Space Matters: The Church’s Gathering Necessity

How should a church speak about “the church is not a building” without denying the need for the church’s gathering place?

Scripture teaches that the church is a people, not bricks and mortar. Yet a people must still gather, and gathering requires a location. In ordinary life, outdoor meetings are often limited by weather, noise, and distractions, so a building becomes a practical servant of the congregation’s shared life.

Yet a people must still gather, and gathering requires a location.

In that sense, buildings are not the essence of the church, but they are frequently the means by which the church’s embodied fellowship becomes stable and credible in a community. As the article observes, “often the wider community won’t take you very seriously until you have a building to meet in” (Sims, “12 Theses on Church Buildings,” 2026).

A church is not a building, but because it must gather, it must take space seriously.

Related Material


Source: 12 Theses on Church Buildings

Disclaimer: Information in my “slip-box” doesn’t necessarily reflect my agreement with the source or all its content. Recording diverse perspectives helps strengthen one’s position beyond the echo chamber of like-minded thinkers. By documenting alternative viewpoints, we engage in the intellectual wrestling match that ultimately deepens our understanding.

I aspire to post one note from my “slip-box” every weekday. If you want to learn more about how to work with knowledge, click this link: What is knowledge management?

Pastor Dan Patrick Avatar

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *