One Church, One Service? | The Beauty of Multigenerational Worship
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In this episode of Local Theologians, Dr. Travis Montgomery talks with Dr. Michael Nelson—pastor of First Baptist Church Grandview and assistant professor at Midwestern Seminary—about how the study of ecclesiology profoundly shaped his ministry. Michael shares how wrestling with questions of church health, unity, and dysfunction led him to study the biblical theology of the church’s gathering. Drawing from Scripture and years of pastoral experience, the conversation explores why physically gathering as one people matters, how intergenerational worship forms disciples, and why biblical principles—not pragmatics—must guide church practices. Together they reflect on unity, charity amid disagreement, and how serious theological study bears real fruit in the life of the local church.
About the Podcast
Local Theologians is a podcast for everyday Christians and ministry leaders from Midwestern Seminary's Global Campus. Learn more about online theological education at mbts.edu/global.
Keywords
ecclesiology, church gathering, corporate worship, intergenerational church, unity, discipleship, biblical theology, church health, pastoral ministry
Takeaways
• The gathered church is central to God’s redemptive plan throughout Scripture, not a peripheral ministry decision.
• Ecclesiology shapes not just what churches believe but how they structure worship and community.
• Intergenerational worship forms believers by allowing faith to be witnessed across life stages.
• Physical gathering reinforces unity that cannot be achieved through segmented or preference-driven services alone.
• Biblical principles must guide church practice before considerations of pragmatics or efficiency.
• Age-graded ministries serve important roles, but they cannot replace the church’s primary gathering.
• The church’s visible unity provides a powerful witness to unbelievers.
• Theological study equips pastors to lead with clarity, patience, and charity amid disagreement.