The Church – A Means of Grace
There is much more I can say about this.
I determined early on my family’s development that I would always go to Sunday Church. I think the reason was this: that I wanted my kids to love the church, even in it’s glaring flaws and inconsistencies. Since that time, the Local Church has not been exemplary in its display of the biblical standard. Yet, we have rarely missed attendance over the years.
There is a growing interest in departing from the church along with its local manifestations. Substitutes like “organic church’ replace what they call the “institutional” church. The description “institutional” (reminds me of some mental hospital), is used to imply that the Church has become something unnatural, formal, stiff, legalistic. So good meaning Christians reject the organized church for an “organic” church in the form of house churches or in many cases no church at all.
CS Lewis expressed it this way: (the church)… is a unity of place and not of likings, it brings people of different classes and psychology together in the kind of unity (God) desires. He continues, “the search for a “suitable” church makes the man a critic where (God) wants him a pupil.”
Do you see the point
- The church is a unity of place, NOT of liking
- The church is the vehicle to unite individuals who may not normally like each other
- When we give up on the church simply because it does not “suit” our standards, we become a critic not a student of it!
Here is how I see it. One finds fault with his local church. He searches the internet and finds several web pages that describe the faults of the church and give a basis for returning to the authentic manifestations which it seems only occurred prior to Emperor Constantine. Prior to him, the church was really real… Since then, it has been only a facade.
Then what happens? This person starts hanging out with those who “agree” with him. And what is lost? The sanctification that occurs of learning to live with and love those whom you would normally not hang out with…. Along with a fundamental witness to the skeptics of Christianity. Jesus exhorted his followers to love their enemies. It is easy to love those who love and agree with you. Jesus asked in effect, “what kind of effort is required of you when you choose your own friends?” None! But to love one you don’t like, one you would never choose in a thousand years, that is something else altogether, something to talk about. It cannot be duplicated by any unbelieving skeptic.
I must be honest. Could it be that those who only hang out with those who hang out with those who reject God’s church, become quirky and become “One message” people….. I think because they have no sanctifying and balancing force in their life through others who may disagree with them (not to mention the other means of grace in the local church: preaching, sacraments etc)
My kids have grown up in local church. They love the church. They love Jesus who’s body it represents. I think it is time we agree with Augustine that “there is no salvation outside the Church.” There is much in that thought.
Francis Shaeffer said it well: Our relationship with each other is the criterion the world uses to judge whether our message is truthful. Christian community is the ultimate apologetic . (quoted in Total Church, Tim Chester and Steve Timmis









Chris-
You have done well. I appreciate the perspective lived out actively through your family.
I had a discussion with a friend of mine once, who is a bit more of a theologean than I am. He went into the concept behind sacremental thoughts, particularly pertaining to communion. Until that time, I was uncomfortable with the term “sacrement”, I always took a lower view akin to “ordinance”. Since our discussion, & through a lot of reflection, reading, & prayer, I think I have become much more “sacremental”. There is something special, set-apart, sacred about the weekly Gathering of the Saints (Communio Sanctorum). I believe we enter into the eternal & ever-present worship with all the saints during communion. Anyway, thanks for writing, keep it up.
My friend has also become a pado-baptist, which I see more of the beauty in than ever, though I remain firmly convinced that the biblical model is believers baptism.
-See you at the Gathering
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