wayneL
VIVA LA LIBERTAD, CARAJO!
- Joined
- 9 July 2004
- Posts
- 25,851
- Reactions
- 13,086
Just to be a pedantic pain in the @rse :Hi Wayne
Correct - and the place for such gatherings is usually referred to as ......"a Church".
"I will make them joyful in my house of prayer. Their holocausts and their sufferings will be accepted on my alter, for my house will be called a house of prayer for all the peoples" Is 56:7
Isaiah was written quite some time before the advent of Jesus, ergo, could not be referring to church. In fact it can only be referring to the Jewish Temple AKA Synagogue. In fact the etymological roots of "church" do not appear until around 300 AD.
As a point of order the greek used by the NT writers that has been translated into English as "church" is "ekklesia". This word at that point of time was not used to describe a routine place of worship, but as a special assembly for the purposes of voting or making decisions and was used for secular purposes originally eg a political meeting.
Therefore ekklesia can be a Christian assembly, but equally can be an assembly of silversmiths as was the case in Acts 19:32,39,41 where ekklesia was correctly translated as "assembly". Equally it can be an assembly of tiddlywinks players.
This puts the modern hierarchial church at odds with scripture as there is no biblical basis for it. Therefore it can be argued that most modern churches are apostate (without even getting into the idolatry debate).
A "real" Christian may therefore avoid "church" like the plague in favour of informal meetings of believers.
And of course we can go off at all sorts of tangents from here.
I totally agree with your interpretation Wayne. I was making the point that "going to Church" plays a central part to mainstream Christian faith regardless of whether it is St Paul's Cathedral or under a thorn tree in the Serengeti Plain. The common link is that they are meeting a group for the purpose of prayer as you established above.
(And one other thing - would people please not treat me as a religious crank just because I've quoted from the Bible. I know it is the fastest way to lose Forum Cred!!!)
Duckman
So "going to church" is a misnomer, particularly if under a thorn tree.
(pedants rule, OK?)