
There’s a lot that’s wrong with the church today.
Over and over, I see similar complaints:
- “The church today is compromised!”
- “The modern church is about entertainment!”
- “The contemporary church is more about personalities than about Jesus!”
- “Today’s preachers just say what people want to hear!”
- “Did you see the expensive sneakers on that pastor?!”
I don’t disagree that there’s a whole lot of mess going on. But one of the fastest ways to get me to stop listening is to complain about “the church today.”
Why?
Because it betrays a serious lack of understanding about church history.
No Perfect Churches – Ever
Yes, the church today is compromised, shallow, legalistic, petty and unforgiving. But no more than it’s been in every era.
Including the over-idealized church of your childhood and of the first century.
There has never been a perfect church.
Never a church without compromise. Never a church without shallow, toxic people, self-serving preachers, you name it.
The Imperfect First Century Church
If the church had been perfect in the first century, we wouldn’t have several of the New Testament books.
The Galatians we’re leaving grace for old-school legalism. The Ephesians very quickly lost their first love. The Laodiceans were lukewarm. And the Corinthians? Oh my. Where do I begin with them?
Yet God used the faithful, imperfect, striving, in-need-of-radical-forgiveness first century church to turn the world upside-down.
It gives me hope.
Imperfect, But Usable
Yes, the church has problems. It always has. And until we’re in heaven, we always will.
We should never dismiss or downplay our need for repentance, forgiveness and holiness, but we need to stop thinking that the church today is less capable of being used by God than it has ever been.
God has always used imperfect people and imperfect churches, because that’s all there is to work with.
Which means he can use me. And the church I serve. And you. And the church you serve.
No, today’s church is not what it should be. It’s never been what it should be.
That may be one of the reasons Jesus told us “I will build my church.” Because he knew we’d always be a work in progress.
Copyright © 2019 by the author or Christianity Today.
Click here to read our guidelines concerning reprint permissions.
Pivot is a part of CT's
Blog Forum. Support the work of CT.
Subscribe and get one year free.
The views of the blogger do not necessarily reflect those of Christianity Today.
Join in the conversation about this post on Facebook.
- Ending Human Trafficking, with Dr. Sandra Morgan (Ep 28)In this episode we talk about how healthy churches are uniquely positioned to help prevent human trafficking
- The Unexpected Origins of the Church Growth Movement, with Dr. Gary McIntosh (Ep 27)The origins of church growth are far different than what most of us have been taught recently, according to Dr. McIntosh.
- Destigmatizing the "M" Word (Marketing), with Austin Savage (Ep. 26)
- Why Your Church Needs A Website And Social Media, with Josh Givens (Ep 25)