Diasporic Ruminations :: 1P11 :: Jeremy Hoover

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Which of these are the values of Jesus? #Church attendance and obligation, or service, love, and encouragement?

Servants of the Bible Study

Did you know Jesus never taught church (or synagogue) attendance?  Not even once.

He probably assumed the people he taught would attend their respective houses of worship, but he didn't feel the need to teach this as a core value. In fact, the gospels only present Jesus in the temple a few times--and in the one time they all report, Jesus tore the place apart!

Yet, for many of us, church attendance is the height of our spiritual commitment.

We have reasons for this. We point to one big reason in the bible itself: "[Do not give] up meeting together, as some are in the habit of doing, but [encourage] one another" (Hebrews 10:25). We tell others that the bible commands their attendance at church meetings.

So we have church members attending bible studies out of obligation, not love. When obligation is the foundation, little encouragement happens. Lifelessness is prominent.

We have church members attending bible studies and worship services when they are sick. These poor members take the day off work, or struggle through the day, yet muster up their remaining strength to attend a bible study, rather than staying home and resting.

Is this really what God intended?

What if we misunderstood this teaching in Hebrews? One reality in Hebrews is that people were deserting the faith, giving up on it (and Jesus) in the midst of persecution and trial. There are numerous calls throughout this book to retain faith and keep strong (Heb. 2:1). The warning passages (Heb. 6:4-6, for example) are intended to remind people of what they have and what they stand to lose if they leave.

Then we come to Hebrews 10:25.

We need to remember that the early church was nowhere near as developed as we are, two thousand years later. We have buildings, an internal structure, a board of directors, a leadership structure, programs, meetings, budgets, bank accounts, legal forms, policies, things to maintain, and people to pay. The early church had little of this.

What the early church had was each other.

This is the core of what the writer is teaching in Heb. 10:25. If you don't have each other, you can't possibly stay faithful. That's why you need to focus on encouraging each other as a core value. Encouragement builds the body of Christ and keeps others strong when they feel like quitting.

"Meeting together," in Heb. 10:25, is not about attendance at the church building. It's about not giving up on others, or yourself, or Jesus. It's about not giving in to temptation and trials. It's about remembering who and whose you are. It's about being together as a group, sharing the unity and fellowship that are in Christ.

So if you're sick, stay home and rest. There's no need to be around others. No mature believer will look down on you.

If you're tired after a long day, take the night off. Don't feel obligated to attend a Wednesday night bible study out of fear of what others will say or think. No mature believer looks at church attendance as the barometer of your faithfulness. (In fact, they shouldn't be measuring your faithfulness to begin with; they have enough to worry about with themselves.)

Jesus taught that we are to love and serve each other. This happens in and out of meetings, worship services, and bible studies. Church attendance, in any form, is not the goal we are after.

Focus on love, service, and encouragement--and let your attendance serve these goals.

Do you agree? Disagree? Please leave your comments.

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Comments (4)

Jan 28, 2010
sara smith said...
This artice effects me a lot because I have MS and I can not work or drive. I am in pain a lot and have a hard time getting around. I am really bad when it comes close to taking my meds but I try not to miss church. I have my mother-in-law pick me up everyweek since my husband is working. I could say I am to tired to go to church or it is to hard for me to get myself and my 2 year old ready. I feel that it is important to go unless you are contagus. i feel once you make excuses not to go you will stop going all together. I feel that it encourges others if you go if you have cancer and are not get feeling or if you are disabled in anyway.
Jan 28, 2010
Jeremy Hoover said...
You are an excellent example of attending church meetings for encouragement and to encourage others. Thanks for sharing this, Sara. My hope is we all will have this same attitude of *needing* to be together rather than showing up because someone told us we needed to be there.
Jan 28, 2010
Rebecca said...
I think that many religious people would say that the point of any religious practice is to become closer to God, or to develop your relationship with God. The question becomes - do we as individuals get to choose how we think we can best better that relationship OR should we subscribe to a higher order / recommendations of what the best methods are? In Judaism, we talk a lot about "letter of the law" and "spirit of the law" and which one is more important to hold yourself to. While I think that following the spirit (love, service, encouragement) seems like a good choice, the problem is that most people will often take the lazy or easy choice and tell themselves it is because it is better for their relationship with God. That’s why it is often helpful to have a larger communal structure / religious code to keep peoples practice in line, while at the same time allowing for personal religious beliefs and focuses. On the other hand, if people really honestly work on their personal relationship with God through their own means, that will probably be a more true religious experience than one fostered through a general religious code. So this can be debated either way . . . Just some thoughts!
Jan 28, 2010
Jeremy Hoover said...
Nice response, Rebecca. I get what you're saying. Laziness always enjoys "the spirit" because they can hide behind it. Yet, "the letter" creates coldness. Doing something out of obligation because it's good for you is okay sometimes but not as a steady diet. We need obligation fused with the right "spirit" so we're responding correctly to both God and each other.

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