David
Know the Bible
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“If ye continue in my word, then are ye my disciples indeed.” ~John 8:31
Something interesting is happening right now. More and more people are quietly stepping away from church buildings. Some leave because they were hurt. Some leave because they grew tired of programs and routines. Others leave because something inside them started asking a question they could not ignore: Is this really what following Jesus is supposed to look like?
For many believers that question is uncomfortable. The moment someone says they stopped attending church, the assumption often comes quickly. They must be drifting away from God. They must be isolated. They must be losing their faith. But that assumption is not always true, and Scripture pushes us to look deeper than that.
The real issue is not whether someone attends a church building. The real issue is whether someone is actually following the Word of God. Jesus did not say, “If you attend services regularly, you are my disciples.” He said something much more direct: “If ye continue in my word, then are ye my disciples indeed.” ~John 8:31. That is the measure. Not a building. Not a denomination. Not a schedule. The measure is whether a person continues in the Word of Christ.
This is where the conversation becomes uncomfortable. A person can sit in a church building every Sunday for years and still not be living according to the Word of God. Jesus warned about that kind of religion. “This people draweth nigh unto me with their mouth… but their heart is far from me.” ~Matthew 15:8. Religion can create activity without obedience. Attendance can create the appearance of faith while the heart remains unchanged. When that happens, the system itself can become dangerous, not because gathering with believers is wrong, but because people begin to believe the routine is what makes them right with God.
But there is another side to this conversation that many people overlook. When someone truly loves Christ and His Word, that love does not suddenly disappear because they stepped away from a building. In many cases the opposite happens. The Word of God becomes central in everyday life. It shapes conversations, thinking, and decisions. Scripture actually describes believers living this way: “Then they that feared the LORD spake often one to another.” ~Malachi 3:16. Faith was never meant to be a weekly event. It was meant to be woven into daily life.
The early believers were not spectators attending religious services. They were a community centered around truth. “And they continued stedfastly in the apostles’ doctrine and fellowship.” ~Acts 2:42. Notice that doctrine comes first. The Word of God anchored everything else. Their fellowship existed because they were united around truth.
When you step back and look carefully at the ministry of Jesus Himself, something else becomes clear. His ministry did not resemble the modern institutional model many people assume is necessary today. Jesus taught on mountainsides. “Seeing the multitudes, he went up into a mountain… and he taught them.” ~Matthew 5:1-2. He taught from a boat while crowds listened from the shore. “He entered into a ship… and the whole multitude stood on the shore.” ~Matthew 13:2. He walked from town to town teaching along the roads. “And Jesus went about all the cities and villages… preaching the gospel of the kingdom.” ~Matthew 9:35. He even taught inside homes. “And it came to pass… that he went into an house: and the multitude cometh together again.” ~Mark 3:20.
The focus of His ministry was never building programs or maintaining religious systems. The focus was the Word of God and calling people to repentance and faith. He even warned people about religious systems that replace obedience to God with traditions created by men. “In vain they do worship me, teaching for doctrines the commandments of men.” ~Matthew 15:9.
So this raises a serious question. Is the real problem that some people are leaving church buildings, or is the real problem that many people believe attending a building is the same thing as following Christ? Because those two things are not the same. Scripture never commands believers to rely on religious systems, but it does call believers to continue in the truth and walk with others who love the truth.
That brings us back to the real question. It is not where someone sits on Sunday morning. It is not whether someone belongs to a certain structure. The real question is whether we are continuing in Christ’s Word and walking with other believers who want to live by it. That is the pattern Scripture keeps pointing us toward, and it challenges both religious routine and spiritual independence more than most people realize.
So here is the question worth discussing. Is modern church culture actually helping believers continue in the Word of Christ, or has it quietly trained people to believe that showing up once a week is the same thing as following Him?