I am a Christian, but I don't go to church.
I don't believe in organized religion.
I go to church most Sundays, but I never joined.
Never saw any need for it.
Membership is just a tool or tradition anyway.
I joined the church because .
well, I don't know why.
It's just what Christians are supposed to do, I guess.
If statements like these are familiar, you know that strong arguments for church membership are not within reach of most pastors and laypersons.
Building a Case for Church Membership finally puts a strong, bible-based case for church membership within the average person's hands through an easy-to-understand construction motif.
Denominationally diverse reviewers describe it as clear, accessible, charitable, biblical, theological, and pastoral, practical, useful, and convincing, and straightforward and sensible.
Formerly published as A Church You Can See: Building a Case for Church Membership (2017), this new edition has been revised for Sunday Schools, new member classes, church small groups, and one-on-one discipleship.
Discussion questions have been added and the text is now more interdenominationally accessible.
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