Ask Your Preacher - Archives

Ask Your Preacher - Archives

“Meeting Needs”

Categories: THE NEW TESTAMENT CHURCH, WORSHIP
Where we worship, there are a great number of people in need of healthcare.  It seems every time the announcements are made, we mention several who have missed because they are sick or in the hospital.  Where does the burden of responsibility lie for a church meeting the needs of its sick?  Considering the purpose of the church includes assembling, where do we stop in our efforts to help people assemble?

Sincerely,
Support Staff

Dear Support Staff,

Technically, it isn’t the job of the church to make sure people get to church services; it is the church’s job to make sure services happen.  That distinction can be seen in Heb 10:24-25 because individuals were rebuked for forsaking the assembly.  It is the individual’s responsibility to make it to services, not the church’s job to drag them there.

Having said that, we shouldn’t be cold-hearted toward people’s needs.  If there is a way for others to “do good to the household of faith” (Gal 6:10) by providing rides, that is more than appropriate and a great example of christian hospitality (1 Pet 4:9).  But once again, we are talking about individuals helping other individuals.

The church is told to assemble on the first day of the week as a minimum (Acts 20:7, 1 Cor 16:1-2).  That is the sum total of God’s command for the collective local body – it is very generic.  Within that generic command, a congregation can decide where, when, etc. based upon what is expedient and useful.  The specifics are left up to the local church to decide using wisdom (Pr 4:7).  The church has to factor in the needs of every member (ailing and healthy) when deciding when to meet.  It isn’t about meeting the needs of one particular group of people; it is about trying to balance everyone’s needs.  That looks different in each congregation because each congregation is made out of a unique collection of people.