Where, When and How to “Go to Church”

Personal note: For years, I raged against institutional Christianity, challenging it at every turn, debating with everyone who dared to see things differently than I did. But then the Lord began to graciously adjust my temperament, reminding me that He is building His Church and that I can trust Him.

As one part of the Body, my only responsibility is to stay connected to our Head and live, move and have my being in Him. Then, as I just live this freedom before my brothers and sisters, they will be drawn to this simplicity in time. I’ve seen this happen so many times and the fruit is always so much better than what I’ve tried to produce in my religious effort. Love has been so patient with me in softening my heart on this issue and I love Him for it.

The purpose of this article is to free and encourage the people of God to simply walk with Him and His people as Jesus did with His friends.

Joel


Recently, while reading through the Book of Acts, I took note of where and when the early Church “went to church.”

Regarding where they “went to church”

They met on mountains (1:4, 12), in public places (20:20), in upper rooms (1:13-26; 20:5-12), in houses (2:1-2, 46; 10:27; 12:5, 12; 16:40; 20:20; 28:30-31 (see also Rom 16:5; 1 Cor 16:19; Col 4:15; Philemon 2)), in the temple (2:46; 3:1), in Solomon’s porch (5:12), along riverbanks (16:13), in jails and dungeons (16:25), and on beaches (21:5).

As for when they “went to church”

They met on “the day of Pentecost” in “the third hour” (9am)(2:1-2), at the hour of prayer in the ninth hour (3pm)(3:1), on sabbath days (17:1-4; 18:4), on the first day of the week (20:5-12), as well as daily (19:7-10).

Where does it say the Church (the people of God) has to meet a certain way in a certain place at a certain time?

It doesn’t.

Many Christians say, “Well, you really need to be in a local church because you don’t need to forsake the assembling of yourselves with believers.” But these folks are only repeating what they’ve been told without first studying the verse they’re referring to — Hebrews 10:25 (KJV) — which says,

“…Not forsaking the assembling of ourselves together, as the manner of some is; but exhorting one another: and so much the more, as ye see the day approaching.” [Note: This verse is the last part of a three verse sentence and neither this sentence (in verses 23-25) nor chapter ten or the whole letter of Hebrews have anything to do with “going to church” as many understand and practice it today.]

What does this verse have to do with regular “local church” attendance?

Nothing.

Does it say, “Not forsaking the assembling of ourselves together on Sunday mornings in a church building”?

Nope.

Where do these verses say where, when and how we need to “assemble”?

They don’t.

Well, then why do we assume that those who don’t “go to church” on Sundays are “forsaking the assembling of ourselves together”? Because we’ve read our religious conditioning into the passage to make it say what we think it means, thus elevating our views above the Scriptures themselves and teaching as doctrine the commandments of men (Matt 15:7-9).

This reminds me of what Blaise Pascal once said:

“People almost invariably arrive at their beliefs not on the basis of proof but on the basis of what they find attractive.”

The reading of meaning into a verse or passage — formally known as eisegeses — is much more common today than the literary discipline of drawing meaning from the text itself (along with its surrounding context). And, sadly, when some benefit financially from the presupposition that “not forsaking the assembling of yourselves together” automatically means “go to church on Sundays”, their wallet will speak louder than reason.

Additionally, is it possible that religion has so imposed man-made methods and structures for how, when and where we’re to “do church” that we’ve lost our focus on the why?

Yes.

Jesus defined “going to church” as…

“…Where two or three are gathered together in my name, there am I in the midst of them.” Matt 18:20 KJV

Notice, there’s no when or how, and, regarding where, well, it’s IN HIS NAME or “(into) My name” (Amplified) or “in Me” (Easy-to-Read Version) or “to My name” (Young’s Literal Translation).

Jesus didn’t say, “Where two or three (or 200 or 300 or more) gather in a church building (or a living room) on Sunday morning (or Wednesday night), there am I in the midst of them.” Neither did He say that the gatherings had to be structured or unstructured, open or closed, inside out outside.

Instead, Jesus made it simple: “Wherever two or three get together in Me, I am there.”

This is how Jesus “assembled” in the Gospels with his friends and how the Church “assembled” in the first century (For more on how Jesus “went to church” click here.). They didn’t just “assemble” in rooms or buildings. Anyone can gather a group of people in a building — that doesn’t mean they’re necessarily assembled. Jesus assembled with his disciples daily, through regular, intimate, face-to-face dialogue and connection, where they did life together, ate together, depended on one another, and engaged in fearless vulnerability.

By the way, the House of God has never been a building but has always been His people (1 Tim 3:15; Heb 3:6; 1 Pet 2:5). We are His Temple (1 Cor 3:16-17; 6:15-20; 2 Cor 6:14-18; Eph 2:19-22). We are His sanctuary.

Needless to say, life in Jesus is simple, and while religion complicates, dictates and manipulates, Jesus liberates!

“…Where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is liberty.” 2 Cor 3:17 KJV

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