May 18, 2018


Share Life With Fellow Believers

They devoted themselves to the apostles’ teaching and to fellowship, to the breaking of bread and to prayer. – Acts 2:42

It’s one of those things that boggles the minds of those who see it happening. We don’t know how to change it. Invitations fall on deaf ears. How do we get people to be more than Sunday morning pew sitters? How do we get them involved?

We call it so many things. Sunday school, small group, circle or bible study. We gather for dinners and lunches and speakers and outreach. We host sports activities and choir for the children, for the youth and for adults. We offer so many opportunities at so many times. Still, they never come.

They are people content to sit on the sidelines of faith, never getting too deep or too involved. How do we explain to them what they are missing? How do we encourage them to partake of the fellowship, the laughter, the prayers and support that is so freely offered?

What are they afraid they’ll find? Are they afraid of conviction for things they don’t want to give up. Maybe they aren’t as sure of their faith as they claim. Maybe they don’t want to question themselves, preferring to slide through life without examining who they are in Christ.

Or maybe it’s something else. Maybe they are afraid of a past they prefer to keep hidden. Maybe they’re beyond certain they’ll be judged in some way. Maybe it’s just easier to pretend they are the people they want to be rather than accepting God’s grace and actually being the people He created them to be.

I could throw out all those trite phrases. We are all sinners. We all fall short of the glory of God. We are not to judge others but rather to extend the grace that’s been extended to us. We are to help one another and support one another through joy and sorrow, happiness and disappointment.

And most of the time we do. I’m sure there are churches who don’t extend Christ’s hand with a clean heart and open arms. That’s not the case with our church. I don’t think it’s true of most churches. We are all flawed people trying to navigate a world to which we don’t belong.

Doing it together is what makes it possible. It’s the real, practical help that comes with a grocery store gift card or a ride to a doctor appointment. It is the prayers that surround us when our hearts are broken. It’s the celebratory cake and shared meals, the laughter and joy that comes from doing life together.

That’s what people miss when they only come on Sunday morning to occupy a pew or a chair. They say all the right things. They have smiles and excuses ready when invitations come. They don’t want to be part of a community of believers. At least until their world falls apart and they have nowhere else to turn.

There are no perfect churches and no perfect people. We are a community, a family, who loves and squabbles their way through it all. If you haven’t joined a small group, take a chance and step forward in faith. You’ll be amazed at what you find.

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