My friend doesn’t like the idea of attending church. She says, “People leave their brains at the church doors.” A contemporary poet describes the church this way: “Outwardly splendid as of old; inwardly sparkless, void and cold. Her force and fire all spent and gone, like the dead moon she still shines on.”

For some people, the church is simply a place for those who are religious. But the apostle Paul sees the church through a different lens. He sees the church as a significant body. It’s the “household of God,” “the church of the living God,” and “the pillar and foundation of the truth” (1 Timothy 3:15). The church isn’t a building, or a meeting held in a building. The church is people—those who’ve been born by the Spirit of God and have entered into a new relationship with God as their Father and each other as siblings. It’s the “household of God.”

In addition, the church belongs to the living God. When believers gather, they experience the presence of a God who speaks His words to them, hears their prayers, and responds to their worship.

Unlike what some people believe, the church isn’t an outdated remnant of the past with no relevance for today’s society. There’s a reason for its existence. It’s the “pillar and foundation of the truth”—created in the world to make a difference, to introduce truth into a world saturated with error.

May God help us, the church, to learn again who we are and what we can do through Him. For “Christ loved the church. He gave up His life for her to make her holy and clean, washed by the cleansing of God’s Word” (Ephesians 5:25-26). The church is a thing of great worth and value in God’s sight.

NLT 365-day reading plan passage for today: Esther 4:1-17