• Skip to main content
  • Skip to after header navigation
  • Skip to site footer

Sallie Schaaf Borrink

  • About
  • Subscribe
  • Premium Content
    • Purchase Premium Access
    • Premium Member Log-in
  • Categories
        • Free Printables
        • Gifted & 2e
        • Gracious Christian Parenting
        • Homemaking
        • Homeschooling
        • Our Family Stories
        • Questioning the Narrative
        • Rebuilding America
        • Simple Living
        • Unit Studies & Learning Themes
        • Tags
  • My Printables Shop
    • The Lifetime Pass
    • Explore The Shop
    • Your Cart
    • Your Account Details
      • View Your Orders
      • Go To Your Downloads
      • My Account
    • Lost Password Help
    • Digital Products Terms of Use
  • Comments
  • Forum
    • Login
    • Sign Up
  • Search

Welcome & Miscellaneous

See the sidebar for all categories

Start Here

Subscribe

Donate

Tags

Sallie’s Rebuilding America – My News Analysis Website

My Recommendations

The Shop

Explore The Shop

The Lifetime Shopping Pass

Your Cart

Digital Products Terms of Use

Your Account

View Your Orders

Go To Your Downloads

Lost Password Help

Cozy & Simple Living

Simple Living

Homemaking

Our Cozy Family Life

The Prudent & Prepared Homemaker

Free Homemaking Printables

Holidays & Traditions

Comfort Food Recipes

Health

Home Education & Parenting

Home Education

Discipleship Homeschooling

Gracious Christian Parenting

Gifted/2e Parenting for Christians

Homeschooling a Creative Child

Homeschool Mom Encouragement

Homeschool Planning

Gifted/2e Homeschooling

Unit Studies & Themes

Unit Studies & Resources

Unit Studies

Unit Study Activities

Poetry

Christian Faith

Christian Faith

Prayer

Marriage

Bible Readings & Christian Devotionals

Morning Hope

Eventide Blessing

Streams in the Desert

You are here: Home / Christian Issues / Church Life / How Christians Gathered in the 1st Century | Dr. Tom Wadsworth




Archives

How Christians Gathered in the 1st Century | Dr. Tom Wadsworth

Wednesday, March 5, 2025 (Updated: Friday, November 14, 2025)
2 Comments

Post may contain affiliate links. Read my disclosure statement.

The video below popped up in my CensorTube feed right after David and I were discussing some of these same topics in October. “How Christians Gathered in the 1st Century” with Dr. Tom Wadsworth is eye-opening. If you are familiar with the book Pagan Christianity by Frank Viola, some of this won’t be new to you. But I imagine much of it will be for many Christians. 

(If you want to watch the video first without my commentary, skip what follows here and go directly to the video at the end of the post. Then come back and read this.)



There were two ideas in this video that I had specifically been thinking about the previous couple of weeks. Both revolved around how there is almost nothing in the New Testament that would lead us to “do church” the way we do it. This is certainly true of the Roman Catholic Church and also true of the vast majority of Protestant churches.

The section about the way the various elements of pagan temple worship (sacrifice, altar, priest, temple) became established in the Christian church over the first four centuries is one part that stood out to me. I think about that often. Very often. It frequently pops up in conversations David and I have to this day. I’m still processing the significance of that, especially as I sort through topics related to partial preterism.

The other is at the very end where they discuss that the Reformation did not go far enough concerning worship and church structure. The Reformers kept way too much Catholicism in the church which you can still see today. I had just made that very point to David over breakfast the day before I came across this discussion.

One last thing I want to point out is the discussion re: how people benefit the most when they are actively involved. We know this from life as parents, homeschoolers, etc.

In the vast majority of churches, there is almost zero opportunity to be meaningfully involved in what is happening during the “morning service” or what Tom more appropriately calls “the assembly.”

Participate? Yes.

Meaningfully involved? No.

In most churches, 97% of the people could not be there and everything would go on without them. Their attendance isn’t meaningful other than filling a seat so the room is full and the church bank account is kept topped off that week. 

Now some people might not like the way I said that, but am I wrong? I don’t think I am. Being meaningfully involved on Sunday morning in a way that promotes spiritual growth and edification is seriously lacking in most American churches. 

Let me know what you think of this in the comments. 

Category: Church LifeTag: Recommended Videos

About Sallie Borrink

Sallie Schaaf Borrink is a wife, mother, homebody, and autodidact. She’s a published author, former teacher, and former campus ministry staff member. Sallie owns a home-based graphic design and web design business with her husband (DavidandSallie.com).

