Do You Have to Go to Church to Be a Christian?

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MatthewG

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Do You Have to “Go to Church” to Be a Christian?

No.


“THE” Church “NOT a building.”
“THE Church” IS the duly Sav-ED members of and IN Christ Jesus’ Spirit and He who IS Spirit “IN” them, ( 24-7 ) wherever they are.

Glory to God,
Taken
Hello,

I agree with the heart of what you’re saying, but I’d word it even more precisely: Scripture doesn’t call us a building or an institution — it calls us the temple of God. The Spirit doesn’t dwell in structures made with hands; He dwells in His people.

So being part of God’s people isn’t about attending a location. It’s about being His temple 24/7, wherever we are, because His Spirit lives in us. Fellowship can happen anywhere believers walk in truth together — a home, a conversation, or even just two people gathered in His name.

The building can be useful, but it isn’t the temple. We are.

Glory to God.
 

MatthewG

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the biggest abuse of what these leaders now do is
they lie to this people . They keep them trapped in bondage and in sin .
Did you know that many now IDENTIFY with SIN and NOT with THE CRUCIFIED LIFE in CHRIST .
How so you might be wondering .
Well have you ever heard words like , HEY everyone i am a ......................gay christain or an etc christain
IF SO you are hearing those who identify WITH SINS and a LIE . and those be in darkness and trapped
under the sentence of death and not UNDER grace .
WHOM we LOVE matters mathew . And when i say WHO i mean IT SHOULD have been GOD , HIS CHRIST
above even our mother , father , son , daughter and all things .
THEN we love our neighbor as our self . But i see a love of the world in m any
and thus they have NOT THE LOVE OF THE FATHER in them .
SO allow me some parting words . HE who allows his neighbor to remain in sin
Hates his neighbor . HE who accepts the sins of any , PUTS THEM AND THEIR SIN before GOD himself .
And that is super d eadly mathew . Now i hope this helps to encourage you .
Hello,

I appreciate you sharing your thoughts. I can tell you care deeply about truth and about people not being misled, and I respect that. For me personally, I’m trying to stay focused on something simpler right now — growing in Christ, keeping my heart steady, and learning how to walk with Him day by day.

A lot of discussions about labels, movements, or what other people are doing can pull me into places that aren’t really helpful for my own walk. I’m trying to stay centered on what Jesus is doing in me, not on trying to sort out everyone else’s situation.

I agree that loving God first matters, and loving people matters too. That’s the part I’m focusing on — letting God shape my own life, my own choices, and my own direction. Everything else tends to fall into place when I keep my eyes there.

Thanks for the encouragement. I’m just keeping my attention on Christ and letting Him handle the rest.
 

MatthewG

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  1. What did Jesus actually require for someone to follow Him?

**What Jesus Actually Commanded:​

Believe on Him + Love One Another**

1. Believe on the Son

John makes this crystal clear:

“This is His commandment: that we believe on the name of His Son Jesus Christ…” (1 John 3:23)

Jesus said the same thing:

“This is the work of God, that you believe in Him whom He has sent.” (John 6:29)

Belief isn’t just mental agreement. It’s trust. Dependence. Abiding. Receiving life from Him.

It’s the foundation of everything else.


2. Love one another

The second half of the same verse:

“…and love one another, as He gave us commandment.” (1 John 3:23)

Jesus said:

“A new commandment I give to you, that you love one another as I have loved you.” (John 13:34)

Not “as you love yourself.” Not “as you feel like.” But as He loved — sacrificial, patient, humble, Spirit‑empowered love.


These Two Commands Are the Entire Christian Life

Jesus didn’t give a long list. He didn’t build a complicated system. He didn’t create a religious institution.

He gave two commands that flow from one source: Himself.

And here’s the key:

You can’t obey either command without abiding in Him.

Jesus said:

“Without Me you can do nothing.” (John 15:5)

You can’t love like Jesus without Jesus. You can’t walk in the Spirit without the Spirit. You can’t bear fruit without abiding in the Vine.

That’s why the Christian life isn’t:

• self‑effort • moral striving • religious performance • trying harder

It’s abiding.
 

Jack

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  1. What did Jesus actually require for someone to follow Him?

**What Jesus Actually Commanded:​

Believe on Him + Love One Another**

1. Believe on the Son

John makes this crystal clear:

“This is His commandment: that we believe on the name of His Son Jesus Christ…” (1 John 3:23)

Jesus said the same thing:

“This is the work of God, that you believe in Him whom He has sent.” (John 6:29)

Belief isn’t just mental agreement. It’s trust. Dependence. Abiding. Receiving life from Him.

