What
Kind Of Church Building Should We Have?
Elder Oscar B. Mink Now In Glory (2 Chronicles 3:6) “And he garnished the house with precious stones for beauty: and the gold was gold of Parvaim.” (Isaiah 64:11) “Our holy and our beautiful house, where our fathers praised thee, is burned up with fire: and all our pleasant things are laid waste.” We
are not to try to emulate the grand edifices of Protestantism, or the ostensible
temples of so-called fundamentalists, and it is out of the question as to
copying the temples of Solomon or Herod. Yet, we might be inspired by these
temples to improve in some measure the beauty of our houses of worship. Having
been given the ability to enhance the beauty and comfort of our place of
worship, and leave off to do so, would be to our shame. We are to give our
best to God, and His house of worship should not be inferior to our own homes.
God said to David, “For I have not dwelt in an house since the day that
I brought up Israel unto this day; but have gone from tent to tent, and from
one tabernacle to another …Why have ye not built
me an house of cedars?” (1 Chronicles 17:5-6)
The Jews idolized their temple, Roman Catholics hold
their Basilica in Rome in idolatrous esteem. The Mormons are not one whit
behind the Jews and Catholics concerning their temple in Salt Lake City,
Utah, and the Humbard Cathedral in Akron, Ohio, along with many of the so-called
Baptist temples have gone the way of great extravagance. These buildings
show the extremes men will go in their efforts to worship God with their
hands, or to make a name for themselves. The history of false Christendom attests to the fact
that extravagance in church building, and extreme ritualism are wedded. It
is for this reason early American Puritanism, and in later times Hardshell
Baptists swung with the pendulum to the other God dishonouring extreme. Music
in worship services was condemned and forbidden, ceremony in worship was
considered evil, and church meeting houses were constructed without any consideration
given to beauty and but little to comfort. Their rigid determination to be
plain resulted in shoddy and uncomfortable church buildings, and earned for
them the stigma of being stingy toward God. Many of their farm buildings which
housed their animals were kept in better condition than their worship houses,
and while they kept their affluence they lost much of their Christian influence.
TRUE
CHURCHES AND THEIR WORSHIP HOUSES
While
true churches cannot go the route of extravagance in erecting their meeting
places, they should not be guilty of the other extreme either. There is an
area between the two extremes wherein adequate and comely church buildings
may be built without creating a financial hardship for the members. What true
churches need to keep in mind is that no church building be it ever so humble
or magnificent can serve as a substitute for the inward beauty which the
redeemed soul is to be adorned with. The beauty and physical comforts of
the church house serve to make the worshippers feel good, but that in itself
is not enough, for many commercial and public buildings provide the same
or better. The deception to avoid is, when people feel good they are prone
to think they are good. Many a poor deluded soul has pointed toward their
palatial church home, and said, “The Lord is really blessing us.” The Lord
blesses truth wherever it is preached regardless of The circumstances under
which it is preached, but to have the power to have a suitable building to
worship in, and not exercise that power may tend to circumscribe the blessing.
A beautiful, comfortable, and adequate building while
affording a good feeling for the assembly can only enhance the worship service
when it is kept in mind from whence these blessings have come, for what purpose
they are granted, and when the heart is filled with gratitude to God for
giving them. When this state of worship is achieved the service is lifted
up in spirit beyond the beautiful surroundings of the carnal building to
the celestial and incomparable grandeur of the palace of the King Eternal.
Then too, the church needs to keep in mind that its primary work is not the
construction of church buildings, but the building up of the spiritual house
of God is the chief work of the Lord’s churches. We are not to build expensive
edifices at the expense of missionary work, on the other hand no church should
let their building become so dilapidated as to bring a reproach on the church,
and thereby impair its effectiveness in its own community. A good and general rule in determining the cash outlay
in providing a church building, and its measure of beauty and comfort, is,
find the average income of the member-ship, the tithes and offerings of the
church are usually greater than the average income of the individual members
of the church. The difference between the two incomes should determine the
superiority of the common building over that of the homes of its members.
This rule is seldom applicable to newly organized churches, but there is
no church that does not need its own building, and in due season, after the
new church has grown in membership, the above rule may serve as a good tool
in shaping the size and convenience of its own church home.
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