There were problems in the Corinth church mainly infighting and elders were imoral.
Paul faced many problems in the new testament. He was shipwrecked, put in Jail and the church of Corinth gave him trouble.
The old testament, then the church and the new testament.
The Old Testament was a series of Laws. The New Testament is Love and Faith.
As far as I know the church was started by Paul in the new testament. And not in the old testament. At that time in the old testament they had the temple only. And Jesus also never did built a church in his life time.
The early Church created the New Testament.
Jesus mentions 'the church' 18 times in the New Testament.
What new testament book tells us of the work of the early church
New Testament fulfills what was written about Him in the Old Testament.
The word "church" appears 113 times in the King James version of the New Testament.
The only church that existed in this time was the Catholic Church.
27 books are identified as being in the New Testament.
The Bible, in the New Testament, teaches that the Christian believers ARE the church. It states this many times. The idea of "church" meaning a building is a much more recent idea. At the beginning of the church there probably weren't any church buildings as such. So according to the Bible in the New Testament, Christian believers are part of the church, and the church is the body of Christian believers. The expectation of the New Testament is that Christian believers will be a part of the church, personally involved and in relationship with the other believers. The New Testament does not have anything to say about whether people who are not believing Christians should attend church - there's no rule about it. But there's no reason why they shouldn't. Most of the New Testament was written specifically to churches, not to individuals.