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title: "Introduction: A Church That Can Tell the Truth"
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# Introduction: A Church That Can Tell the Truth

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The Scripture reader loses her place and smiles before finding the line again. A family arrives late, carrying a stroller and the strain of the morning, and someone brings two chairs from the next room. During the prayer, a child whispers much too loudly. An older member hands the parent a pencil instead of a look. After the blessing, a man asks the widower whether he wants lunch or a quiet ride home.

Nobody calls this a strategy. Christ gathers a body, and his people receive one another through Scripture, bread and cup, prayer, patience, correction, and acts of attention small enough to escape the monthly report.

The Church belongs to Jesus Christ. That is the reason a weak congregation can be precious, and it is the reason no congregation may organize itself around denial. Charisma, money, history, and public reputation do not hold the body together. Christ does. A leader's gift cannot excuse contempt. A desire for peace cannot turn a buried injury into gossip. Unity cannot mean that wounded people must keep quiet so everyone else can feel faithful.

Consider what happens when several volunteers say a ministry leader has been harsh with them. One person shrugs: everybody knows what he is like. Another says his ministry is too fruitful to endanger. Someone calls the whole conversation divisive. The people who have already learned the cost of speaking go quiet.

The church now has more than a personnel problem. It is deciding what its holy words mean when they become expensive. Will unity help the body face the truth, or hide it? Will grace lead to repentance, or protect the person with the most influence? Will prayer open the meeting to Christ's rule, or postpone a necessary act?

Truthful communion is the shared life of people who remain before Christ long enough to answer those questions honestly. It includes worship and ordinary friendship, but also qualified authority, protection, confession, patience, judgment, repair, and public witness. A church learns this life before a crisis through the way it sings, handles money, welcomes children, receives correction, remembers absent members, and speaks about people who cannot defend themselves in the room.

This book follows those practices from worship and Scripture into small groups, office, mercy, protection, conflict, and mission. Read it with a Bible open, especially 1 John 1:5--10 (NIV); John 17 (NIV); Acts 2:42--47 (NIV); 1 Corinthians 12 (NIV); Ephesians 4:1--16 (NIV); Matthew 18:6--20 (NIV); 1 Peter 5:1--4 (NIV); and Revelation 2--3 (NIV).

You may read straight through, or begin where the pressure is. Chapters 1 and 5 help an ordinary member name a concern without feeding rumor. Chapters 4 through 7 belong close to worship, teaching, and group life. Chapters 8 through 13 address authority, care, protection, conflict, repair, and witness. If church has wounded you and you are deciding how near you can safely come, start with Chapters 2, 3, 10, and 11. Being present does not prove trust, and forgiveness does not require unsafe access.

<a id="when-ordinary-study-must-stop"></a>

## When Ordinary Study Must Stop

If a child or adult may be in danger, someone has disclosed abuse, or a person may harm themselves or someone else, begin with Chapter 10 and use qualified local help. Church processes do not replace emergency services, civil authorities, medical or clinical care, lawful reporting, or independent safeguarding expertise. Before a group uses this book, its leaders should complete the local protection and referral map in Appendix C.

Two questions are enough to carry into every chapter: What is true before Christ? What does love require us to do next?

> Lord Jesus Christ, Head of your Church, bring us into your light without contempt and into your mercy without denial. Teach us to tell the truth, repent where we have sinned, receive one another with patience, and remain in communion with you. Amen.
