Jesse: I can't see how we can
read though the Bible
and not clearly see the
call to a commitment
to a local assembly in person.
Mack: It would be like saying,
"Well, I want to play football,
but I don't want to be on a team."
It makes no sense.
Christianity is the people of God.
Christ has redeemed a people.
And it's a family the Bible says.
It's a body.
It's a building.
What good is a brick laying
on the grass by itself?
It's not functioning any
good for any purpose
until it's connected to other bricks
and it's cemented together
as a part having its place.
Kevin: You know, it's
so important for someone -
for a Christian to be
part of a local church.
That's the means God has given.
You don't get that impression in Scripture
where He just saves Christians
and has them dotted about just everywhere
just by themselves.
You know, when we're saved,
we become part of a body -
a localized body.
You know, God expects His Christians
to gather in local gatherings.
All the letters are
addressed to the churches.
You see that in whatever region
whether it's in Galatia or Thyatira
or wherever - in Ephesus.
You know, he's speaking
to people in that region.
Jesse: Some people struggle
with the word "membership."
And if you want to throw out
the word membership, I don't care.
But the notion, the
concept of being a part
of a family of faith in person -
so much of what we are
called to in the Scriptures
can not be fulfilled
without the understanding
of commitment to a local
group of believers.
Take for instance the
call given to pastors.
We are told that a pastor's
going to give an account
for those that they pastor.
How do we know who we pastor
without the notion of
there being a commitment
to a specific local group of people?
Who am I responsible for?
Everyone who logs into the website?
You take the notion of church discipline.
You can't fulfill church discipline
without the understanding
that you're a part
of a local assembly
and being put out of it would
have an impact on you
and lead you to repentance.
So, you can't fulfill it.
You can't fulfill the one anothers.
Kevin: The other Christians
with all their little quirks and whatever,
being in their lives, it
helps you grow together.
But again, someone's not going to get that
on the Internet.
And one of the evidences
someone is a true Christian
is we know we've passed from death to life
if you love the brethren.
It's very easy to say
"I love people" on Facebook
or whatever who you've never met
and around the world
and they're a nice person.
Well, you know, they may
be a horrible person.
(incomplete thought)
It may be a PR (public relations) job
what you're seeing on the Internet.
So again, the means is to find
a local church to be part of.
And generally, when one is truly converted
they will crawl over
broken glass to find one.
Mack: A Christian can only grow,
they can only be rightly related to Christ
as they're rightly related to the church.
Why? Because He's the head of the church.
And so, you can only
be related to the Head
if you're a part of the body.
If my finger's cut off
and it's laying over here,
(incomplete thought).
So we can only grow properly
as we're a part of the church
and all that that means.
The last verse of 2nd Peter says,
"But grow in the grace and knowledge
of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ."
And the New Testament tells us
in teaching,
in exhortation,
and by example,
the believers were together,
were worshiping together.
And so there is no biblical Christianity,
there's no living the Christian life
or living out biblical Christianity;
there's no pleasing God
without being a part of a biblical church.
Jesse: When we look at that call
Paul gives to the church at Corinth
in 1 Corinthians 12,
regarding the gifts,
and he talks about that
each one has been gifted
for the edification of the body.
And I understand that that doesn't mean
that you can't use your
gifts outside the church.
It's not an exclusive thing.
But this is what it's written to.
It's written to a local church
to be used for the building up.
Paul speaks about it in Ephesians 4.
When each part is doing their role,
we're built up to maturity
fit for the head of Christ.
And so when you have someone out there
who is not committed to that,
you can't fulfill the one anothers
as they're given in Scripture.
And so this notion that
you can float around
or just glean from the Internet
and not be committed and accountable
to a specific group of believers,
it's unfounded in Scripture.
Kevin: One of the biggest dangers
for young Christians in our generation
is because we've become
an Internet society
where people tend to react on social media
rather than in real life.
And a lot of it's fake.
(unintelligible)
But the danger of that
is to translate it into the church
where you get these
so-called "Internet Christians"
where they have no interest
in being around real
believers in the flesh.
I don't mean in the flesh in a bad way,
but I mean in person,
because again, to actively
be in other people's lives
and submit to authority,
you can only do that in reality,
not in some kind of hypothetical
social media context.
Clint: I would say it's a necessity
to be a part of a biblical church.
To be isolated is no existence.
It's very difficult.
It might be for a season.
But the desire,
the motivation ought to be
to either start a biblical church,
become a biblical church themselves,
or become a part of a biblical church.
It's necessary for longevity.
You know, we live in a day and age
where the Internet supplies us
with vast resources of sermons.
Sermons at every hand.
Video sermons, livestream
sermons, and so on.
But there's nothing like being a part
of a congregation, sitting there,
with your mouth open
and your Bible open,
taking in what's coming
to you from the pulpit
with the solid belief that
what you're hearing right then
is God's Word for you on that occasion,
on that morning.
There's nothing like that.
And so the other Internet
sermons, CD's, and so on,
those can be auxiliary.
Those can be additional.
Those can be sort of emergency rations
if you want to call it that.
But we really do need to be a part
of a believing church.
Kevin: The thing that makes
a church most biblical -
it can become a cliche, so
you've got to be careful with it,
but it being Christ-centered.
And I say it can become a cliche
because it's very easy
for people to say that,
but is that what people center on there?
I don't mean that it's Israel-centered
where people are obsessed with Jews.
I don't mean where people are obsessed
with end times or conspiracy theories
and that's the thing that
gathers them together.
