Three weeks ago I missed church because we were driving to Florida - TopicsExpress



          

Three weeks ago I missed church because we were driving to Florida for our family vacation. Two weeks ago, I missed church due the fact I could barely move my neck and stayed home. Last Sunday I was at church for only 30 minutes when I became very ill and had to leave church and head home. I am sorely missing corporate worship, my pastors teachings and fellowship with my fellow FBC Canton friends and families. I hate not being there. I understand why non believers dont care about coming to church but I cant understand why many Christians dont seem to put much value on it either. May we never lose our desire to worship with a body of believers. 1 Timothy 4:13 Until I come, devote yourself to the public reading of Scripture, to exhortation, to teaching. I challenge all my believing FB friends to actively be involved in a bible teaching church. Below sums up my thoughts. I did not write it but it is good. Question: Why is corporate worship important? Answer: Scripture is clear that Jesus died for the church (Acts 20:28; Ephesians 5:25) and that the church is His body (Romans 12:5; 1 Corinthians 10:17; 12:12-27; Ephesians 1:23; 4:12; 5:30; Colossians 1:18, 24; Hebrews 13:3). Participation in a church is essential to the spiritual health of individual Christians. However, statistics gathered by a recent Barna study show that church attendance is in general on the decline in this country. Almost a quarter of Americans are unchurched, even though the majority of them consider themselves Christians and a fifth of them actually read the Bible regularly. Organized religious gathering is becoming less important to the average American. So, why should Christians attend church? First of all, attendance at corporate gatherings is a biblical mandate. Hebrews 10:24-25 tells us not to give up meeting together. It’s significant that the recipients of this letter were under the threat of persecution. Public church attendance could open them up to abuse. The command indicates that the benefits of attendance outweigh any possible threat. The Christian life was never meant to be solitary. All of the biblical metaphors for a church indicate a plurality, never a singularity: we are a body, a flock, a building, and a holy nation. There are no “lone wolves” in biblical Christianity. A second reason for church attendance is the array of spiritual blessings it bestows. Negatively speaking, church attendance helps prevent backsliding and apostasy. Without regular participation in corporate worship, one tends to drift spiritually. Positively, church attendance promotes fellowship and encouragement. In the book of Acts, we’re told that those who came to faith in the early days “continued steadfastly in . . . fellowship” (2:42). The Hebrews passage mentioned above reveals that one of the purposes of gathering together is to “encourage one another.” We all need encouragement. Corporate worship provides that for us. Another reason for corporate worship is the public statement it makes. If we’re regular church attendees, we publicly demonstrate our obedience to the command to love God. To say we love Christ yet neglect His body is hypocritical. Regular church attendance also shows support for the work of God in the world—that we are for Jesus rather than against Him (Matthew 12:30). Furthermore, worshiping with others conveys benefits that are unavailable to us individually. When we attend corporate worship, we hear the public preaching of the Word of God. Substituting a media ministry (radio or television) not only removes the immediacy of public preaching, but also fosters disloyalty to the church and a sense of isolation, effectively privatizing Christianity. Church attendance also enables us to partake of the Lord’s Supper, the public proclamation of the body and blood of the Lord Jesus (1 Corinthians 11:26). Finally, regular gatherings with the people of God demonstrate that we have eternal life. John tells us that we know that we’ve passed from death to life because we love our brothers and sisters in Christ (1 John 3:14). Gathering together for teaching, worship and mutual edification is an indication of our love for the redeemed and is a sign of our salvation to eternal life. Read more: gotquestions.org/corporate-worship.html#ixzz3EqiugmTL gotquestions.org/corporate-worship.html
Posted on: Wed, 01 Oct 2014 00:42:43 +0000

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