WE ARE THE CHURCH---NOT A BUILDING
10/6/14
4
But in the same night the word LORD came to Nathan, saying, 5 “Go
and say to My servant David, 'Thus says the LORD, “Are you the one who
should build Me a house to dwell in? 6 “For I have not dwelt in a house
since the day I brought up the sons of Israel from Egypt, even to this
day; but I have been moving about in a tent, even in a tabernacle. 7
“Wherever I have gone with all the sons of Israel, did I speak a word
with one of the tribes of Israel, which I commanded to shepherd My
people Israel, saying, 'Why have you not built Me a house of cedar?”” 2
Samuel 7 Jesus tells us again and again that we are the church, His body,
that is made up of many different members. And yet many still have the
mistaken notion that 'going' to church, a building, is what is required
of them. Many dress up and put on their Sunday best clothes, to go and
sit in a pew time after time, to hear the same preacher tell them
things that come from one man, the pastor, or head of that particular
church building.Many go thinking that they are fulfilling their duty as
such to go and 'hear' the required message, leave, and then think that
they have done what Jesus has required of them.
Why
are we continually telling some to 'go to church' when what we should
really be doing is to point them to Jesus. Instead, we should tell them
about the importance of knowing Him,spending time with Him, and studying
His word, the bible.
These mistaken
procedures and notions have gone on so long that many don't know the
truth from tradition.Actually, most of the problems that many face
today, is that some are blinded by the traditions of man that have
infiltrated the church for hundreds of years.
I'm
not saying here that we shouldn't meet together to encourage one another
and to share the things of God--we should. But when our buildings and
our agendas take precedence over meeting together, then we are following
the wrong set of guide lines. When the sermon is preached from designated
guidelines, and when the pastor is the only one that preaches Sunday
after Sunday, then we have strayed from God's original plan.
When
there is such a chain of command that many don't have the liberty of the
Spirit to act then perhaps our churches have become very much like the
businesses we see in the world around us. The church has taken on the
characteristics of the world. One man is the CEO and one man pulls the
strings.
Many of us glorify the pastor.
We think that he or she is the one with all the answers. We should honor
them but we treat many of them like demi-gods. And they are given all or
most of the control within the walls of these buildings.
Who
is the head of the church? Who is the one that we should ultimately
defer to? Who is the Chief Cornerstone,who is the one who has laid the
foundation? Do we look to Him or to man? There isn't a scripture that
points to a one-man leadership; instead there is only one head, and that
is the Lord Jesus. Apostles are also not meant to be the sole leadership
of a church, for they are foundational builders, not the head of a
particular church. 1 Corinthians 12:28 It is not a one-man leadership
but it is through the apostle, prophet, and teacher team where they work
together for a common purpose. It is a plurality of leadership, not one
man. We see this throughout scripture even in the Old Testament as
prophet, priest and king worked together.
Are
we not His body? Do we not have the Holy Spirit dwelling in us? If so
then, why do we think that going to this particular building has the Holy
Spirit dwelling in it?
Jesus met in
various homes, as did His disciples. They didn't have lush tapestries
and carpets. They didn't have a guest speaker that they paid money to fly
them in to have a speaking engagement. They didn't have a building fund
or many of the other types of expenditures that many have in our churches
(buildings) do today.
They also didn't
have the seminaries that we have today. For these men and women had been
chosen by the Lord Jesus himself. They were appointed by the Spirit, and
not by man. And yet these men and women were filled with so much power
and wisdom that no one could refute them.
But
God chose what is foolish in the world to shame the wise; God chose
what is weak in the world to shame the strong;I Cor. 1:27
What
will happen when many of the beautiful churches and synagogues collapse?
Will we still hold onto the same old structure, or will we look back to
the original apostles and see how they laid their lives down for each
other, breaking bread together, and sharing with others a common thread
of leadership and servant hood?
Article by,
Stephen Hanson