You Might Also Like

The Pulpit Is a Sacred Place?

Rush Limbaugh, Modes of Baptism, and Church Membership

Introverts in the Church

Previous Post:John MacArthur’s Rebuke of Alana Lagares
Next Post:Acts 2:14-36

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Sallie Borrink

    Thursday, March 6, 2025 at 7:34 am

    I watched this video again yesterday when I posted it so if there was discussion in the comments it would be fresh in my mind.

    My brain must be processing it because I woke up in the middle of the night with this song in my head out of the blue.

    “We bring the sacrifice of praise
    Into the house of the Lord.
    We bring the sacrifice of praise
    Into the house of the Lord.
    And we offer up to You
    The sacrifices of thanksgiving;
    And we offer up to You
    The sacrifices of joy.”

    A quick search this morning on Bible Hub lead to this:
    A “sacrifice of praise” is mentioned in Hebrews 13:10
    One use of “sacrifice of joy” in the Bible in Psalm 27:6 and it mentions specifically in the Tabernacle
    “Sacrifice of thanksgiving” is clearly Old Covenant and I didn’t find it in New Covenant with a quick search
    “house of the Lord” is only found in OT according to my quick skim

    So what exactly are we singing when we sing this?

    Reply
  2. Kris

    Wednesday, March 12, 2025 at 11:55 am

    I have listened to a Tom Wadsworth video and find the information very interesting from this perspective. Would like to listen to this one as well. The idea never occurred to me that the early church may not have actually had services the way we do today.

    Reply

Leave a Reply to Sallie Borrink Cancel reply

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

 

Thank you for your comment. I read and appreciate each one even if I am unable to respond.

Sidebar

Sallie Schaaf Borrink

For 20+ years, I’ve been writing about following Jesus Christ and making choices based on what is true, beautiful, and eternal. Through purposeful living, self-employment, and homeschooling, our family has learned that freedom comes from a commitment to examine all of life and think for yourself. 

I hope you will join me here where we discuss all of life each day.

Categories

Search

Access all of my Premium Content for just $10/month

All of my printables for just $37!

Popular Today

  • Popular-Today-List-Avatar-SB-GIRL-80×80Forum
  • What Was In The Envelopes At President Bush’s Funeral SIMPLEWhat Was In The Envelopes At President Bush’s Funeral?
  • A colorful image of sacred geometry related to MegatronExplaining Metatron from an Orthodox/Historical Christian Perspective
  • Free Great Lakes Map Printable POSTFree Great Lakes Map for Homeschoolers
  • Classical Conversations Negatives and Why We Didn’t Join SIMPLEClassical Conversations Negatives and Why We Didn’t Join
  • Removing Distractions - Using FreeTube on Linux SIMPLEUsing FreeTube on Linux & Removing Distractions
  • Tickler List for Premium ContentTickler List for Premium Content
  • Fresh ingredients for Autoimmune Protocol comfort food recipesThe Ultimate List of AIP Comfort Food Recipes
  • Trump was shotAssassination Attempt on President Trump in Pennsylvania
  • The Cozy Life in America and Why I Prefer It To the Danish Hygge SIMPLE2The Cozy Life In America and Why I Prefer It To the Danish Hygge
  • Famous Creative and Gifted Homebodies SIMPLEConsider the Well-Known Creative and Gifted Homebodies
  • 100 Ways to Add Joy to Your Life SIMPLE100 Ways To Add Joy To Your Life




A Christian Nation

"The real object of the first amendment was not to countenance, much less to advance, Mahometanism, or Judaism, or infidelity, by prostrating Christianity; but to exclude all rivalry among christian sects, and to prevent any national ecclesiastical establishment, which should give to a hierarchy the exclusive patronage of the national government."

Joseph Story (Associate Justice of the Supreme Court), Commentaries on the Constitution of the United States (1833), § 1871.

countenance: To favor; to encourage by opinion or words; To encourage; to appear in defense (Websters Dictionary 1828)




What Can I Help You Find Today?

Home

About Sallie

Contact

Privacy Policy

Disclaimers & Disclosures

Tags

Premium Content

Subscribe

Comments

Forum

Make a Donation

My Printables Shop

The Lifetime Pass

My Account

Cart

Lost Password Help

Digital Products Terms of Use

Rebuilding America

Free Printables

Unit Studies & Learning Themes

Homeschooling

Copyright © 2005–2026 · Sallie Schaaf Borrink · All Rights Reserved · Powered by Mai Theme

Scroll Up
We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue to use this site we will assume that you are happy with it.