Looking to the Bible On the Multi-Site Issue
Let me say first of all what a privilege it was to have been invited to participate in the panel discussion at Southern Seminary a couple of weeks ago. I count all the men on that stage as friends—some of them long and deep friendships, others new and deepening. Whatever else we talked about there, the most important fact is that we are all men who are deeply in love with Christ’s church and have given our lives, in one way or another, to serve her. We may disagree on the multi-site issue, but there’s a mountain of agreement and respect under that.
I know I’m a little late in posting this—life calls, ya know?—but I think it would be useful to lay out in more detail the case I was able to make only very briefly, and really only as a bald assertion, during the SBTS panel. That is, there is no example in Scripture, either in Acts or anywhere else, of a multi-site church as we think about that today. Whatever the size, whatever the circumstances, they seem to have met together, and you have to do quite a bit of speculation to get to any other conclusion.
I realize that for some people, it won’t change much in their thinking even if it becomes really clear to them that the NT church met together. There’s a real debate going on, apparently—even among Baptists, of all people—about whether the example of the NT is prescriptive for us. I think it is prescriptive, and I think that’s an incredibly important point, but I’m not going to argue it here.
This post is for those many Baptists who agree with me that we should take the NT example as prescriptive, but who
are perhaps set on their heels a bit by the argument that it would have been impossible for “the church” in
1) In Acts 2:41, “about three thousand souls” became
Christians and therefore a part of the church.
It’s often asserted that there was no place in
2) Acts 4:4 says that “the number of men grew to about five thousand.” It’s often said that we really ought to understand this as more like twenty-thousand, since the five-thousand is only explicitly “men.” Maybe; you have to do quite a bit of two-thousand-year-old crowd estimation there, which would seem to be a tricky task. But regardless of what number you finally come up with—5000, 10000, 20000—5:12 is about as explicit as it could be: “And all the believers used to meet together in Solomon’s Colonnade.” All of them. Met together.
3) In 6:2, the apostles somehow manage to “gather all the disciples together” in order to take care of the food distribution problem. Gathered. All of them. Together.
4) In 8:1, the church in
5) 9:31 is admittedly strange—the only place in Scripture
where “church” seems to be used for something other than a local assembly or the
universal church. I think there are a
couple of options here. A) It could be
referring to the one
6) This is just an observation, and I haven’t looked at it
exhaustively, but the apostle Paul seems to have been pretty careful about all
this in how he addresses his letters. Take Romans, for instance. We know from Romans 16 that there are
multiple churches in
The point of all this is simply to say that the unbroken example of the NT seems to be that each church met together in one place. That was true after the scattering, when churches were smaller, and it was true before the scattering, too, when the church in Jerusalem was enormous.
To get to a multi-site church, then, I think you'd have to do one of two things: Either show that the NT pattern isn't what I'm seeing here, or say that the NT's example isn't prescriptive. Over to you....



Greg,
Great post. By the way, I thought you did an excellent job defending the Alamo on the panel!
Grant
Posted by: Grant Gaines | Nov 17, 2009 2:52:35 PM
Thank you for posting this. I listened to the SBTS panel and was disappointed that 4 of the 5 participants were leaders in "multi-site" churches. I would have liked to have heard a panel which was more evenly weighted. I did appreciate hearing what you had to say during that discussion.
Posted by: PJ King | Nov 17, 2009 10:26:01 PM