| Ecclesiology |
Shopping Ecclesiology |
Website Links For Ecclesiology |
Information AboutEcclesiology |
| CATEGORIES ABOUT ECCLESIOLOGY | |
| christian philosophy | |
| christian group structuring | |
| ecclesiologychristian philosophy | |
| christian group structuring | |
| ecclesiology | |
| christian theology | |
| SHOPPER'S DELIGHT | |
|
Ecclesiology is a branch of , its origin, its relationship to the historical Christ, its discipline, its destiny (see Eschatology ) and its leadership. It is, therefore, the study of the Church as a thing in itself, and of the Church's self-understanding of its mission and role. In addition to describing a broad discipline of theology, ecclesiology may be used in the specific sense of a particular church or denomination’s character, self-described or otherwise. This is the sense of the word in such phrases as ''Roman Catholic ecclesiology'', ''Lutheran ecclesiology'', and ''ecumenical ecclesiology''. ETYMOLOGY ''Ecclesiology'' comes from the Greek ''ekklesia'' (ἐκκλησία), which comes into Latin as Ecclesia , and which simply means a gathering or a meeting. It is a compound of the Greek preposition ''ek'' (ἐκ), which denotes origin and could be independently translated ''from'', and ''kaleo'' (καλέω), meaning to call or bid --a calling out, as in a calling together. The most generic definition given by Thayer's Greek Lexicon is “a gathering of citizens called out from their homes into some public place.” While the term today is closely tied to the Christian church, its roots are therefore broader. The Septuagint uses ''ekklesia'' to translate into Greek the Hebrew word ''qâhâl'' (קהל), meaning a congregation, assembly, company or other organized body (Brown-Driver-Briggs Hebrew Definitions). These uses in the Hebrew Scriptures of ''ekklesia'' are not regarded by most Christian theologians as referring to the Church specifically (in context, they refer to a specific gathering for a partricular circumstance), even though many of these same theologians regard the Jewish people (as "The People of God," a community that understood itself to be defined by a unique covenant with God) to be a foreshadowing, a prototype or a sort of living prophecy of what would one day be the Christian Church. The generic sense of the word is used several times in one passage of the New Testament (Acts 19:32, 39 & 41) in reference not to the church but to a group of Ephesian craftsmen, something like a guild, speaking out against the Apostle Paul and his companions. ISSUES ADDRESSED BY ECCLESIOLOGY Ecclesiology asks the questions:
SEE ALSO Beliefs that define the Church Rituals that define the Church
Topics in church government
|