You know, some professing churches,
the big uniting factor is
they're all of a certain race.
But they shouldn't be race-centered.
Let me clarify on that one.
It's like in America, you
go to certain parts
or certain parts of the world.
Everyone will be pretty
similar if you like,
but in a city like San
Antonio or Manchester
where I come from,
it's very multi-cultural.
The church should reflect that
if the uniting factor is Christ there.
It shouldn't be that people are
home-schooled-centered.
Or anything else basically.
Or the big thing is we
do street evangelism
or we meet in a house.
But are the people
enamored with Christ there?
Once you see the real thing,
it's very easy to see the difference.
Again, what makes a biblical church
is not someone doing a big PR video
saying we're so lovely here
and everyone's no nice and loving.
But you come there
and Christ should be the drawing thing.
Now if He is the drawing thing,
then the other things generally
will all be true anyway.
The preaching of His Word is essential -
that they're getting the
sermons from Scripture.
Not a pastor putting a verse of Scripture
up on a screen
and then talking about
whatever else for the time.
Are they expositing the Scriptures there?
And being truthful to them?
You know, not trying to explain them away
and things like that,
but does this church follow the Bible?
Are the people living it?
Because that's the thing.
True conversion -
are there true Christians there?
(Incomplete thought)
And that's where the Christ-
centeredness comes.
When people are centered on other things -
of course, a Christian can get
out of balance for a time.
But when it's all the time,
it tends to be a lack of
true conversion there.
And another thing with dealing with that
is of course church discipline.
Will a church be faithful
with people souls?
When they go astray,
when they go on in sin,
will they come and correct them
and put them out of the church if
necessary for their own good?
And for the good of
the church and so forth?
Because you don't want to be somewhere
where if you go astray,
no one's going to come and correct you.
They're just going to put
their arm around you
all the way to hell.
So those things definitely
are the most important:
true conversion,
the preaching of the Word.
Are the sermons challenging?
As in, do they engage you?
What I'm saying is you can
teach through the Bible,
but it can all be Bible trivia
where it doesn't engage your life.
I'm not saying that every sermon
needs to give you a kicking.
For instance, if you hear
a sermon on giving,
and you're faithfully giving,
you shouldn't be convicted.
You should be encouraged by that.
Because some Christians
get into that mentality
where every sermon needs
to knock them out.
(incomplete thought)
We should be challenged there.
It shouldn't be just about:
we're the perfect church,
but look at those out there
and all their faults.
It should be engaging my life
and helpful to me.
Tim: When you have God come down
and break into your life -
the God who is love -
and save your soul,
if God is saving men,
women, boys, and girls,
there's going to be love.
He said of course there is.
There always is.
And any community that does not have love,
John tells us in these verses,
he tells us in v. 8,
"Anyone who does not love
does not know God because God is love."
Brethren, if you find churches
where there's no love,
it's because it's not a church.
It's not one of His churches.
It's not a candlestick.
That's John's conclusion.
That's what we see here.
Think about these words again.
"Beloved..." I'm going
to read verses 7-10.
"Beloved, let us love one another,
for love is from God.
Whoever loves has been
born of God and knows God.
Anyone who does not love
does not know God because God is love."
Kevin: The churchless person -
realize this, they have an evidence
of salvation missing
until they're part of a
church with believers.
I'm not saying they're not saved,
but you know, we know he's passed
from death to life because
he loves the brethren.
Don: There is no such
thing as lone ranger -
I call it being a lone ranger -
me being saved out here
apart from my fellowship
and my participation in the local body.
I can't know that I'm a real Christian
unless I'm in the local church.
You can't know.
You can't have any assurance
that you're a real Christian
by reading books
and by listening to sermons
and being out here isolated and say,
well, it's wonderful.
We love God.
Listen, if we walk in the light
as He is in the light,
we have fellowship one with another
and the blood of Jesus Christ, God's Son,
cleanses us from all sin.
By this we know that we have passed
from death into life because
we love the brethren.
We have to have brethren around us
to prove that we are Christians.
And we have to have brethren
to show that we really love the brethren.
And how can we love God -
this is such a theme in
the little epistle of 1 John -
how can we say we love God
and not be in union and fellowship
and in love with brothers
and sisters in Christ
in a local body?
(incomplete thought)
There's going to be contention.
There will be division at times.
There will be misunderstandings.
There will be differences of opinion.
But these have to be in grace.
These have to be worked through.
You have to live through these things.
You have to walk through these things.
You have to submit to one another.
You have to learn that we've been called
and called out from the world,
and we've been put into
an assembly upon earth.
If we forsake the assembling
of ourselves together,
we fall out of the realm of teaching.
We fall out of the realm of oversight.
We fall out of the area of
communion and fellowship.
We're no longer participating
in the ordinance.
There's no way in the world
you can sit alone by yourself
and take the Lord's Supper.
There's no way in the world
you can baptize yourself.
You're baptized by someone else.
You take the Lord's
Supper with other people.
It's a supper and it's for the family.
So, I would say again,
there's a lot of misguided,
misdirected souls
that don't want to have any part to do
with a local church.
They're greatly in error.
And I would not go so far as to say
that all of them are completely lost,
but I'm saying this,
they are going to be very stunted
and have an accounting -
if they're not going to be willing
to be accountable here,
they're going to have to give an
accounting to Him one day.
And I sure wouldn't want to be
standing before the Lord
Jesus Christ when He says,
"Why wouldn't you be a part of My church?"