Years ago, a friend gave a provocative talk in a seminary chapel on âWhy I Stopped Going to Church.â His point was that church is something we are, as believers in Jesus, not a place we go once or twice a week. It was an important corrective at a time when church attendance was the norm for believers and often mistaken for the fullness of following Jesus.
Itâs increasingly clear, however, that we no longer live in such a time. In 2011, 43% of Americans indicated that they attend church every week. By February of 2020 (before Covid restrictions), that number had shrunk to . The pandemic accelerated this trend. Since churches have opened back up, only of previously regular church attendees have returned. Among Southern Baptists, weekly attendance dropped 18.75% between 2020 and .
Dwindling church attendance does not diminish my friendâs point: Church is indeed more than a place we go. But itâs not less than meeting together regularly. At this point, simply going back to church is an important step toward being who we need to be as Godâs people.
Getting Used to Not Going to Church
I âgetâ not wanting to go back. Iâm an introvert; I actually like being alone. âGoingâ to group activities, including church, has always been a stretch for me. I confess that I secretly (sometimes not so secretly) welcomed the initial pandemic restrictions. Sundays suddenly became much easier, even âspirituallyâ â the time saved by not getting ready and traveling to church meant I had more opportunity for personal Bible study and devotional reading. And since the service was recorded, I could watch it online at any time during the week. Or not.
Not going to church quickly became a comfortable habit. So when restrictions began to ease, returning was a struggle. I did it out of obedience, recognizing the clear Scriptural teaching that I need to be around Godâs people whether I feel like it or not. But in the months since I started back to church, rekindling relationships with the brothers and sisters there, my reluctant biblical conviction has become a foundational commitment. Rubbing shoulders with Godâs people is softening my heart and expanding my soul. I didnât realize how contracted and shriveled Iâd grown in isolation. Like the Velveteen Rabbit, I sense myself becoming more ârealâ through tangible interaction with Godâs people.
I know Iâm not alone â both in struggling with going to church and in needing it desperately.
To be clear: when I say we need to go back to church, Iâm not taking sides in current over whether churches should continue to stream their services as well as meet in person. Obviously, some people łŠČčČÔât go back to in-person church at this point â those who are physically or medically isolated and those who are still highly vulnerable to Covid or other infections. Itâs a problem for others, as well. I have another friend who faithfully ministers online to hundreds of spiritually wounded individuals who are estranged from the flesh and blood churches in their communities. For them, online worship and interaction is a lifeline back to faith in Christ.
But (letâs face it): most of us and our families and friends who struggle with going back to church donât fall into those categories. We need to go back to church. Does it need to be in person? Yes. God made us embodied creatures, who connect with each other in irreducibly embodied ways. Virtual reality is only that: virtual. Itâs an illusion to suppose that streaming and Zoomed interactions, as helpful as they can be, are as relationally meaningful as being in the physical presence of others. As businesses are discovering, off-camera, informal, âaround the water coolerâ interactions are necessary for building trust. âWe form and sustain social bonds [through spending time together], expressing verbal and nonverbal communication in ways that convey understanding, empathy and shared concern,â notes sociologist Scott Schieman. âThereâs no way endless Zoom calls can replace the depth and quality of in-person human .â Followers of Jesus should take seriously the example of the one who communicated himself to us in person, taking on actual flesh and living in our midst (John 1:14).
Four Reasons We Need to Go Back to Church
First, we need to go to church because âthe Bible tells [us] so.â âAnd let us consider how we may spur one another on toward love and good deeds, not giving up meeting together, as some are in the habit of doing, but encouraging one another â and all the more as you see the Day approachingâ (Heb. 10:24-25). The Bibleâs central image of the church has obvious implications here: âNow you are the body of Christ, and each of you is part of itâ (1 Cor. 12:27). A body is a complex organism, which can only function and flourish when its parts are both present and working properly. We are not faithful to Jesus if we, as parts of the body of Christ, donât participate in the life of his body, together.
