Lessons From Desert Man
The Small Church #2

How Big is Big Enough?


How Big is Big Enough? How big should a church be, before we call it "a church?" Furthermore, at what point does a fellowship of Christians become an effective ministry? To answer these questions, we need to determine what God calls "church." After all, church is His idea, so, only His definition matters.

To begin with, there are many things which church is not. Church is not a building, in which Christians congregate, to relate to God on a weekly basis. Church is not an event, to showcase the talent of a few individuals. Nor is church a time, when Christians get together for social interaction.

Church is people: people who love Jesus, and have been bound together by the Holy Spirit, Who dwells within them, and by their commitment to live for Him. According to Ephesians 2:21 we are being "fitly framed together" to make a dwelling place for God. That is the definition of the church.

Along with this universal definition for the church, there are also local expressions of God's Church. Some people have attempted to define a "local church" by statistical information. For example, there are some who feel that a fellowship should not be called a church, until it reaches about 80 people. Up until that time it is either a "pioneer work," an outreach, or just a Bible study. But, the biblical definition of church defies such logic.

Since the church is people, Jesus gave us the best definition of the local church when He said, "For where two or three are gathered together in my name, there am I in the midst of them." (Mt.18:20)

This is a greatly comforting passage, for those who pastor (and those who attend!) small churches. We can rejoice in the fact, that Jesus is just as aware of our Sunday morning experience, as He is of the mega-church we passed on the way to service. We can also be assured that our experience of His presence will not increase or diminish on the basis of numbers. God doesn't have a quota to meet, before He shows up. Less people does not mean less God, in some cases, it may mean more.

Since "two or three" meets the criteria for the local church, we see that church can also be a spontaneous occurrence. At home with your family, you can experience church. When you meet another Christian in the grocery store, you can have church. Church is what you are, not what you do, or where you go.

If you will choose to embrace this simple truth, the following things will happen to you: 1) You will not evaluate the success of a given meeting on the basis of numbers solely, 2) You will learn that every member should be a participant in local church life, rather than an audience, and 3) You will start training people to live like "churchgoers" should live, 24 hours a day.

This truth does not grant people the freedom to avoid "organized religion," rather it makes their church-life a way of life, not just a Sunday morning event, and if your Sunday morning is smaller than "average," it gives you the comfort of knowing that you are experiencing just as much Jesus anyone else - maybe more! Remember, church is people, and two or three is big enough.

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