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1) Is membership in a church NECESSARY for salvation and a Christian Life, or can these things be attained and lived without a church? What is the justification for this?
2) If church membership is necessary, is there any indication that picking the RIGHT church is necessary? Is it the case that it is different strokes for different folks, that diversity in churches is okay and certain churches “fit” certain people, or is it that case that there is ONE church that ALL true Christians are to belong to? What is the justification for this?
3) If there is a right church (or a type of right church), what SIGNS do I look for to find that right one? Is SOLA SCRIPTURA (“scripture alone”, the doctrine that all religious teaching and doctrine is to be found in the Scriptures) a necessary teaching in a church, or is additional reliance on TRADITION necessary to fill apparent gaps? Are SPIRITUAL GIFTS a sign that a church is true, or is that something that ended long ago? What is the justification for this?
I think the issue of the “right” church can be made easier if it is determined whether the church was supposed to be unchanging and universal or if it is supposed to change with the time and place it occupies to more efficiently conduct ministry and fellowship. If the former is true, we should model churches off how churches were in the earliest times of Christianity, but that is a hard task today as some information from that time period is missing. If the latter is true, then it may make the task easier, but some sort of boundary would have to be established where a church is definitively no longer Christian, or else we could easily fall into religious pluralism. It seems that these are questions all Christians should consider.
For salvation, no. For Christian life, you need to at least have a few other believers that you can worship with, look at Scripture with, and pray with. As you develop trust with trustworthy believers, you should be able to lean on them, as they should be able to lean on you.1) Is membership in a church NECESSARY for salvation and a Christian Life, or can these things be attained and lived without a church? What is the justification for this?
The one right Church is not confined to any one denomination of churches. However, there are bad ones which you should avoid. Mormons, Jehovah's Witnesses, "Christian" Scientists, etc. These groups do not preach the Gospel, but a perversion of it.2) If church membership is necessary, is there any indication that picking the RIGHT church is necessary? Is it the case that it is different strokes for different folks, that diversity in churches is okay and certain churches fit certain people, or is it that case that there is ONE church that ALL true Christians are to belong to? What is the justification for this?
I'm a Sola Scriptura guy. That's all I can recommend to you, though some churches with what they call sacred tradition are better than nothing. If they focus more on that than on Jesus Christ being God in the flesh, coming down to earth being born of a virgin, living a perfect life, dying to take the punishment from our sins, rising from the grave, and ascending back to Heaven with the promise of coming again, then get out. No hierarchy is more important than that.If there is a right church (or a type of right church), what SIGNS do I look for to find that right one? Is SOLA SCRIPTURA (scripture alone, the doctrine that all religious teaching and doctrine is to be found in the Scriptures) a necessary teaching in a church, or is additional reliance on TRADITION necessary to fill apparent gaps? Are SPIRITUAL GIFTS a sign that a church is true, or is that something that ended long ago? What is the justification for this?
The Gospel and the rest of God's word are eternal. Worship and ministry traditions change, though - and you'll find that they even changed within the Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox churches as far back as their history goes. If you want my opinion, problems occur when God moves people in a way that is in agreement with Scripture, but church officials oppose it for the sake of preserving a non-biblical tradition which is younger than Scripture by a few hundred years.I think the issue of the right church can be made easier if it is determined whether the church was supposed to be unchanging and universal or if it is supposed to change with the time and place it occupies to more efficiently conduct ministry and fellowship. If the former is true, we should model churches off how churches were in the earliest times of Christianity, but that is a hard task today as some information from that time period is missing. If the latter is true, then it may make the task easier, but some sort of boundary would have to be established where a church is definitively no longer Christian, or else we could easily fall into religious pluralism. It seems that these are questions all Christians should consider.
1) Is membership in a church NECESSARY for salvation and a Christian Life, or can these things be attained and lived without a church? What is the justification for this?
2) If church membership is necessary, is there any indication that picking the RIGHT church is necessary? Is it the case that it is different strokes for different folks, that diversity in churches is okay and certain churches “fit” certain people, or is it that case that there is ONE church that ALL true Christians are to belong to? What is the justification for this?
3) If there is a right church (or a type of right church), what SIGNS do I look for to find that right one? Is SOLA SCRIPTURA (“scripture alone”, the doctrine that all religious teaching and doctrine is to be found in the Scriptures) a necessary teaching in a church, or is additional reliance on TRADITION necessary to fill apparent gaps? Are SPIRITUAL GIFTS a sign that a church is true, or is that something that ended long ago? What is the justification for this?
I think the issue of the “right” church can be made easier if it is determined whether the church was supposed to be unchanging and universal or if it is supposed to change with the time and place it occupies to more efficiently conduct ministry and fellowship. If the former is true, we should model churches off how churches were in the earliest times of Christianity, but that is a hard task today as some information from that time period is missing. If the latter is true, then it may make the task easier, but some sort of boundary would have to be established where a church is definitively no longer Christian, or else we could easily fall into religious pluralism. It seems that these are questions all Christians should consider.