Failing to understand the nature of the church can lead to a number of problems. Defining the church functionally — in terms of what it does — can shift our perspective away from understanding the church as a unique community of God’s people. In place of this, the church tends to become a series of ministry functions such as worship, education, service, children, youth, etc. Defining the church organizationally — in terms of its structures — shifts our mind away from the spiritual reality of the church as a community, a family, the body of the Christ, the very presence of God on earth.

In most cases the church has become something to be structured and managed. Thus ministry is to be administrated and managed to maintain effectiveness, in order to accomplish certain goals. This seduces leaders into placing too much confidence in their managerial skills or in their us of organizational techniques. Thus church leaders are always looking for the “next” key to success.

It is my conviction that we need to move beyond trying to find the “next” church “thing” that will help us be successful one more time. We truly need to rediscover what is more basic about what it means to be the “church.” It is critical that we recover the nature of the church before we understand what the church is do be doing.

We must face the very way we think about “Church.” The critical question is what is the church?

The church is more than what meets the eye. It is more than a set of well-managed ministry functions. It is more than another human organization! The church lives in the world as a human enterprise, but it is also the called and redeemed people of God. It the people of God who are created by the Holy Spirit to live as a missionary community here on the earth.

The church is God’s personal presence in the world through the Spirit! This makes the church a unique spiritual community. The very family of God who by it’s presence give witness to the origin and future of God’s people.

The Church’s true character is its embodiment of Christ’s mission by its very existence in the world, it witnesses to the mission of God, to overthrow evil and to the ultimate reign of God over the entire created order. This is the eschatological nature of the church. It is the presence of a Good God now revealed, it is the very future of God’s Kingdom; in a world hostile to its message and values.

The early Christians saw themselves as participants in a grand drama, …..those gathered from all nations to testify to the resurrected Lord. Without the church the world literally had no HOPE OF SALVATION since the church is necessary for the world to know it is part of a story that it cannot know without the Church.

The Church is the adopted people bought by His blood, united to Him and to each other …. Whose lives have been changed and communities that have been transformed by God’s presence among them.

The church is an inviting and compelling community of people who attract unchurched because they embody a new life under the reign of Christ and informed by their eschatological (prophetic) vision.

Our personal journey into Christ therefore is nourished by the community called “church” which God has been sent and set as a divine presence to proclaim the unltimate destiny of the world…

Without the church the world would have no idea of it’s destiny!

To come to Christ and His Church is to come into a new way of seeing!

The church is the nurturing and caring community of the Father: “when we encounter the church we move into spiritual territory that occupies earthly terrain. We encounter the living God in the midst of our humanity. We encounter the Spirit of God dwelling in the midst of a people who are created and formed into a unique community. In and through this community the converting person is nurtured, discipled, and equipped.