How To Have A Small Fellowship

A Small Fellowship, get it?

Acts 2:42 is a fantastic passage for seeing what some of the earliest Christians focused their attentions on after Peter’s sermon on Pentecost: “And they devoted themselves to the apostles’ teaching and the fellowship, to the breaking of bread and the prayers.”

Luke, who wrote the book of Acts, notes the focus of these early believers: Apostolic teaching, Fellowship, breaking of bread, & prayers.   The early Jerusalem church does a good thing in focusing on all of these issues, and we do a bad thing when we favor one against the other.   Today I want to look at the problems that come with ignoring the koinónia or fellowship mentioned.

How is fellowship corporately lost?  I submit that it is most often (but not always) muscled out in favor of teaching.  (pause for collective gasp).

This is not to say that biblical teaching is unimportant, Luke may have been submitting an unordered list, but if he were to have put the early church’s focus in order of importance, apostolic teaching would still have been at the top.  A problem does arise, however, when all a church does is teaching.   If the pattern is simply show up, sit down, close your mouth, and listen to the teaching (repeat once during midweek and twice on Sundays and make it the predominant feature of any other ‘event’) and then leave, then the only familiarity will be from identifying the sometimes nameless faces.  The body will become familiar with one another, but that’s about it.  In college I was familiar with a bunch of people, saw them every day in class.  We listened to the lectures together, but I wasn’t about to mistake that for fellowship.

This is not the way it’s supposed to be.  We’re supposed to be able to rejoice with one another when they rejoice, weep with one another when they weep (Romans 12:15).  This is difficult to do if our “fellowship” finds its equivalence with the people who work in the office above or below you.

“That’s what’s-her-name from the office downstairs.”

You know the face, but not the name.  Or maybe you know the name too and a few trivial factoids.

“You’re the guy who likes motorcycles, right?”

That’s nothing substantial.  Nothing shared.   When Romans 12:15 gets applied to that sort of a situation, the best rejoicing is a half-hearted “That’s great!” or “Good for them!”.   The closest weeping a temporary “That’s awful.” or “That’s too bad.” depending on severity.

This isn’t the only problem with having a church without fellowship.  Christians  will often seek Christian fellowship elsewhere if there is no opportunity for unified fellowship among the brethren.  So, the brethren can’t find fellowship with all the church when they’re together as a church, they will often find Christian fellowship with the church members they come in contact with most often in their day to day lives.  There’s nothing bad about this by itself, everyone does that already.  I have closer friends than others when it comes to the church based on how often I see them, but when there’s nothing substantial at home base, those outside relationships become the fellowship that is perpetuated when the church gathers.  True koinónia fellowship for one outside of a given clique seems next to impossible.  The love is from without, and it’s brought within.

I propose that a healthy church develops a deep love for one another within through regular and active Christian fellowship.  This is more than sitting with your family eating potluck food that someone else brought.  That love spreads outside with a desire to seek and serve the lost (rather than find a missing fellowship).  When the lost are discipled and come in, they join a fount of love and fellowship that exists among the body because of Christ, rather than through a clique because of work or shopping habits.

So, how to get that done?  Are you part of a clique yourself?  Is it even a bad thing?

Spread the Word:
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Google Buzz
  • Digg
  • email
  • JRH1

    ‘two are better than one, because they have a good reward for their toil. For if they fall, one will lift up his fellow. But woe to him who is alone when he falls and has not another to lift him up! Again, if two lie together, they keep warm, but how can one keep warm alone? And though a man might prevail against one who is alone, two will withstand him — a threefold cord is not quickly broken.’ Ecc. 4:9-12

    Facing a life directional decision and having discussed it with others whom I know and trust, the fellowship of the body of Christ is personally dear to me. Much like reading Scripture and having it speak to you where you are in your life, time with fellow believers is often similarly encouraging. Though others may not have an exact experience, wisdom often comes through the recollection and sharing of similar experiences and verses or passages that might have been pertinent during that time. And, as history continues to repeat itself (man is not evolving!), the necessity of passing on life experiences and the lessons learned through them stands strong. Peter’s books take on more meaning when understanding the road he took before authoring them.

    Other thoughts that come to mind-
    In some sense, only receiving the teaching is similar to those in James who look in the mirror and when walking away, forget what they saw

    Hebrews 12 in discussing our Lord’s love for us as displayed through His discipline is followed by an encouragement to tend to the body and ‘See to it that no one fails to obtain the grace of God…’ obviously requiring corporate attention, but not just a superficial, cursory once over. I love how the Lord’s love through discipline goes hand in hand with our corporate encouragement to join together in encouraging each other to obtain the grace of God.

    I’m all for getting in the trenches, but then again, Band of Brothers is definitely in the top ten, so its not really a stretch.

    Sidenote-

    Shown in psychological studies, while observing runners casually running on a track, their speed nearly always increased when they neared the section of the track where people would be seated in the grandstands.

    moral of the story- whether good or bad, the presence of others has an effect on our performance. over time, accountability inevitably plays a positive role in the lives of believers.

    So drop trou!