Read this also and you will see why we cannot compare what happened
in the NT to today’s churches. Basically become there wasn’t any churches to
invite people to, until people were saved and churches were formed.
Also the preaching took place in public places, where a mixture of people
would have been present.
https://www.evangelismcoach.org/should-we-invite-non-believers-summary/
As I finished out my chapter through chapter re-read of the book of Acts, I
see believers and non-believers in various settings:
- hearing the word of God proclaimed,
- gifts of the Spirit are manifested,
- elders are chosen,
- people getting saved, etc.
The biblical DESCRIPTION of what happened in the NT church involved these
elements. It gets mighty confusing to look at the book of Acts and to say
- “that’s not a church meeting” but “that assembly is a church meeting.”
- That’s not church, that is church,
- Paul’s preaching in the synagogue is outreach, but teaching in a different place is a church gathering.
What is obvious is that people were being regularly and daily saved. This no basis to
say that these conversions were occurring within or outside of the gatherings.
Acts merely describes what was happening.
It does not define a how the church will function following this particular era.
The church as a gathering PLACE is in development.
The earliest glimpses in Acts shows groups of people meeting in synagogues, public
squares, and in houses. Today’s PLACES of gathering is very different than the
gatherings in the book of Acts. Most of us meet in a dedicated space or building
set apart for church meetings.
The church as a gathered PEOPLE is still a theological concept in development.
It is later spelled out in Paul’s letters.
The church gathered for the PURPOSE of a particular expression of worship is not
the same.
It does not look like the weekly gathering of God’s people for worship as we know
it in nearly any form today.
To ask the book of Acts for evidence about inviting non-believers to a church is
ultimately a practice that will fail.
As the remaining passages deal with the missionary expansion of the early Christians
there were no “churches” in these towns for the gathering of the saints They were being
created as the apostles went forth, so looking at these passages for evidence of church
practices may be pointless.