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From the Manse June 2007
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It’s
quarter past seven on a Sunday evening and I’m at home. It doesn’t
happen very often. In fact, I doubt if there have been a dozen times in
the last thirty years when I’ve not been in church on a Sunday evening.
Of those nearly all have been down to illness or accident (I once spent
a month in hospital with my leg in traction). But today’s different.
It’s Jesse who’s ill so I’ve stayed in with him and John while Anne
takes Vicky to church. In God’s kind providence David Last is here as
our guest preacher this weekend. So I can happily leave things in his
hands. Otherwise Anne wouldn’t have managed to get out at all today. As
it is, here I am, fit and well, sitting at home while others are
gathering to worship.
It’s a strange feeling. I’m restless, uneasy. I feel I’m
missing something. I know a mile away, others are singing great hymns of
praise together. I’ve tried to sing here on my own, but I’m painfully
conscious of my own voice. Instead of being carried along by the voices
of others, I’m having to force myself to keep going. I press on to the
end of the hymn but wonder if I’ve worshipped at all.
By now I expect David will have begun to explain God’s
Word and to apply it to himself and all who are in the meeting. I’ve
tried to read the Bible here to myself, but it’s hard to concentrate.
So often when I’m listening to another man preach, or even at times when
I’m preaching myself, I’ve been aware that something hugely important is
happening - that we’re doing something of eternal significance. It’s
hard to feel that here on my own.
If I’m honest, my natural inclination is to lay aside my
Bible, leave my prayers, and pick up a novel or turn on the radio. It’s
hard to remember that this is the Lord’s Day, our Sabbath, a day to be
used entirely for the Lord, a day for renewing my soul. Cut off from
the Lord’s people, even for one Sunday evening, I’m aware that my
determination to put God first is slipping.
That month I spent in hospital 20 odd years ago was the
hardest month of my life spiritually. How I hated being away from the
Lord’s people, from the meetings of the church. How I hated being every
day being the same - seven days a week spent listening to people chatter
on about empty things - seven days a week, fourteen hours a day with the
television on in the background. And how I hated my own hardness of
heart: the fact that I found it so hard to pray, to read the Bible, to
worship. I learned back then just how vital it is to get to the
meetings of the church; how quickly we decline spiritually when we miss
the shared worship of the church. Tonight has been a reminder of the
lessons I learned back then.
It’s Monday now. And I’m still reflecting on the lessons
of last night.
Why
is it so important that every Christian should aim to be at all the
meetings of the church? There are many
reasons.
Firstly, each of us has a
duty to our
fellow-Christians. As it says in our church’s covenant of
membership, we must “come together at
such times as we agree among ourselves..” Why? Because we have
a responsibility to “cleave to, to
support, and whenever possible, to encourage by our presence..”
our fellow-Christians. Those words
“whenever possible” are important. Yes there will be times when
it’s not possible to get to all the meetings we’ve agreed together.
It’s not possible for both Anne and myself to be there tonight. In a
family where there are young children, it’s sometimes not possible for
both parents to get to evening meetings even when all the children are
well. It may be that the only job you can get is one that makes it
impossible for you to get to every meeting. There may be times when
you’re genuinely too ill to come. But
whenever possible we owe it to our fellow-Christians to be there
for them. The writer to the Hebrews says,
“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...” (Hebrews
10:24). You may feel that there’s not a lot you can do to stir up your
fellow-believers. But just by being there, you do encourage them. And
when you stay away you discourage them.
Secondly each of us has a duty
to the church
of which we’re part. Remember, the church is more than just the
sum total of the people who attend it. Each local church is supposed to
be a single body, a single family, an army marching together. The Bible
uses all those pictures for the life of the church. We’re supposed to
learn together as one, to work together as one, to pray together as one,
to worship as one. If any Christian is missing, the church can’t
function as it should. As the church meets and listens to Bible
preaching, the church together learns new lessons. If you’re missing,
that means that there’s one lesson that everybody else will learn but
you’ll miss out on. The church as a whole will learn to think in a
united way - but you’ll be left behind - and the oneness of the church
will be damaged. As the church meets and prays together, the church
together agrees what blessings it needs from God, asks for them and
waits for them. But if you’re not there at the prayer meeting you won’t
even know what needs we’ve talked about together and what we’ve asked
for from God. You won’t be one with the church in its praying.
