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Why The Gathering Matters

October 24, 2021 • Eddie Williams • Acts 2:37–47

In years past it has been easy to take gathering together as the church for granted. In a Post-Covid world, many of us returned to gathering albeit in a modified way. However, for some, the importance of the gathering is lost on us as we have grown accustomed to Sundays alone, and for others, we’ve just gotten busy with life. The issue is Jesus called us to be church and to be church we have to be together. When we don’t gather we miss out on engaging God in the way he created to engage him: Together. We also miss the profound opportunity of experiencing the Holy Spirit move amongst us to convict us of sin, comfort us in hardship and confront the lost in love.

More from We Are Church

Why Mission Matters

November 21, 2021 • Ken Flower • Matthew 28:18–20

Being the church requires doing what the church is created for. Nothing is more urgent than the mission Jesus gives the church to make disciples. We have been adopted in God’s wonderful family, and we should seek to extend that love to others so they too can join the family of the Father. Living out God’s mission slowly brings the Eternal Kingdom into fruition while granting us immeasurable purpose in the process.

Why Prayer & Worship Matter

November 14, 2021 • Donald Zimmerman • 1 Timothy 2:1–8

Prayer is the life force of our spiritual lives that grows the church, individually and communally. When we pray we unleash the Holy Spirit to guide us through our daily lives and to move God’s will into existence. When we pray we get in touch with God’s overarching plans, and this brings us joy, peace, and contentment in our everyday lives. God is also capable of moving in powerful ways if we pray. But without prayer, we experience powerless lives, out of touch with our father and his love.

Why Community Matters

November 7, 2021 • Eddie Williams • Acts 2:42–47

Community isn’t simply a fun addition to a great church that helps you find friends. Community is how the church solves our created instinct for love, affection, correction, and confidence in Jesus. When we miss out on the community a church provides we fill those needs in other ways or neglect them altogether. We need community, not because something is wrong with us, but because something is right with us. This also means that our neighbors and friends who don’t know Jesus need community as well, and the church can help them meet that deep, core need.