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A major announcement about house churches (The fastest growing Movement in Christianity)
WorldNetdaily.com ^ | 06/27/2006 | James Rutz

Posted on 06/27/2006 9:56:30 AM PDT by SirLinksalot

A major announcement about house churches

-------------------------------------------------------- Posted: June 27, 2006 1:00 a.m. Eastern

© 2006 WorldNetDaily.com

The little guy is back. For the first time in 1,700 years, simple churches meeting in homes are once again a factor in human events.

In many countries, they're booming so strongly that critics and opponents can no longer brush them aside as a fringe movement. And as I documented repeatedly in "Megashift," home churches are producing millions of proactive Christians who now and then perform miracles (though the credit ultimately belongs to God, of course).

But this week, even I was shocked to discover how big our house church community in North America really is. Briefly stated, we're right about halfway between the Catholic Church and the Southern Baptist Convention (which is the second-largest denomination in the U.S.).

OK now, let's inhale. I'm stunned, too. This really is starting to alter the landscape for all of us.

Let me state up front: These are solid numbers. George Barna, the leading U.S. church pollster and perhaps the most widely quoted Christian leader in America, is the author of the figures below. They are based on a full-on, four-month scientific survey of 5,013 adults, including 663 blacks, 631 hispanics, 676 liberals and 1,608 conservatives.

Nobody argues with numbers from The Barna Group. They employ all the professional safeguards to ensure tight results – in this case, a sampling error of +/-1.8 percent. Here are the results stated in five ways:

In a typical week, 9 percent of U.S. adults attend a house church.

In absolute numbers, that 9 percent equals roughly 20 million people.

In a typical month, about 43 million U.S. adults attend a house church.

All told, 70 million U.S. adults have at least experimented with participation in a house church.

Focusing only on those who attend some kind of church (which I recall is about 43 percent of us), 74 percent of them attend only a traditional church, 19 percent attend both a traditional and a house church, and 5 percent are hard-core house church folks. The study counted only attendance at house churches, not small groups ("cells") that are part of a traditional church.

George Barna is the author of the new best seller, "Revolution," which talks a lot about the kind of person who is leaving the fold of the institutional church and joining things like house churches. Revolutionaries are highly dedicated to Christ and know the Bible better than most. Barna predicts that within 20 years, Revolutionaries will comprise 65-70 percent of U.S. Christianity, leaving in the traditional setting only 30-35 percent (primarily the white-haired crowd).

Please don't think of the house church as a new fad. For the first 300 years of Christianity, house churches were the norm. In fact, church buildings were quite rare until the fourth century, when the power-hungry Roman Emperor Constantine suddenly outlawed house church meetings, began erecting church buildings with Roman tax money, and issued a decree that all should join his Catholic Church. If you want to stick to a biblical model, the house church is your only choice.

In China, the world's largest church (120 million) is 90 percent based in homes. The cover story in this week's World magazine (June 24) is on how Christian business leaders in China are beginning to change the whole situation in that country. Yes, even while Christians in many provinces are hunted down and tortured, CEOs of corporations in areas with freedom are changing the way government looks at Christianity. That is major.

Bottom line: Worldwide, the original church is back, re-creating the biblical model: "Day after day, they met by common consent in the Temple Courts and broke bread from house to house." (Acts 2:46) God is again pouring out His power on plain folks, bringing a megashift – not in our doctrine, but in our entire lifestyle.

House churches in North America are no longer seen as being in conflict with the traditional church. In fact, much to our amazement, noted leaders like Rick Warren have recently come out strongly in favor of house churches. Saddleback Church is even sending out their own members as "missionaries" to start house church networks! And just last week, John Arnott of Toronto Airport Christian Fellowship asked me, as a house church spokesman, to speak at his big annual conference. Unheard of.

Of course, many Christians will prefer to stay in their traditional roles, and that's OK. But now there is a strong alternative for ambitious souls who are crying out to do more, to have more, to be more.

----------------------------------------------------

James Rutz is chairman of Megashift Ministries and founder-chairman of Open Church Ministries. He is the author of "MEGASHIFT: Igniting Spiritual Power," and, most recently, "The Meaning of Life." If you'd rather order by phone, call WND's toll-free customer service line at 1-800-4WND-COM (1-800-496-3266).


TOPICS: Culture/Society; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: christians; growth; housechurches
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To: taxcontrol

That attitude is a slap in the face to the God who gave you a Church first, and entrusted them to pass along to others what was essential, knowing the Holy Spirit would protect and giude them. Only afterwards did He see fit to give us the New Testament.


101 posted on 06/28/2006 7:29:19 AM PDT by Notwithstanding (I love my German shepherd - Benedict XVI reigns!)
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To: Notwithstanding
If 70 million adults in the US have participated in "house church" religion,
the term would be widespread and widely understood.