It’s the foundation of everything else.


2. Love one another

The second half of the same verse:

“…and love one another, as He gave us commandment.” (1 John 3:23)

Jesus said:

“A new commandment I give to you, that you love one another as I have loved you.” (John 13:34)

Not “as you love yourself.” Not “as you feel like.” But as He loved — sacrificial, patient, humble, Spirit‑empowered love.


These Two Commands Are the Entire Christian Life

Jesus didn’t give a long list. He didn’t build a complicated system. He didn’t create a religious institution.

He gave two commands that flow from one source: Himself.

And here’s the key:

You can’t obey either command without abiding in Him.

Jesus said:

“Without Me you can do nothing.” (John 15:5)

You can’t love like Jesus without Jesus. You can’t walk in the Spirit without the Spirit. You can’t bear fruit without abiding in the Vine.

That’s why the Christian life isn’t:

• self‑effort • moral striving • religious performance • trying harder

It’s abiding.
Mk 16 He that believeth not shall be DAMNED!

Hell Fire!
 

MatthewG

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What counts as assembling together?

✔ Two believers talking about Christ​

✔ Praying with someone​

✔ Encouraging a brother or sister​

✔ Reading Scripture together​

✔ Sharing struggles and supporting each other​

✔ Meeting in a home​

✔ Meeting in a park​

✔ Meeting online​

✔ Any gathering where Christ is the center​

It’s not about the building. It’s about the Body.


**And here’s the key:​

You can’t assemble in the Spirit without abiding in Christ.**

Real fellowship flows from:

• the Spirit • love • unity • encouragement • truth • mutual strengthening

Not from:

• attendance • obligation • tradition • pressure • guilt
 
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ProDeo

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Debate Questions for Participants
  1. Does Hebrews 10:25 command church attendance or simply encourage fellowship?
  2. Can someone be inside the Kingdom without attending a church building?
  3. Is the modern church model biblical or cultural?
  4. Does salvation depend on faith alone or faith plus participation in church life?
  5. What counts as “assembling together”?
  6. Is a home group or online fellowship equal to church?
  7. Does forcing church attendance create legalism?
  8. What did Jesus actually require for someone to follow Him?

Even more challenging :

9. Can this Bible forum function as a Church ?
 

MatthewG

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I know for me, I come here simply to share information. My desire is to get people thinking, and whatever good comes from that is for the glory of God, not for myself.

When I was young, all I ever heard were pulpit messages about how wrathful God was, how He planned to destroy the whole earth, and how Jesus would return any moment to wipe everything out. That was the mindset handed to me as a child—heaven or hell, fear or escape. But over time my direction changed. And I’m thankful for that. It didn’t happen overnight. It came through reading the Scriptures for myself, believing what I read, and allowing the Spirit to renew my mind. Scripture says, “Be transformed by the renewing of your mind” (Romans 12:2), and that’s exactly what happened.

I did have teachers along the way, but I still had to put in the work on my own time. No one can do your seeking for you. Jesus said, “Seek, and you will find” (Matthew 7:7). That means each person has to search things out for themselves.

So please—never believe something just because I said it. Be encouraged to seek God, to test what people say, and to see whether it is true. The Bible tells us, “Test all things; hold fast what is good” (1 Thessalonians 5:21). That includes anything I share here.

And be careful, because you can fool your own self if you’re not paying attention. James warns that a person can be a hearer of the word and still deceive themselves (James 1:22). If we can deceive ourselves, then of course other people can sway us too if we’re not grounded.

My hope is simply that people think, search, and let God guide them by His Spirit. Everything else is secondary.
 

shepherdsword

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I wonder how many forum members have exchanged the Church for a (this) Bible forum.

I am one of those, not because I have something against Church but of physical limitations.
I am in the same boat brother. I have a struggle with travel. However, I admit if I found a body where I truly fit in I would press in and try to make. As it stands now I have zoom meetings and online fellowship.
 
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MatthewG

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I wonder how many forum members have exchanged the Church for a (this) Bible forum.

I am one of those, not because I have something against Church but of physical limitations.

I am in the same boat brother. I have a struggle with travel. However, I admit if I found a body where I truly fit in I would press in and try to make. As it stands now I have zoom meetings and online fellowship.

