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Six Reasons The Church Still Matters
By Ray Hollenbach on Mar 5, 2026
Despite the failures of many congregations, Scripture presents the church as God’s design for spiritual growth, community, authority, and witness in the world.
Six Reasons the Church Still Matters
Many people today question the importance of the church because they have seen hypocrisy, dysfunction, or abuse within Christian communities. Yet Scripture consistently presents the church as God’s intentional design for His people. Followers of Jesus were never meant to live out their faith in isolation but within a gathered community shaped by worship, structure, authority, love, and shared mission. When the church functions according to God’s design, it becomes a place where believers grow, forgive one another, are equipped for ministry, and bear witness to Christ together. Despite its imperfections, the church remains God’s gift to the world and an essential part of the Christian life.
It’s difficult to stand in defense of the church when there are so many examples of dysfunctional churches around us. But sometimes, as preachers, we need to remind our own congregations that the Church is vitally important. We were designed for community, but also something beyond mere community — we were designed for the church.
Many people will object, and nearly everyone has gruesome tales of hypocrites, self-righteous blowhards, and sexual predators. I get it. Some parts of the North American church are desperately sick, and in many cases, the church hinders the spiritual growth of believers. But before we allow our people to have coffee and croissants at Starbucks and call it church, I’d like to suggest that God has given us a few clues about what He thinks makes up a church. The bottom line is this: Church is God’s idea, and we ignore it at our peril.
These points could be the start of a series, or they could be rolled into one powerful message. Perhaps you have other observations, but here is one man’s list of at least six vital parts of a real church:
1. The church meets together regularly
Sunday morning isn’t the only possibility, although the earliest followers of Jesus celebrated his resurrection by naming the first day of the week "The Lord's Day." Acts 2:42-47 suggests they met together far more than North Americans might find comfortable. In a variety of settings, for a multitude of reasons, followers of Jesus meet together regularly and share their lives together. This much is sure: a regularly scheduled, habitual gathering is a mark of the church.
2. The church has a defined structure
Structure is built into God’s order of creation. Single-celled organisms reveal astonishing complexity of function; in the human body, there is individualized function. Without the structure of a skeleton, the body cannot stand. These physical realities point toward spiritual truth. Amazingly, the scripture seems to endorse a variety of church structures, but every New Testament church had a recognizable structure. We can disagree on what that structure may look like, but it’s not possible to read Acts or the Epistles without recognizing its importance.
3. The church provides authority
Authority! Just mention the word and people tense up. Abuses abound, guilt is common currency, and many churches in North America differ little from the business down the street. Yet we all must personally come to terms with passages like, “Obey your leaders and submit to their authority.” –Hebrews 13:17
Paul’s letters to Timothy and Titus could be considered all about authority! Nearly everyone has a horror story about abuse of authority in the church. Here’s my take: Authority without compassion and relationship makes a sham of God’s Kingdom, but compassion and relationship without authority miss God’s Kingdom entirely. That will preach!
4. The church is a proving ground for love and forgiveness
“Therefore, as God's chosen people, holy and dearly loved, clothe yourselves with compassion, kindness, humility, gentleness and patience. Bear with each other and forgive whatever grievances you may have against one another. Forgive as the Lord forgave you. And over all these virtues put on love, which binds them all together in perfect unity” –Colossians 3:12-14. These words are impossible to live out in isolation. I believe the Father designed families and churches as the venues for love and forgiveness. How can we live out these words apart from our families, or the church, which is the family of God?
5. The church equips God’s people
Christian maturity requires a nurturing family atmosphere. Gifts of the Holy Spirit and the development of Christian character thrive in a healthy community. Entertainment, apart from equipping, is antithetical to God’s plan for the church — there are plenty of churches that amount to nothing more than TV shows. But fellowship and community without equipping also fall short of the mark. If there's no equipping going on, it's not fully the church. Jesus is into lab, not lecture. And it's not recess, either.
6. The church provides a unique corporate witness
There have been exceptional individuals throughout history. Saints and geniuses appear larger than life, and because they are so exceptional, they are easily dismissed as individuals, even freaks. But who could dismiss an entire community of faith?
“A new command I give you: Love one another. As I have loved you, so you must love one another, by this all men will know that you are my disciples, if you love one another.” –John 13:34
The early church would either get you healed or care for you until you died. Widows, orphans, and outcasts of the first century knew there was a refuge called “the church.” Perhaps you're like me: you can imagine some people will listen to you preach on the importance of the church and think, "Of course, he says that. It's what he does for a living." Don't let imagined criticism keep you from boldly pointing to what our people need. Jesus paid the price for each individual, but the church is his gift to the world.
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