Second, we need to go back to church for our own sake. The body metaphor has further implications: An isolated body part is not merely lonely, itâs unable to be what it actually is, according to its nature. A hand functions as a hand only when itâs connected to an arm â an arm that also needs to be connected to the rest of the body. Likewise, we who follow Jesus find our true identity and purpose only in vital union with the rest of His body. Thatâs how weâre made; we cannot flourish otherwise.
Not just Christians need community, of course. Itâs built into the way God created all humans to function and flourish. But it turns out that going to church is a particularly powerful source of human connection, one that is desperately needed.
Covid is not the only âdeadly pestilenceâ we face these days. âAmerica remains in the grip of an epidemic of deaths from drug overdose, suicide, and alcohol poisoning,â according to Harvard University researcher, Brendon W. Case. âThe epidemic began in the mid-1990âs and is still escalating: The CDC estimates that 2020 saw ninety-three thousand drug overdose deaths, a 30 percent increase from 2019, and the highest total ever .â The increase in these âdeaths of despairâ lowered the overall U.S. life expectancy in three consecutive years (2015-2017), the longest period of decline since .
What does this have to do with church attendance? According to an extensive study of medical workers by Harvardâs Human Flourishing Program, those who attended religious services frequently (not merely engaged in private religious or spiritual practices) were â29 percent less likely to become depressed, about 50 percent less likely to divorce, and five times less likely to commit suicide than those who never attended.â Other studies concur, finding that âreligious service attendance is associated with greater longevity, less depression, less suicide, less smoking, less substance abuse, better cancer and cardiovascular-disease survival, less divorce, greater social support, greater meaning in life, greater life satisfaction, more volunteering, and greater .â Indeed, âpeople who attend services at least weekly are about 26 percent less likely to die of any particular cause than are those who attend less than â (my emphasis)!
Maybe the Bible is onto something when it urges us not to give up meeting together.
Third, we need to go back to church for our childrenâs sake. No doubt we all want our children to enjoy the benefits just enumerated. Indeed, according to the , âregular service attendance helps shield children from the âbig threeâ dangers of adolescence: depression, substance abuse, and premature sexual activity. People who attended church as children are also more likely to grow up happy, to be forgiving, to have a sense of mission and purpose, and to volunteer.â
Childhood church attendance contributes other development goods as well, as I can attest. Only as an adult have I realized how much I benefited from growing up in a vibrant church community, surrounded by people of all ages and stages of life. Older believers spoke into my life at key times, sometimes with correction, often with encouragement, always with love. They provided wonderful, diverse examples to me of how to be a man, how to work, and how to walk with Jesus. Without trying, I was better educated than many of my childhood friends in our small town, simply by sitting under significant Bible teaching in several church services per week â whether I wanted to be there or not. In the culture in which I was raised, apart from church settings, resources like this were somewhat rare. In todayâs world theyâre virtually non-existent.
Our children need to be with a variety of other believers of different ages during the most formative years of their lives. They need this far more than they need to participate in many of the activities that now serve as weekend substitutes for church attendance, as valuable as those can be in other ways. We need to remember that our children are being formed by our cultureâs dominant narratives, values, and models â whether or not we as parents are aware of it or want it to be the case. Itâs in the air they breathe. Romans 12:2 implies that we are either âbeing conformedâ to the pattern of this age or we are âbeing transformedâ by the renewing of our mind; thereâs no neutral ground. So we must be intentional about how we and our children are being formed. As Flannery OâConnor counseled a young friend, we need to âpush as hard as the age that pushes against you.â Being conformed is caught more than it is taught, and so is being transformed by Jesus. Podcasts and videos provide valuable sources of Christian teaching these days, but there is no âvirtualâ substitute for the way of Jesus being âcaughtâ within the tangible interactions of His people in community.
Finally, we need to go back to church for our neighborsâ sake. Society as a whole obviously benefits when even some of its members bear the dramatic physical, emotional and social fruit of regular church attendance. In fact, going to church turns out to be a way we can âseek the welfare of the cityâ (Jeremiah 29:7) in which God has placed us. More than that, however, loving our neighbor should motivate us to invite them to embrace for themselves the life of Christian community as the people of God.
We â and they â need to go back to church.