Pro, and Shep,

There you go then. People make their choices, and everyone walks according to what they’re able, what they understand, or what they’re comfortable with. We can’t control that. All we can do is stay faithful to what God has shown us.

At the end of the day, it really does come down to faith, trusting God, and loving your neighbor as yourself. Jesus said the whole law hangs on those two things (Matthew 22:37–40). That’s the foundation, and you’re standing on it.

So don’t feel pressured to fix anyone or carry their decisions. You’re doing what you can, and that’s enough. God sees the heart, and He honors sincerity, even when others don’t.

Stay steady. Keep your peace. Walk in love. God will handle the rest.
 

Justified

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I get why you’d feel that way, but concern shouldn’t automatically be the reaction when someone doesn’t attend group gatherings.
Why not? It means something is wrong, spiritually or otherwise. God calls us to his family, not to individuality. Believers are called to use their gifts for the building up of the church.

The New Testament never teaches that a believer’s sincerity is measured by how often they sit in a crowd. It points to things like love, sincerity of heart, and a genuine walk with God.
And I haven't said otherwise. Speaking of love, this is what Jesus says is one of the marks of his followers:

Joh 13:34 A new commandment I give to you, that you love one another: just as I have loved you, you also are to love one another.
Joh 13:35 By this all people will know that you are my disciples, if you have love for one another.”

It's hard to love one another and harder yet for the world to know it if people don't gather together regularly.

There are plenty of reasons a person might not gather in traditional ways — past hurt, unhealthy environments, manipulation, or simply needing space to grow without pressure. None of that means someone isn’t following Christ.
Of course none of those things mean someone isn't following Christ; I never said that was the issue. I do disagree with "simply needing space to grow without pressure."

And Scripture shows that fellowship isn’t limited to a building or a schedule. Jesus said, “Where two or three are gathered in my name, there am I in the midst of them.” That’s real fellowship too.
Of course it is, but that shouldn't replace larger gatherings, unless those are the only believers in a given area.

So instead of assuming something is wrong with someone’s faith, it’s better to let God work with each person individually.
You're the one assuming that I'm assuming something is wrong with someone's faith. It very well could be, but there are other problems that could need addressing. And while God works on people as individuals, he often uses others to do so.

Not everyone’s walk looks the same, and not everyone thrives in the same environments.
Of course, yet, we are called to gather together, whether people like it or not, whether they thrive in such an environment or not. The problem is that you are making a very western church sort of argument, where it becomes about the individual, when God says it's about the body. Western individualism and the love of comfort are a blight on Christianity.
 
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Wrangler

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Is church attendance required to be a Christian, or is it optional?
I think you are conflating 2 points: the requirement for salvation from living the Christian life.

For salvation, church is not required. To live the Christian life, it is. Iron sharpens iron. Only by living life with other believers can one put the principles into practice.
 
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MatthewG

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Why not? It means something is wrong, spiritually or otherwise. God calls us to his family, not to individuality. Believers are called to use their gifts for the building up of the church.


And I haven't said otherwise. Speaking of love, this is what Jesus says is one of the marks of his followers:

Joh 13:34 A new commandment I give to you, that you love one another: just as I have loved you, you also are to love one another.
Joh 13:35 By this all people will know that you are my disciples, if you have love for one another.”

It's hard to love one another and harder yet for the world to know it if people don't gather together regularly.


Of course none of those things mean someone isn't following Christ; I never said that was the issue. I do disagree with "simply needing space to grow without pressure."


Of course it is, but that shouldn't replace larger gatherings, unless those are the only believers in a given area.


You're the one assuming that I'm assuming something is wrong with someone's faith. It very well could be, but there are other problems that could need addressing. And while God works on people as individuals, he often uses others to do so.


Of course, yet, we are called to gather together, whether people like it or not, whether they thrive in such an environment or not. The problem is that you are making a very western church sort of argument, where it becomes about the individual, when God says it's about the body. Western individualism and the love of comfort are a blight on Christianity.
I hear what you’re saying, and I agree with you that Scripture calls believers into a body and not into isolation. Gathering matters, loving one another matters, and using our gifts matters. Where I’m coming from is simply that the presence or absence of group attendance doesn’t automatically reveal the condition of someone’s heart. Sometimes there are wounds, unhealthy environments, or seasons where God is working on someone privately before bringing them back into community. That doesn’t make fellowship optional, but it does mean we shouldn’t jump to conclusions about what is “wrong” when we don’t know the full story. Jesus said the world will know us by our love, not by the size or frequency of our gatherings, and love can be expressed in many forms — large groups, small groups, or even two or three believers walking together. I’m not arguing for individualism or comfort; I’m simply saying that God shapes people differently, and not everyone thrives in the same environments at the same time. The body is real, but so is the Shepherd’s personal work in each of His sheep. Holding both truths together keeps us from assuming too much about someone’s spiritual condition while still honoring the importance of fellowship.
 

