This site was last modified on September 28, 2003 and is now being maintained at eachnewday.com
ON IMITATING THE EARLY CHURCH
It has become popular in recent years to establish programs within the church that attempt to emulate what is believed to have occurred in the church of the first century. To that effect we now have churches that concentrate on Cell Groups, Home Worship, and any number of other programs that are believed to be reflected in the Bible’s accounts of the early church. What is not often realized is that the early church was not successful as a result of the programs that it implemented but that it was successful because of the faith it had in the God that it worshipped. The programs that are found in the book of Acts are not necessarily programs that were set up because of their efficiency but because of their necessity. First century Christians, in the general sense, may not have had buildings set aside for regular worship and were not always permitted access to the Temple in Jerusalem or the more widely scattered synagogues due to their ever increasing distance from these institutions, to the antagonism of the Jews toward Christianity, and even the destruction of the Temple in Jerusalem by the armies of Rome. By necessity the early Christians would have gathered in each other’s homes, in public forums, and even in open areas beyond city borders. Groups that met in homes could frequently have been restricted in size by the size of the home itself so small groups may have gathered in homes throughout the areas where Christians were numerous. It must be remembered as well that in the first century many towns and cities may not have had more than one Church (body of believers) and that all Christians generally considered themselves members of the world wide Church and, more specifically, members of the Church in their region.
What the early Christians were good at was evangelism. Their
success at bringing in converts was more a result of the blessing of God falling
upon committed believers who devoted themselves to the distribution of the
Gospel than it was due to any specific programs. The men and women of whom we
primarily read in the book of Acts were men and women who were committed to
telling others of the God who had saved them from death and who were in turn
willing to die while serving that God.
The answer today to the lack of growth in many churches
(world wide, denominational, as well as local gatherings of Christians) is not
because the programs being used are of poor quality (though there is often room
for improvement in that area as well) but because Christians today are less
willing to die for their faith than the Christians of the first century. We are
today tied too closely to the pleasures of the world to be willing to forsake
these pleasures in the service of our King. If churches today have such
difficulty even encouraging believers to be faithful in their tithing consider
by extension what the commitment of these same believers would be to suffer on
behalf of the Gospel as many of the early Christians suffered. What is more
necessary today than programs is Christians who are excited about God as the
early Christians were; Christians in whose company God was not ashamed to show
His power; Christians who were committed to God regardless of the cost.