
Loving a church that is as flawed as I am…
[The] church is made up of people like us: sinful, slow to do good, quick to speak and gossip, full of envy, strife, jealous and hatred. That is what we are apart from Christ.
However, we have been redeemed. We are united with Christ. And now, we can, by God’s grace, begin to see the effects of this union in our daily lives. But we still sin and this shows up, perhaps most pointedly, at church.
Added to this great problem of our own personal sin is the fact that we live in an anti-church age. I passed a church here in Philadelphia the other day with these words on its sign: “Barely organized.” Of course, that is hip these days. We don’t want “organized religion” – we don’t want “our daddy’s church.” When I saw the sign, I couldn’t help but wonder, “How many of us would go to a doctor’s office with the same words on its sign? “
But the church is the place where God has called us to have our souls doctored – hearing the Word preached, serving our fellow saints and speaking and doing good to those without. However, the church is not only God’s means of Gospel proclamation, but a place where souls are restored. It is the place where we can find healing, perhaps in unexpected ways – like learning to get along with the people there who are not like us.
This is one reason I am very allergic to the burgeoning “house church” movement here in the U.S. Having the privilege of knowing suffering saints in actual house churches that meet in countries where saints are persecuted mercilessly, I find it almost laughable that we have such things here in the land of the free and home of the brave. It is indicative of the anti-church age in which we live, however.
I wonder, of ten, why are people, particularly young college students, drawn to these mysterious entities called house churches here in the U.S.? Not because of persecution. Rather, I think, it is because they are dissatisfied with the church. And I am sympathetic to them – barely. The church is a place where you can get hurt. It is full of people who are insensitive, unloving at times, insecure and socially awkward.
Here’s the rub though: you are one of those people. The problem with the church is not the institution itself, for God has ordained it and sent his Son to die for her. No, we’re the problem. So before you go running to a house church here in the free West, ask yourself: am I running to Jesus or running from sinners? You can only run to Jesus as you run with fellow sinners. If you run away from them, you’ll be running in circles, not to Christ.
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