Why go to church? It’s an important question for the time we’re in. Some of us, if we’re honest, have really enjoyed Sunday services at home. And I don’t think that’s a bad thing to admit. Sundays have been slower, more restful. There is no hurry to get ready, no concern for how you look, no hassle with hair or wind or traffic—just the anticipation of a few moments that lift our spirits and fill our hearts.
There is no question that God can use such a season to refresh and heal our sometimes hurried and restless approach to Sundays. It seems that he has been doing that in my own heart. But still, it needs only to be a season. God designed the church to be, well, exactly what the word means: an assembly, a gathering. Church is not just a spiritually uplifting and nourishing experience; it is the coming together of real people with all our wounds, struggles, heartaches, differences, quirky personalities, and wondrously varied gifts—all tied together in Christ. It’s harder and messier than virtual church, but greater.
Ephesians 4:1-6 is a hinge-point in a letter that says much about church. Paul urges Christians to walk in a manner worthy of the calling, which clearly, he sees as being lived in the context of fellowship with the people of God. Such a life-among-others is to be characterized by humility, gentleness, patience, and bearing with one another in love. We are taught to be “eager to maintain the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace” (vs. 3). This teaching is a call to diligently guard against the countless things that so often divide people: politics, race, differing opinions, unforgiveness, self-centeredness, etc. Our Christian bond runs deeper. It’s also a call to be eager about something our Father is eager for: all his children being together as one.
Online gatherings are the best we can do right now, and we thank God for such a blessing. Even when church doors open, it will be wise for some to continue to stay home a while longer. But, when the time comes to “go to church” (and only when it’s responsible for you to do so), remember that while an online experience has its upside, there is something greater: the harder and messier but profoundly more beautiful unity in which we see God “over all and through all and in all” (vs. 6).
Why Go To Church?
Why go to church? It’s an important question for the time we’re in. Some of us, if we’re honest, have really enjoyed Sunday services at home. And I don’t think that’s a bad thing to admit. Sundays have been slower, more restful. There is no hurry to get ready, no concern for how you look, no hassle with hair or wind or traffic—just the anticipation of a few moments that lift our spirits and fill our hearts.
There is no question that God can use such a season to refresh and heal our sometimes hurried and restless approach to Sundays. It seems that he has been doing that in my own heart. But still, it needs only to be a season. God designed the church to be, well, exactly what the word means: an assembly, a gathering. Church is not just a spiritually uplifting and nourishing experience; it is the coming together of real people with all our wounds, struggles, heartaches, differences, quirky personalities, and wondrously varied gifts—all tied together in Christ. It’s harder and messier than virtual church, but greater.
Ephesians 4:1-6 is a hinge-point in a letter that says much about church. Paul urges Christians to walk in a manner worthy of the calling, which clearly, he sees as being lived in the context of fellowship with the people of God. Such a life-among-others is to be characterized by humility, gentleness, patience, and bearing with one another in love. We are taught to be “eager to maintain the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace” (vs. 3). This teaching is a call to diligently guard against the countless things that so often divide people: politics, race, differing opinions, unforgiveness, self-centeredness, etc. Our Christian bond runs deeper. It’s also a call to be eager about something our Father is eager for: all his children being together as one.
Online gatherings are the best we can do right now, and we thank God for such a blessing. Even when church doors open, it will be wise for some to continue to stay home a while longer. But, when the time comes to “go to church” (and only when it’s responsible for you to do so), remember that while an online experience has its upside, there is something greater: the harder and messier but profoundly more beautiful unity in which we see God “over all and through all and in all” (vs. 6).