That is where your mistake begins, there are many Christians who are not in the church, there are many churches that contain few, if any, Christians.
There are Christians who don't "go to church", yes. And in my experience that has always been because they are sick of discussions about bricks and mortar, debates about some triviality of church practice or maybe of arguments like this one, when the church should be focussing on mission, preaching the Good News, being salt and light to the world, and so on.
The word "Christian" has become devalued, yes - and now seems to include those who have been baptised, live in a Christian country and do good deeds.
But in my posts I have also written of accepting Jesus as Lord and being born again by the Holy Spirit. THAT is what makes someone a Christian.
I think I also previously said that the church is all believers. Catholics, Anglicans, Methodists, Baptists etc etc all believe the same Gospel and have the same Father and Saviour.
The way that you define church is so inexact so general has to have almost no meaning.
No, it's the word "Christian" that has become devalued and inexact.
The followers of the Way were called Christians because they were like Christ and doing the same things that he did; healing, raising the dead and preaching the Good News. Sometimes they fearlessly challenged the authorities - the religious leaders who were so blinded by tradition and their interpretation of it, that they missed Jesus.
I have spoken with many Protestants who maintain that church means the body of Christ
It does. We all belong to Christ and are members of his body.
and a few who say that church means a building. In this very thread one Christian has told me, the church means a building. And even after posting a quite good definition for that christian they retained the view that church means building.
Of course church does not mean building, it means the house of God,
It means the body of Christ.
ALL who believe and trust in Jesus as their Saviour and Lord are IN Christ - branches on the vine, sheep in the Shepherd's fold, living stones with Christ as the foundation and so on.
Yes, there are people who would say they are Christian and mean that they go to church occasionally and do good deeds. Just as there are people who say they are Catholic but don't go to Mass or no longer attend a Catholic church. I know; I have spoken to them. But it's not for us to decide whether they are true Christians or not.
in the scriptures that house is called the Temple of The Holy Spirit.
No, WE are temples of the Holy Spirit. That was what happened at Pentecost; the prophecy given to Joel, "my Spirit will be poured out on ALL people", was fulfilled.
Paul wrote those words about the body being a temple of the Holy Spirit to a group of believers who were engaged in sexual immorality, 1 Corinthians 3:16; 1 Corinthians 6:19.
So yes, the church is the body of Christ, it is the temple of The Holy Spirit,
All Christians - born again believers who are IN Christ - are members of his body.
All believers are temples of the Holy Spirit.
But I think that you are not yet prepared to say that the Church is The pillar and foundation of the truth.
JESUS is Truth.
True believers accept Jesus, have received Jesus, live in Jesus and follow Jesus.
I think that you would rather put that on to the Bible,
No, the Bible contains God's word of truth - Jesus is THE Word. He is God's final word. The Alpha and the Omega - the first letter and the last, and every letter in between.
or maybe you'd be willing to put it on to the Holy Spirit speaking in the holy scriptures.
The Holy Spirit - the Spirit of the Lord and Spirit of Jesus, who is the Spirit of Truth - is also God.
But you will not allow the church to occupy that role,
To occupy a position reserved for God? No.
Each Christian congregation has rules, discipline and authority, yes. And members should, rightly, submit to that authority.
But Jesus has received ALL authority, Matthew 28:18 - and if church practice contradicts Jesus' words and teachings, we are to obey Jesus.
Without a clear definition of what you think the church is it will be impossible to make any real headway in a discussion about unity.
I know what the church is - and I know what a Christian is.
I am pleased that you don't consider the church to be
A building. But, it seems, you do consider it to be an institution - one headed by the Apostles and their successors who, for you, hold as much authority as the Bible. And only believers who acknowledge that authority, tradition and teaching are the church.
Without The Instrumentality of the church, nobody will be saved.
People are saved through and by Jesus - no one and nothing else. Or don't you believe Peter's words in Acts 4:12?
And what is the mission of the church, if not to communicate the gospel to the world as well as to the faithful? So, truly the church does save,
No - Jesus saves.
We are told to preach the Gospel, yes - we are only God's instruments; God's mouthpiece.
If a person listen to the Gospel, that is because the Spirit is working in them; maybe as a response to our prayers. If a person responds to the words that the Spirit gives to us/ to our clergy, evangelists etc, that is still the Spirit at work.
The praise and credit should go to the Spirit whose role is to point people to Jesus, and not to the person who obeyed Jesus's command to preach his words.
No, I don't want to answer that. You're only repeating what I've already said, there is nothing to answer.
Well I wasn't actually.
You said that it was not enough to declare Jesus as Lord and believe that he had been raised; that we needed to add resurrection of the saints and other doctrines to the definition of the Gospel.
I said that Jesus taught all those things - except ordination - and that a person who accepts Jesus accepts his words and teachings.
In other words "receiving Jesus as Lord" means accepting all that he was, is and all that he said.
Besides there is a lot more than the few things that you mentioned from my post in a statement of faith. A statement of faith has to cover a lot of ground,
The first creed, or statement of faith, was "Jesus is Lord".
it suggests no such thing; I do not know why it is so common for people to make these bad logic errors when dealing with Catholic teaching.
It's got nothing to do with Catholic teaching.
The fact that you "did not want to answer" my post - and questions - which was written in answer to yours suggested to me that you either couldn't be bothered or that you had no answer.
You have now written an answer to it - some of which I agree with - so thank you.