Have you ever really examined the purpose of the Church? I
don’t mean the point of your Sunday morning service at your favorite Church,
with your favorite worship band and your favorite coffee kiosk. I mean the
actual Church.
The Body of Christ.
His beloved.
His bride.
His bride.
I know, personally, I hadn’t. Until very recently, I have
never fully comprehended the purpose and/or benefit of the Church; it was
simply a term I have misinterpreted for a long time.
I was missing the point, though. Brutally.
Here’s what the Lord has shown me: when we don’t live as the
Church, we don’t live like Christ.
Allow me to explain.
It’s so easy to do life by yourself. Unfortunately, this
schema has gotten dragged into the Church. David Platt mentions that it’s said
today by many, well meaning, Christians, “I don’t need to do life with anyone.
I just love Jesus!” Now, were using Christ as an excuse for something He
directly speaks against.
It just doesn’t line up. We’re somehow missing it. We go to
the Church but forsake being the Church.
So, what’s it supposed to look like?
I can’t help but wonder what ever happened to life as
written about in Acts 2.Here’s what it says:
They devoted themselves to the
apostles teaching and the fellowship, to the breaking of bread and the prayers.
And all who believed were together and had all things in common. And they were
selling their possessions and belonging and distributing the proceeds to all as
any had need. (Vs. 42, 44, 45)
These early apostles were living together. They were doing
life together.
It doesn't look the same today.
Why? How’d we get so far off of the life Christ died for us
to live?
Bluntly: we’ve become Christians full of pride; we’ve become
prideful of our relationship with the Lord causing us to no longer need to do
life with others. We take our eyes off of the Gospel for all nations and focus
them on ourselves.
Subtly, Satan begins to fill our minds with, “me,” rather than, “the Kingdom.”
Subtly, Satan begins to fill our minds with, “me,” rather than, “the Kingdom.”
Paul speaks to this in 2 Corinthians 10:7 saying, “Look at
what is before your eyes. If anyone is confident that he is Christ’s, let him
remind himself that just as he is Christ’s, so also are we.”
I can picture Paul yelling, “Look! Look what’s before your
eyes! We follow Christ, too. You aren’t the only one!”
Truth is, we need to hear that. We forget that we’re simply one building block in the Church of Christ; the very Church that Christ gave himself up for (Eph. 5:25). We are one building block that rests upon and around other blocks. We need fellow laborers in Christ; or else, our block is useless.
Truth is, we need to hear that. We forget that we’re simply one building block in the Church of Christ; the very Church that Christ gave himself up for (Eph. 5:25). We are one building block that rests upon and around other blocks. We need fellow laborers in Christ; or else, our block is useless.
That’s life in Christ. Without the fellowship and life with
other followers, we become ineffective for the Gospel. We need them. I need
them.
Jesus prays in John 17, “…may all be one, just as you,
Father, are in me, and I in you, that they also may be in us, so that the world
may believe that you have sent me.”
The body of Christ living in Christ is the greatest witness for Christ.
The body of Christ living in Christ is the greatest witness for Christ.
Do you hear that?
Our most effective tool of evangelism is doing live with others, in Christ.
That is the purpose of the Church.
We are His body.
We are His bride.
We are His witness.
We are His!
We are His witness.
We are His!
WE. Not, just you. Or me. We, are His.
We can’t forsake this anymore. When we forsake this, we
forsake Christ.
Lets live life together for the sake of the Gospel in order
to spread the Gospel.
Lets live as Christ did.
Lets live like Acts 2.
Join me.
There is one body and one Spirit- just as you were called to the one hope that
belongs to your call- one Lord, one faith, one baptism, one God and Father of
all, who is over all and through all and in all.
(Eph. 4:4-6)