Sacred Places

Can a place, absent of people, be sacred?

Or could a place be cursed?

 

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The Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem

Churches are peoples

 ἐκκλησία ekklēsia;an assembly, a (religious) congregation.

A church was never a place, it was always a people.

Churches were a place, in as much as that is where the people are from.
A home was where the church, the assembly, the people met. Maybe a synagogue, if the newly converted were from one, but that was generally until they got expelled.

The first-century church met in homes. As time went on, and the state became more favorable to this new religion, buildings got built and the word church changed, sadly, from people to building.

Is there such a thing as a sacred place?
I am saying no, only people can be scared.

Is there such a thing as a cursed place?
Again, I am saying no.

There is no denying that people hold a place as sacred or cursed. A lot of effort is put into cleansing a place or sanctifying a place, but are they intrinsically sacred or cursed? In some people’s minds, they are, and attendance at the location is the only way to get a gods blessing or a devils appeasement.

God is not limited by location, and evil likes to fool people that it has geographical authority.

Works of darkness find themselves limited to earth as foil, something for us to practice on, a power to overcome, not as any kind of inheriter because of our fall.

Works of evil do not need to be present for their lies and ideas to hitch a ride on us, in our thoughts, conversations, and actions.
That is why Paul said to take every thought captive, (2 Corinthians 10:3) to speak only those words that lift up.
Our belief in a thing gives it power and even control over us. Not necessarily as an intrinsic power, but as the power of habit. Move from habit to propagation, and you have a different story.
This is why becoming a proactive follower of Jesus is so important. Jesus practiced the idea that he only did that, which he saw the Father doing. That is philosophical and instructional. This means Jesus never reacted, he could never be pushed around, and he might not have had control of every situation he found himself in, the illegal trial, the crucifixion, but those situations never had control over him.
How do you prepare yourself now for a conflict, a dilemma, or an attack in the future that you have no control over?
God always has ultimate control.
As far as it depends upon you, be at peace with all men. When that is not possible, we don’t shy away from the gospel.
It might cost you your head, John the Baptist.
Or it might turn a Saul into Paul.
Acts 9:10-19