, except in a dismembered form which no one can recognize.


Finally, Jean’s understanding of what it means to be a "saint" is informed by something other than the New Testament. For Jean, a saint is someone whose allegiance is perfectly directed toward Christ, with no room for error, failure, missteps, and no need for growth and maturity. In fact, after reading Jean’s post, especially the second paragraph, I am convinced that Jean believes she is the only true Christian she knows personally. She is clearly not paying attention to the way the New Testament uses the word “saint.” In the New Testament, a “saint” is certainly someone who is a truly born again believer in Jesus Christ. But consider the Christians at Corinth. They form factions leading to bickering and divisions (1 Cor. 1-3), they refuse to exercise church discipline toward a sinning brother (1 Cor. 5), they misunderstand gender roles in the church (1 Cor. 11), they abuse the Lord’s Supper by being selfish and getting drunk (1 Cor. 11), and they take pride in a shameful and misguided use of the gift of tongues (1 Cor. 14), among other problems. Whatever they are, these Corinthians cannot possibly be “saints,” and they cannot possibly be a true “church.” Yet that is exactly how Paul addresses them in the opening to this scathing and rebuking letter: “To the church of God which is at Corinth, to those who have been sanctified in Christ Jesus, saints by calling…” (1 Cor. 1:1).


To reject the local church is to reject the assembly of the saints (Hebrews 10:25). Certainly not all assemblies which bear the name “church” are true to that description. But to begin imposing standards of definition on the church which are inconsistent with and contradictory to the teaching of Scripture is problematic. The gospel of Jesus Christ sets the boundaries for whom and what really constitutes the body of Christ. Any other imposed boundary is legalism.


So, don't quit on the local church. Unite with the church, and labor diligently to serve Christ by serving his body, striving to play your part in helping the whole body grow toward a "unity of the faith and knowledge of the Son of God" (Eph. 4:13).

3 comments:

Nolan Flowers said...

Thank you so much for this post. (We are the friends of your dear friend that just cannot talk about football when we get together.) This guy Lee has been working on Jean for a very long time and has finally succeeded in helping her leave the church. That is what our concern has been, that others will read these posts with all the encouragment from other believers and just think its ok to do it. We are benefitting greatly from your blog as well as any counsel you give our friend. We enjoyed the sermon on Church Discipline. Thank you for this ministry.
Nolan and Melissa Flowers

Kyle Claunch said...

Thanks for the encouragement. Knowing that the Lord is using this in the lives of just a few makes it worth the effort (it's very beneficial for me as well). Our mutual friend speaks often of you both, and your friendship is a great blessing to her. The Lord bless you guys in Christ.

Kyle

Gaby said...

Melissa directed me to your blog, very well written and articulated response.Like Nolan and Melissa, I too fear that people will read Jean's blog and think they do not need to be and shouldn't be part of a local body. I was fooled into believeing this 2 years ago and did not attend church for almost a full year. What a shame, but now I see that God was preparing me to speak from experience about why the body is so important. I hope to read more as you post!


Gabriela Gammo