I think the term is well-known, but the concept of it being a fairly
sizeable phenonmenon is just not grasped by the MSM and even some
more conservative media outlets.
For a fair number of Americans, if it isn't on TV, it doesn't exist.
102 posted on 06/28/2006 7:31:41 AM PDT by VOA
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To: Paperdoll

>>We also have house churches which meet once a week in small groups to discuss the prior Sunday's sermon<<

That's not a house church. It's small group. It is just some of the members of a "normal" church getting together as a small group in someones home. House church means the meeting in your home IS the "church" one goes to.

I am definitely migrating in that direction.


103 posted on 06/28/2006 7:40:58 AM PDT by RobRoy
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To: SirLinksalot
There is a scripture that says, "That man of sin shall not be revealed until there be a great falling away from the church". I always assumed that reason would be at some point people would no longer believe in God, but could it be because many people no longer believe in organized religion and the great buildings they erect? People are not being fed there spiritually. In fact they are anorexic.

I attend very few churches, unless I hear there is going to be some great speaker and I become curious. One I attended in Dallas rivaled any palace I have ever seen on television. As I ascended one side of the double curving marble staircase's, I noticed the worn and pitiful shoes on the feet of the crowd ahead of me on the stairs who had paid for all this, and this was only one of the many palace Churches across the nation of this tv congregation.

It made me feel bad for the flock, they were obviously poor and in need and not cared for. I left halfway through the speech because it was impossible to hear the speaker because of the tongue talking lady sitting in front of me knitting and rattling her head as her husband amened the few times she paused to intake more breath.

More people who are starved for the Word in large institutional churches are finding that there is a feast in the scriptures that can feed a person spiritually their entire lifetime. Perhaps the home church is the answer, but I can see them being more easily picked off by agenda 21. When we received our Agenda 21 packet; hand delivered to doors all over our city, one of the complaints citizens could lodge with the city was too much traffic going through their neighborhoods from people driving down neigborhood streets on their way to church, and home church attenders taking up too much curb side parking with their cars when believers attend home churches.
104 posted on 06/28/2006 8:31:09 AM PDT by MissAmericanPie
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To: Notwithstanding
Well if Christ and the Apostles were still here to hear their teachings directly, I'd be more than happy to do so.

What we have left are the Scriptures as the definitive source... all other is some man interpreting the scripture and trying to push his view on to me. And often I find what is being pushed is either not supported by the scripture or is totally out of context and at best is little more than trying to stretch the scripture to meet their ideas.

When it is backed by scripture, I accept the teaching, when it is not, I at most, consider the teaching but do not accept it as doctrine.
105 posted on 06/28/2006 8:33:05 AM PDT by taxcontrol
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To: Notwithstanding
God gave us a body of believers call the Church (not the Roman Catholic church) and it was a wide range of churches scattered over the Roman empire. The letters to those churches by the Apostles became the books of the New Testament (formed by consensus by 300 religious leaders during the council of Nicaea in 325).
106 posted on 06/28/2006 8:42:55 AM PDT by taxcontrol
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To: taxcontrol

At least you seem to believe in the authority that God gave to the Church to declare that certain writings are God's very own word. So, for at least 300+ years, men who were NOT the original Apostles, had the authority to definitively declare what was and was not the Word of God!

You apparently embrace tradition and do not embarce sola scriptura. The New Testament is the product of a Tradition that existed for 300+ years without that testament. The early church clearly existed without scirpture as its guide. Tradition was its guide. Men, passsing on tradition. Men, whose traditional teaching was eventually declared to be the word of God - the NT.


107 posted on 06/28/2006 9:24:07 AM PDT by Notwithstanding (I love my German shepherd - Benedict XVI reigns!)
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To: RobRoy

Its kind of like putting in a good widescreen TV with surround sound - good-bye to all that inconvenience of going to the movies at a theatre!

No parking problems, no need to follow someone else's arbitrary man-made rules, no need to be next to people we don't like or don't know, flexible schedule that fits in with NFL and NASCAR events, and no need to listen to those damn sermons that don't interest me.

I can see why its popular.


108 posted on 06/28/2006 9:28:26 AM PDT by Notwithstanding (I love my German shepherd - Benedict XVI reigns!)
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To: taxcontrol

Why did those guys at Nicea have any authority to say what was God's Word and what was not?


109 posted on 06/28/2006 9:30:12 AM PDT by Notwithstanding (I love my German shepherd - Benedict XVI reigns!)
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To: taxcontrol

So, consensus of believers is the way to determine what is authentic doctrine?

And if it was the way in 325, is it still the way?

If not, why not?

Since we have no consensus on abortion, then why is it not legit for people to consider abortion morally acceptable?


110 posted on 06/28/2006 9:36:51 AM PDT by Notwithstanding (I love my German shepherd - Benedict XVI reigns!)
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To: Notwithstanding
Biblical authority... none or at least no more than any other man who hears the word of God.

Political authority - because the Roman Emperor Constantine, who was a pagan until his death bed, wanted to consolidate the multiple different belief systems of Christianity at the time into a single belief system.
111 posted on 06/28/2006 9:36:57 AM PDT by taxcontrol
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To: Notwithstanding
"...So, consensus of believers is the way to determine what is authentic doctrine? "

HARDLY

Scripture teaches us that each person will be held accountable for what the listen to and that we should consider carefully what we have heard. Mark 4:22-24. In this passage Jesus tells instructs us to listen with our own ears and consider carefully to what we hear because it will be measured to us.

