Jesus told Peter, "I will build my church"
The church we cannot entirely see.
A common idea is that the one true church of Christ is invisible. Everybody knows that there is a "universal church". This is the "general assembly"
We see the church like we see an ocean.
Many times I have walked on the golden sandy shores of the great Pacific ocean. I have seen the Pacific ocean from places in Australia two thousand kilometres apart. I have seen the Pacific ocean from small islands of the South Pacific. I have seen the Pacific ocean from high up in the air. I have seen it below the surface. But I've never seen it all, and certainly not all at once with the naked eye. Because I can only see the ocean locally, does that mean that the Pacific ocean is invisible? It may be that some parts of that ocean are so deep or so remote that no human I will see them. However that does not make the ocean invisible,
Sometimes we see trash.
Occasionally I have seen rubbish polluting the portion of the ocean I am looking at. Imagine you were there and I said to you that it was a shame to see that mess. Now suppose you told me that I was looking only at the visible Pacific and I should understand that the "invisible Pacific"
We see the church locally.
Our sight, as far as the church is concerned, is to be sure presently limited to the locality. Nevertheless, what we are looking at is the church. When you look at my body, would you say to me that I am an invisible man because you cannot see all parts of my body? In the same way, the body of Christ, his church, cannot be properly called invisible. Now we may see something wrong with the part of the church we are looking at. It does not help to babble about an "invisible" church
From invisible to impossible.
So thoroughly has the idea of an "invisible church" permeated our thinking, that some even believe that we must have denominational or sectarian organizations in order to provide a local and visible church.
That's how some people think.
Undenominational churches today.
The Bible narrative tells us that in the beginning, when Jesus built his one true church, it was quite visible and the congregations were quite undenominational. The first church of Christ in Jerusalem was visible. As the gospel spread, similar churches were set up in other cities around the world
Here is something for you to think about. Read it several times until it sinks in. The "different churches" of Bible times were the same church in different towns
Denominations? Who needs them?
People will argue for the existence of their own sectarian organization, whilst recognizing that other believers, even a congregation of them, can be true Christians, in the true church, without belonging to that sectarian organization. So why have denominations at all? Why indeed? There is no good reason. Yet there seems to be opposition to forming churches that are actually undenominational. Churches of one denomination will often fellowship, and have respect for, churches of another denomination more readily than they will the churches of no denomination. It's ok to have an undenominational look and feel. It's not ok to be genuinely undenominational and to be
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