Weekly Pursuit—Week of July 09, 2023

THE WAY TO PRACTICE THE HOME MEETINGS—MUTUALITY IN THE CHURCH MEETINGS

Due to the history of Christianity nearly all Christians today, including us, are not used to having mutuality in their meetings. Mostly in the so-called Christian services we see that one or two persons speak, and the rest are just the audience. This is altogether not according to the scriptural teaching.

In the New Testament there are two main categories of Christian meetings. The first one is the meeting of the ministry, the meeting of the apostles, the meeting of any gifted persons such as Peter on the day of Pentecost. The meeting on the day of Pentecost was a meeting for the ministry. This kind of meeting cannot be considered as a meeting of the church and in the church. On the other hand, when 1 Corinthians 14 speaks of the meeting, it is referring to the meeting of the church and in the church. Verse 23 says, “If therefore the whole church comes together.” This is the meeting of the church and in the church. When we speak of the home meetings, we are surely referring to the meetings in the church and the meetings of the church. 

In the preaching or teaching of the meeting of the ministry, there is not much mutuality and not much speaking one to another. But according to 1 Corinthians 14, in the church meetings there is the basic need, the basic factor, of mutuality. First Corinthians 14:23 says, “If therefore the whole church comes together.” Then verse 26 says that in this kind of meeting “each one has a psalm, has a teaching, has a revelation, has a tongue, has an interpretation.” This shows us that the meeting of the church and in the church depends upon mutuality. There is always the feeling of one to another. 

We must keep it well in mind that the home meetings surely are not meetings of any ministry. The home meetings are absolutely the meetings of the church and in the church. They depend one hundred percent upon mutuality. If there is no mutuality, there is no home meeting. To have a home meeting without mutuality causes that home meeting to lose its nature; it would not be a home meeting of the church. It might still be a home meeting but only of a small ministry where one speaks while all the rest listen. A speaker would be there with a small audience, but there would be no mutuality. First Corinthians 14 is the unique chapter in Paul’s writings that teaches us something about the church meetings. In this unique chapter there is the basic factor of mutuality. (CWWL, 1985, vol. 3, “The Home Meetings–the Unique Way for the Increase and the Building Up of the Church”, pp. 145-146)


cebuano version to follow

Leave a comment