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| Welcome | So you have a house church? | About HCC | What's New? | Gifts |
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![]() House Church Central is dedicated to the growing house church movement and endeavors to provide house churches with
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Herb DrakeWebServant |
HCC is non-denominational and an effort is made to accommodate Christians of many backgrounds. The house church movement is an attempt to get away from the institutional church, seeking instead to return to the small gatherings of peoples that constituted all of the churches of the New Testament era.
The emphasis at this site is not to criticize the institutional church, but rather to lift up its
alternative. Many house churches start among people who first meet in an institutional setting, and
regular attendance at a good institutional church is encouraged as a source of Christian teaching.
But can one really worship at an institutional church? The fellowship pictured in
Mt. 18:20 (the source of the house church doctrine of church) is "two or three gathered
together." Even "church growth" expert Lyle Schaller says that the "glue"
that is necessary to unite worshippers cannot be achieved as a church grows beyond a limit of about
40 people. Other experts point out
that an assembly larger than a mere dozen people creates an environment in which some of the people
often back away from full participation. And there is the concern so well articulated by
that the institutional church tends toward viewing its members as an "audience" and the
worship experience as a "show." It is better, he said, to view God as the
audience and all the people equally accountable for the "performance" of worshipping in
Spirit and in Truth.
Here are just a few of the reasons:
Christianity to conform to its notion of "civil religion" and "political correctness."
The house church has always been
for this reason, just as Jesus said that his disciples should be in the Sermon on the Mount. That
sermon outlines how the powerless disciple can be salt and light in a dark world (Mt. 5:13-14), how
to withstand evildoers (Mt. 5:39) by showing God's love to the world through suffering at the hands
of persecution from bullies (Mt. 5:39), foreclosing landlords (Mt. 5:40), and occupying Roman
authorities (Mt. 5:41). It speaks of giving and lending to the most hopeless credit risks (Mt. 5:42).
It speaks of a praying community ("Our Father, who art in heaven ..." Mt. 6:9) that fasts
(Mt. 6:16), gives of itself (Mt. 6: 21), and depends completely on God (Mt. 25ff). It speaks
of the non-judgment of individuals (Mt. 7:1), just as it speaks of the need to judge those
who would be authorities in spiritual matters (Mt. 7:15ff).
opportunities in our communities that are especially suited for the house church. An invitation offered
to a work-place acquaintance to a home is much less threatening than one to a church, just as one example.
Another is the unique value of the house church as a ministry to "the damaged" and
the possibility of learning the joy of giving by elevating that practice to a personal level.
Of course there are objections to the independent house church that the reader will need to consider carefully:
process with a certain degree of authority.
While they seek the benefits of the vibrant Christianity that manifests itself in small groups,
and work hard to make small groups a part of the ministry of their churches, many harbor a
concern that the groups might become a threat to their own relevance and livelihood.
It is the hope of House Church Central that this site can help nurture the growth of the movement and also mitigate the concerns of house church nay-sayers.