Hey there @MatthewG
If someone said that you cannot be a Christian if you do not go to church, I would disagree.
If someone said that it is not important to go to church, I would disagree.
If someone said that scriptures do not tell us to go to church. I would disagree.
“Why do you call Me, ‘Lord, Lord,’ and do not do what I say?" Luke 6:46
As people have pointed out, in the NT the word church means congregation. No church buildings in the biblical era. No church buildings until the 4th century. Back then they meet in people's homes---called house churches or in the catacombs or out in the wilderness. And they risked their lives to gather and worship the Lord. Now a days you need a cattle prod to get people to go to church. During Yeshua's ministry He attended the synagogues and the Temple and so did the Apostle Paul. Paul attended synagogues and with congregations.
Now a days we have churches everywhere. Certainly a serious Christian can take 2 hours to gather with Christians and worship the Lord.
Some people go to people's homes to hold church or hold church in their homes which is ok. And some people are disabled and cannot go often. For them they can watch church services on their television. Then some people say they are too busy to go to church. On judgment Day they will be explaining that to a God that was horribly tortured and crucified for them....and see how that goes over.
But to say there is no need to go to church or the Bible does not say we should go to church, that is false. For one thing you have tradition, it has always been Christian tradition to go to church. In the scriptures the Apostle Paul talked about going to church and the conduct when you do. In Paul's letters to churches he talked about meeting with them. The storyline and history of the church was never to hear the word and go on your own.
And let us consider how to stir up one another to love and good works, not neglecting to meet together, as is the habit of some, but encouraging one another, and all the more as you see the Day drawing near. Hebrews 10:24-25
And he came to Nazareth, where he had been brought up. And as was his custom, he went to the synagogue on the Sabbath day, and he stood up to read. Luke 4:16
And they devoted themselves to the apostles' teaching and the fellowship, to the breaking of bread and the prayers. Acts 2:42
On the first day of the week, when we were gathered together to break bread, Paul talked with them, intending to depart on the next day, and he prolonged his speech until midnight.
Acts 20:7
There is an old saying----You are not what you say you are, you are what you do. People do what is important to them and God sees that.
Hey friend, I appreciate the heart behind what you’re saying. You’re clearly trying to honor God, and I respect that. I also agree with you on several points — fellowship matters, gathering matters, and the early believers absolutely met together. No disagreement there.
Where I think we may be talking past each other is this:
There’s a difference between saying gathering is good and saying it is a requirement for salvation or a measure of whether someone is truly a Christian.
That’s the part I can’t agree with, because Scripture doesn’t teach that.
You mentioned tradition, and you’re right — Christians have gathered for centuries. But tradition is not the same thing as command. The early church gathered in homes, courtyards, fields, and wherever they could. They didn’t have a “church service” model like we do today, and the Bible never equates salvation with attending a weekly meeting.
Hebrews 10:25 encourages believers not to abandon fellowship — absolutely. But it doesn’t say, “You must attend a modern church building every Sunday or you’re disobedient.” It says
don’t isolate yourself. That can happen in a home, online, in a small group, or with two or three gathered in His name.
Yeshua attended synagogues — yes. But He also taught on mountains, in boats, in homes, and in fields. He never commanded, “You must attend a weekly service to be My disciple.”
Paul met with believers — yes. But he also said:
“For by grace you have been saved through faith… not of works.” (Eph. 2:8–9) Church attendance is a
work. A good one — but still a work.
So when someone says:
- “You’re not a Christian if you don’t go to church,” or
- “The Bible commands weekly church attendance,”
that’s where I have to gently say:
that’s not what Scripture teaches.
Gathering is good. Fellowship is good. Encouraging one another is good. But
salvation is in Christ alone, not in a building, a schedule, or a tradition.
And you’re right — people do what’s important to them. But God looks at the heart, not the attendance sheet. Some people gather in homes. Some gather online. Some gather in small groups. Some are disabled. Some are persecuted. Some are alone in their faith. God sees all of that.
I’m not arguing against gathering. I’m simply saying what the Bible says:
Gathering is beneficial, but it is not the requirement for being a Christian. Faith in the Son of God is.
Much love and respect to you. I appreciate the conversation and your desire to point people toward Christ.