When Paul talks about the unity of spiritual gifts and the diversity of bodily diversity, the purpose of the church is confirmed in 1 Corinthians 12. There is no isolated lonely Christian life. At the end of this article, readers can distinguish between concepts of tangible and intangible churches. In addition, readers can decide how they are related and they can not be interpreted against them when they are mentally aware.
The book is divided into four exercises: unity of the church, division of the church, dissolution of the divided church, and revival of the union church. The first movement, the unified church began in chapter 2, and the theological understanding of the Bible is a crime of division and agreement as the gospel. Lithart sees the promise of Babel and Abraham and shows that the Bible story focuses on the reunion of man and God and the reunion of all human beings. Returning to this story through the biblical landscape, Lite Heart discovered that this promise became a "new man" of all accord of Jesus Christ. Therefore, Leitart believes that the theology of this Bible should be at the forefront of Christian church science. Lithart says the church "will be yours" (19). The extent to which the church divides is such that it can not be claimed that it is an evangelist.
Who is the church? Is it a visible or secular company, or a unified, visible society - is it a "church" in the sense of a specific sect or institution? Or is it all the Christian body (see invisible church) that is believed, regardless of the sectarian differences and discords? What is the relationship between a living Christian and the deceased Christian (the "witness cloud") - Do they (the people of the earth and the people of the heavens) constitute a church? Does anyone need to join the church? In other words, what role does corporate worship play in believers' spiritual life? Is it really necessary? In a specific faith group, can redemption be found outside official members, and what constitutes 'membership' (baptism? Formally recognized credo? Periodic participation?).