Each person must consider for themselves what is to be accepted and to be believed. After all, when the individual stands before God to be judged, no pope, priest, pastor, elder, bishop, deacon, etc will be interceding on their behalf. Scripture tells us that it is Jesus who will be interceding for our short comings.

While there are learned people who have made a study of the scriptures, and their words should be considered and according to Jesus, considered carefully, it is not in anyone's best interest to blindly accept what ANY church or ANY person preaches or teaches or provides as interpretation. To do so puts your salvation on someone else's shoulders - some other MAN who has the same flaws of Adam that we all carry.
112 posted on 06/28/2006 9:45:42 AM PDT by taxcontrol
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To: taxcontrol

So, some guys - with the same authroity that you and I have - got together and said: "Hey folks, this stuff is not just good stuff, it is God's Own Word." And today we are bound to accept this decision by a bunch of Christians with no special authroity forever?

That makes no sense. You must have some other reason to think these ordinary men were able to make such a profound and definitive declaration that certain letters were God's Word, and other letters were not.


113 posted on 06/28/2006 9:47:39 AM PDT by Notwithstanding (I love my German shepherd - Benedict XVI reigns!)
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To: taxcontrol

But why would you believe this "scripture" (Mark) since it was ordinary men with no special authority who determined that it was God's Word.

Why do you have to accept the NT as God's Word in order to be an authentic Chrsitian?

Ordinary men had a meeting and declared some writings to be God's Word. Why are you obligated to accept that to be true?


114 posted on 06/28/2006 9:51:04 AM PDT by Notwithstanding (I love my German shepherd - Benedict XVI reigns!)
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To: taxcontrol

But why would you believe this "scripture" (Mark) since it was ordinary men with no special authority who determined that it was God's Word.

Why do you have to accept the NT as God's Word in order to be an authentic Chrsitian?

Ordinary men had a meeting and declared some writings to be God's Word. Why are you obligated to accept that to be true?


115 posted on 06/28/2006 9:52:00 AM PDT by Notwithstanding (I love my German shepherd - Benedict XVI reigns!)
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To: RobRoy


Semantics are your forte, RobRoy? In our Church we call these meetings House Church. What are you gonna do about it? :o)


116 posted on 06/28/2006 10:02:55 AM PDT by Paperdoll ( on the cutting edge.)
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To: Notwithstanding
"....And today we are bound to accept this decision by a bunch of Christians with no special authority forever..."

If you choose to be "bound" then that is your choice and you will answer for it on judgment day. I choose to accept the Old and New Testaments as scripture. But it is my choice.... not an authority question. I will also choose to rate other books and other texts from other learned people - just as many Catholics choose to accepts the writing of the popes and other learned people.

But I challenge all such texts against the Old and New Testament. Some texts I rule out - some of the Nag Hammadi texts fall into that category and some I rule in like the Book of Thomas (which is a bunch of Jesus said statements and many of those sayings are found in the other Gospels).

"....You must have some other reason to think these ordinary men were able to make such a profound and definitive declaration that certain letters were God's Word, and other letters were not."

Why?
Jesus taught to ALL people and it fact, it was the "learned" of the day, the Pharisees and the Sadducees, that Jesus says did not understand.
117 posted on 06/28/2006 10:10:57 AM PDT by taxcontrol
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To: Notwithstanding
Again, it is choice vs authority.

I do not accept the NT as scripture because some other man at some other time in history said to. No other man has authority over my soul.

I CHOOSE to accept the NT because I have studied it, I understand it and the message that it provides rings true with my God give soul and what I believe to be the Holy Spirit within me.

It is one of the tenets of my personal apologetics that I accept the NT as scripture on faith.
118 posted on 06/28/2006 10:14:22 AM PDT by taxcontrol
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To: j_k_l
. . .an incredible waste of resources a “traditional” church is with buildings that are used a couple times a week. . .

A couple times a week? There things going on at our church every day of the week. Same was true of the church I attended prior to this one. Not saying there aren't some who are only used a couple times a week, but that's probably because the church is stagnant or dying. It just needs some new 'blood' to get it going again.

119 posted on 06/28/2006 10:17:23 AM PDT by MEGoody (Ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free.)
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To: dangus
[ Any further information about how "house church" is defined would be greatly appreciated. ]

Biblically "church(gk)" does not mean building or organization(club).. The word church simply defines a gathering.. The real metaphor defining believers is "The Body of Christ".. not "church".. Not the body of christ that walked in Galilee but the Body of Christ that Jesus came to create, AND DID...

A church(gathering) can be in a home, park, or restaurant etc... i.e. "wherever 2 or 3 gather together in my name -Jesus".. like that..

120 posted on 06/28/2006 10:46:49 AM PDT by hosepipe (CAUTION: This propaganda is laced with hyperbole..)
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