Yes. Nevertheless in hermeneutics (the art and science of interpretation (of scriptures namely)) there is a rule of cultural context. One must close the 2000 year cultural gap and define what that looked like in the first century. What did the houses that the churches met in look like in 50AD? 60AD? 90AD? We get this information from other documents written at the time and from archaeology and historians that wrote during or near to this time. What we discover is that many houses were built with courtyards large enough to seat many people. A couple of hundred or more depending on the size of the house. It is well known that those who were wealthy in Ephesus, Colossae, Philippi were using their houses for the church to meet in. These obviously had more room.
It makes sense that a house with a a courtyard or larger rooms were used for a church meeting than to say they limited the number of people in a church to what could fit in the average poor persons one room apartment don't you think?
And I don't find it scripturally accurate to say that they met in living rooms that could only seat 20 people so why do people try to make others think that is how the first churches met. It isn't true. There was no efforts to make churches small in the first century.
Every effort was to win souls, the more the better.
If your church is not experiencing explosive growth, teach soul winning classes and sermons. Let's get busy, the time is short.
A 1st century home with courtyard. Upper middle class.
The square footage of a house could vary enormously. Concerning the ruins at Pompeii, Carolyn Osiek and David Balch observe, “The average property is ten times larger than the smallest, the largest ten times larger than the average.” (17) Examination of 234 ruins at Pomepeii and Herculaneum revealed homes that ranged from 100 square meters to 3,000 square meters. (201) The specifics of the homes varied considerably but the basic features I just described were fairly constant.
These homes were often remodeled, or torn down and rebuilt. It is believed that the original house churches met in these homes, in either the atrium or the peritsyle. As the numbers of people expanded, walls would be torn out to make more space. According to Osiek and Balch, it appears that Christians in the mid-Second Century and later began to buy homes and convert them into shells with open space to hold a number of people. (35) These became the first
domus ecclesia buildings dedicated entirely to meeting for worship. But even prior to emergence of these
domus ecclesia it was possible that large numbers could have met together in the peristyle of some homes. Some of the larger homes in Pompeii could easily have handled a couple hundred folks. The House of Citharist could have accommodated more than 1,100 people. (201) It is not accurate to assume that all of the New Testament churches were limited to two or three dozen people.