Ecclesia (church)

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Ecclesia, holding vexillum and chalice, stands across from Synagogue at a portal to Freiburg Münster
Ecclesia, holding vexillum and chalice, stands across from Synagogue at a portal to Freiburg Münster

Ecclesia (or Ekklesia) in Christian theology denotes both a particular body of faithful people, and the whole body of the faithful. Latin ecclesia, from Greek ekklesia had an original meaning of "assembly, congregation, council"[1], literally "convocation", see Ecclesia (ancient Athens).

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[edit] Christian understanding of 'church'

According to Saint Gregory (P. L., LXXVII, 740), the church was composed of "Sancti ante legem, sancti sub lege, sancti sub gratia ("The saints before the Law, the saints under the Law, and the saints under grace"). This is the basic definition of the church which underpins much of John Calvin's writings.

More narrowly, it may signify the whole body of Christian faithful, including not merely the members of the church who are alive on earth but those, too, who have fallen asleep in Christ, and as such form part of the communion of saints, considered the Body of Christ (see main article Body of Christ). Some churches therefore describe the church as being composed of the Church Militant and the Church Triumphant (Being those Christians on Earth and in Heaven respectively.) In Catholic theology, there is also the Church Suffering comprising those in purgatory.

The Christian family, the most basic unit of church life, is sometimes called the domestic church[2]

Finally, 'The Church' may sometimes be used, especially in Catholic theology, to designate those who exercise the office of teaching and ruling the faithful, the Ecclesia Docens, or again (more rarely) the governed as distinguished from their pastors, the Ecclesia Discens.

Some theologians (e.g. Baptists, Congregationalists) accept the local sense as the only valid application of the term 'church', in so doing rejecting wholesale the notion of a universal ('catholic') church. These people argue that all uses of the Greek word 'ekklesia' in the New Testament are speaking of either a particular local group, or of the notion of 'church' in the abstract, and never of a single, worldwide church. (1689 London Baptist Confession, Savoy Declaration)

Some also note the distinction between the term 'ekklesia' (or 'ecclesia') from the term 'church'. The 'ekklesia' represents the congregation or living body of believers in Christ, as compared to the 'church' which more represents the religious institution or organisation (e.g. Catholic Church). The 'ekklesia' appears to be what Christ was referring to in the New Testament when he said 'Upon this Rock I will build my ekklesia, and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it' (Matthew 16:18), as the original Greek meaning refers to the 'ekklesia'.

[edit] Biblical usage of the word

The disciples of a single locality are often referred to in the New Testament as a church (Revelation 2:18, Romans 16:4, Acts 9:31), and arguably Saint Paul even applies the term to disciples belonging to a single household (Romans 16:5, 1 Corinthians 16:19, Colossians 4:15, Philemon 1:2. Colossians 1:18 says that Christ "is the Head of the Body which is the Church". Ephesians 5:21-32, as previously noted, presents Christ as the bridegroom of the church.

[edit] See also

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Εκκλησια at WikiChristian
  2. ^ Vatican II, Dogmatic Constitution Lumen Gentium, no 11 [1]

[edit] External links

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