I think these definitions support the evangelical view (which of course is the right one

) that the church is made up of all born-again believers (followers of Jesus, Christians, those who have Jesus living in their hearts). I believe from what the Bible says, as well as my experience, that the Church is scattered among many denominations and movements.
Hello again Cal
I have a question to your theology on the Church being made of all believers, all denominations and movements. Regarding Matthew 18:15-17
But if thy brother shall offend against thee, go, and rebuke him between thee and him alone. If he shall hear thee, thou shalt gain thy brother.
And if he will not hear thee, take with thee one or two more: that in the mouth of two or three witnesses every word may stand.
And if he will not hear them: tell the church. And if he will not hear the church, let him be to thee as the heathen and publican.
Lets say me and you have a disagreement about what Jesus was talking about when he said if we eat his body we will have eternal life
So after we discuss this with some of our brothers and find no solution, we decide to go to the Church as commanded by Jesus, and ask them “what did Jesus mean when he told us to eat his body?”
Keeping in mind 1 Tim 3:15 “But if I should be delayed, you should know how to behave in the household of God, which is the church of the living God, the pillar and foundation of truth.”
According to your theology you could go to any denomination to find the truth about what Jesus meant when he said eat my body. Well lets see what happens when we do this.
The
High-Anglican Church will tell us that “Christ in the eucharist makes himself present sacramentally and truly when under the species of bread and wine these earthy realities are changed into the reality of his body and blood”
The
Low-Anglican Church like the
Presbyterians will tell us that “we do not eat the actual body blood soul and dvinity of Christ, but we eat Christs body and blood in a heavenly and spiritual manner”
The
Baptists and many
Evangelical Protestants would tell us something on the lines of “There is no communion, no body or blood in bread and wine, but a remembrance of Christ’s atonement, and a time of renewal of personal commitment.” ie no body or spirit. And also not often the focus of Church.
The
Lutherans would say that “the Catholic doctrine of ‘Transubstantiation’ is wrong, but that the doctrine of ‘Sacramental Union’ is correct meaning rather than the bread and wine becoming body and blood, the bread and wine exists with/at the same time as the body and blood of Christ”
My question to you is How do you reconcile such reasoning that all born-again believers are THE church with Matthew 18:15-17 and 1 Tim 3:15 ?
Im sure you believe that there can only be one truth. So does it not make sense that only one can be right, and that one is right? Also who do we believe? After all Jesus commands us to go the Church when we have a disagreement.
If this is the case either Jesus told us to do something that wont lead us into truth (which would be unbiblical) or your interpretation is wrong, and Jesus is telling us there is one Church with one Truth. To me there was only one Church Jesus founded on Peter, preaching the one same doctrine for 2000 years, the Catholic Church. I would love to know your views on this
God Bless