Virtually Paul
True Christian Community: The Real Building
October 24, 2006 on 11:36 am | In Bible College, Church, Community, Links, Ministry, Music, Preaching, Theology |It’s difficult to talk about buildings at my church without making reference to the one that’s being assembled under our noses.
But the metaphor for the church as a “building” in the New Testament, isn’t talking about the products of the construction industry. This is something that we often forget simply because of the way we use the word “church†in modern English.
“I’m going down to the church on Saturday to help with the working bee.â€
“Which church is the wedding being held in?”
“That church over there looks very nice.”
The “building” described in the NT is not a physical one. When Paul (not me, the apostle) talks about the “church” he uses the Greek word ekklesia.
According to the commentary I looked at (see my Community Resources page) ekklesia refers to “an actual gathering of people” or “the group gathering for a regularly assembled meeting”.
Biblical commentators qualify the idea of ekklesia, proposing that Paul wasn’t referring to the church in an institutional sense either. The early church was most certainly linked in organic ways between the different gatherings. But here, Paul’s use of the word didn’t intend to carry an undertone of an earth-bound, organisational sense of federation, beyond their shared faith in Christ. When Paul wrote to the ekklesia in Corinth, or the ekklesia in Colossae, I don’t think he had the different gatherings listed on a database as member churches of the BURE (the Baptist Union of the Roman Empire). So, in my context at Essendon, I tried to imagine what it would be like, if we didn’t have our physical building.
I imagined what church would be like, if, at 5am every Sunday morning, Heath and Simon, our music guys, got up and put up a marquee made from about 80 sheets of blue tarp in Lincoln Park, just in case it rained… and we had church there every Sunday with musical instruments that don’t need electricity… Doug, who’s been worship leading for decades, whips out an old broom handle with bottle caps nailed on to it… the drum kit got stolen last week because someone forgot to pack it up… so Gary, my favourite drummer, is unloading a couple of upturned rubbish bins from the back of his car like that guy who busks in the city. Joan, everyone’s favourite little old lady, is getting into it with the tambourine. There’s no overhead projector. Just one of the tallest guys at church, Bruce, with a big whiteboard and a step ladder. When I picture that, the only things that are strikingly similar to the regular gathering I call church, are the smiling familiar faces.
Paul wasn’t writing to buildings, nor to organisations. He was writing to Christians who met together, living out real faith in a community. The community gathering is the building that Paul is referring to in Ephesians 2, as he writes to Gentile believers, extending to them the invitation for all believers, to enter into the church community.
Ephesians 2:19-22 (NRSV)
So then you are no longer strangers and aliens, but you are citizens with the saints and also members of the household of God, built upon the foundation of the apostles and prophets, with Christ Jesus himself as the cornerstone. In him the whole structure is joined together and grows into a holy temple in the Lord; in whom you also are built together spiritually into a dwelling place for God.
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Community isn’t about an event either though. Sure, meeting together helps
But isn’t church community a church community whether it’s 7pm at Essendon, 5am in Lincoln Park (wherever that is), or a few people meeting during the week for coffee or otherwise hanging out and interacting with each other on a spiritual level? In fact, I’d argue that the latter is more so because there’s real interaction going on rather than being passive like it’s so easy to be in a big meeting.
But that’s possibly going off-topic from where you were going
Comment by Jason — October 31, 2006 #
[…] Issue 3: What’s the church?The word ‘church’ has been misappropriated to so many different things, even just in the last 50 years, that its meaning within popular culture has been diluted into an array of stereotypes that range in their connotations, from confusing expressions of ancient religious liturgical practice, to a fundamentalist Christianist lobby group that attempts to influence Government policy for conservative ends. Even within the ranks of those who regularly participate in the church, I’m not sure how many of them could tell you what it actually is. If you asked ten different people what the church exists to do, you’d easily get answers that emphasised any number of different things: community, evangelism, family values, charity, prayer. […]
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