If you miss meetings of the church, you simply won’t know
what’s going on a lot of the time. You won’t know about the work the
church is doing. You won’t know about the joys and sorrows of other
members. You won’t know about the encouragements the Lord gives us as a
church. If the church is supposed to be a single body, you’ll be like a
finger that’s been nearly severed and is no longer moving with the other
fingers. Paul wrote to the Philippians that they should be
“standing firm in one spirit with one
mind striving side by side for the faith of the gospel... being of the
same mind, having the same love, being in full accord and of one mind.”
(Philippians 1:27, 2:2). If we can’t even get to meetings, we’re never
going to experience that.
Thirdly each of us has a duty
to the unconverted folk around us.
When we get to meetings, we’re reminding the people of this world
that God is real and that He is important. Your neighbours notice when
you go out to church. As you walk out of your front door each Sunday
morning and evening holding your Bible, you’re telling them, “whatever
anybody else thinks, I’m going to put God first”. Teenagers growing up
in our society have been told that God is dead - that nobody believes in
Him anymore. But when they pass the hall where we meet and see the sign
outside and the cars in the carpark, they know it’s not true.
And by the same token, if we miss meetings we’re giving
unbelievers excuses to ignore God. Even our own children get the
point. They can say to themselves, “If mum (or dad, or uncle so and so
from the church) really believed that the Bible was God’s word, they’d
make sure that they got to every meeting to learn more about it.” Every
time you choose to stay away from a meeting, you’re saying to your own
children, or to other people’s children, “Whatever we may preach to you
week by week, we don’t really believe God is all that important..”
Fourthly each of us has a duty,
to God
Himself. The ultimate
reason we have meetings at all is to bring glory to Him. We think it’s
natural to meet with other people to pay honour to anyone we think is
important. If the Queen comes to Stockport, thousands of people will
line the streets to do her honour. If the England football team came
back from the World Cup victorious, crowds would gather at the airport
to honour them. If granddad reaches his eightieth birthday, the whole
family gets together to show their respect. Just by turning up on these
occasions, we’re saying to the person we want to honour, “We think
you’re great!” If nobody turned up to the royal occasion, to the
victory parade, to the party, what a shame it would be... Well, the
meetings of the church are our opportunity to turn out to give honour to
our King, our Conquering Hero, our Father, our God.
“Enter His gates with thanksgiving and His courts with praise. Give
thanks to Him, bless His name. For the LORD is good...”
So there you have four good reasons to be at the meetings
of the church wherever possible. But
there is a fifth. You have a duty
to yourself.
That was what I realised during that month in hospital all those
years ago. And it’s what I realised afresh last night. I need the
meetings of the church. I need to be with other believers. I need to
pray with them. I need to sing with them. I need to be where Jesus
Christ is - and He has promised to be with the church in a special way
when it meets. If I miss a meeting of the church without good reason,
I’m robbing myself. I’m robbing myself of encouragement and
friendship. I’m robbing myself of comfort and strength. I’m robbing
myself of an opportunity to have fellowship with God. I’m robbing
myself of happiness. Yes of
course, there are meetings which we don’t enjoy, meetings that seem dull
or dreary. But the fact is still that it’s only by that determination
to get to meetings that we’ll find happiness in the Christian life. To
be a happy Christian you have to be a person who puts God first. And
getting to meetings whenever possible
is a crucial part of that. Show me a Christian who’s casual and
irregular in getting to meetings and I’ll show you an unhappy
Christian.
Listen to the psalmist in his “Song for the Sabbath”. He
rejoiced that he could get to meetings morning and evening."
It is good to give thanks to the LORD, to sing praises to your name, O
most High; to declare your steadfast love in the morning, and your
faithfulness by night...” (Psalm 92:1) Or as Isaac Watts
paraphrased it:
“Sweet is the work my
God, my King
To praise Thy name, give thanks and sing;
To tell Thy love by morning light
And speak of all Thy truth at night.”
I wish I
could have been there yesterday to
speak of all His truth by night. Maybe I needed to be kept away
to remind me of just how great a privilege it is to worship God with His
people. I hope to arrive on Wednesday night and then next Lord’s Day
with a renewed sense of anticipation and joy. I want to be there to
share in the “sweet work” of praising God. And I want you to be there
to enjoy that work with me.
God
bless you all, Stephen
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