MatthewG

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I think you are conflating 2 points: the requirement for salvation from living the Christian life.

For salvation, church is not required. To live the Christian life, it is. Iron sharpens iron. Only by living life with other believers can one put the principles into practice.
I get what you’re trying to separate — salvation vs. Christian living — but I think you’re still adding a requirement the New Testament never actually makes.

You said:

“For salvation, church is not required. To live the Christian life, it is.”
The issue is that Scripture never says that either.

1. “Iron sharpens iron” isn’t a church‑attendance command. Proverbs 27:17 describes relationships, not a building or weekly service. Fellowship is absolutely part of Christian life — but fellowship ≠ institutional church attendance.

Two believers sharpening each other in a living room fulfills that verse just as much as a Sunday service.

2. The New Testament never defines Christian maturity as “attending church.” It defines it as:

  • walking in the Spirit (Gal 5:16)
  • loving one another (John 13:35)
  • living in alignment with Christ’s teachings (John 14:15)
  • carrying each other’s burdens (Gal 6:2)
  • building one another up (1 Thess 5:11)
All of these can happen in homes, friendships, small groups, or any gathering of believers. None of them require a modern church structure.

3. The early church didn’t have church buildings for 300 years. Yet they lived the Christian life fully. They met:

  • in homes
  • in courtyards
  • in small groups
  • in daily fellowship
If “living the Christian life requires church attendance,” then the entire early church failed the requirement.

4. Hebrews 10:25 says “don’t forsake assembling,” not “attend a weekly service.” Assembling can be:

  • two or three gathered (Matt 18:20)
  • a home fellowship
  • a prayer group
  • a shared meal in Christ’s name
The verse warns against isolation — not missing Sunday service.

5. Christian growth comes from abiding in Christ, not attending a building. Jesus said:

“Abide in Me… apart from Me you can do nothing.” (John 15:4–5)

He didn’t say:

“Attend weekly services so you can grow.”

Fellowship is vital — but fellowship is not limited to church attendance.

So the biblical picture is this:

  • Salvation does not require church.
  • Christian living does not require church attendance.
  • Christian living does require fellowship, community, and mutual encouragement — but those are relational, not architectural.
Church can be helpful. Church is not the requirement.
 

MatthewG

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Does salvation depend on faith alone or faith plus participation in church life?

1. What the New Testament says about salvation

Every passage that directly explains how a person is saved points to one thing:

Faith in the Son and His resurrection.

Examples:

  • Romans 10:9–10 — believing in your heart that God raised Him from the dead
  • John 3:16 — believing in the Son
  • Ephesians 2:8–9 — grace through faith, “not of works”
  • John 5:24 — hearing and believing
  • Acts 16:31 — “Believe in the Lord Jesus and you will be saved”
None of these add:

  • church attendance
  • participation in church programs
  • membership
  • sacraments
  • rituals
  • denominational involvement
Salvation is faith, not faith plus anything.


2. What the New Testament says about church life

Church life is described as:

  • fellowship
  • encouragement
  • mutual strengthening
  • sharing burdens
  • building one another up
  • gathering in various forms
These things are good, healthy, and beneficial — but they are never listed as conditions for salvation.

They are fruits of faith, not prerequisites for salvation.


3. The early church proves the point

For the first 300 years:

  • no church buildings
  • no weekly “services” as we know them
  • believers met in homes, courtyards, and small groups
If salvation or Christian living required participation in a modern church structure, then the entire early church failed the requirement.


4. Hebrews 10:25 is about avoiding isolation, not earning salvation

“Do not forsake assembling” means:

  • don’t isolate yourself
  • stay connected to other believers
  • encourage one another
It does not say:

  • “Attend a weekly service or you’re not saved”
  • “Church participation is part of salvation”
The verse is about spiritual health, not salvation requirements.


5. The biblical distinction

Salvation: Faith in the Son, believing God raised Him from the dead.

Christian growth: Fellowship, community, encouragement, walking in the Spirit.

These are related, but not the same.


Final answer

Salvation = faith in Christ alone. Church life = beneficial for growth, but not a salvation requirement.