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Christian Church

In ecclesiology, the Christian Church is what different Christian denominations conceive of as being the true body of Christians or the original institution established by Jesus.[1][2][3] "Christian Church" has also been used in academia as a synonym for Christianity, despite the fact that it is composed of multiple churches or denominations, many of which hold a doctrinal claim of being the "one true church", to the exclusion of the others.[4][5][6]

Medieval illustration of the ecclesia from the Hortus deliciarum of Herrad of Landsberg (12th century)

For many Protestant Christians, the Christian Church has two components: the church visible, institutions in which "the Word of God purely preached and listened to, and the sacraments administered according to Christ's institution", as well as the church invisible—all "who are truly saved" (with these beings members of the visible church).[7][2][8] In this understanding of the invisible church, "Christian Church" (or catholic Church) does not refer to a particular Christian denomination, but includes all individuals who have been saved.[2] The branch theory, which is maintained by some Anglicans, holds that those Churches that have preserved apostolic succession are part of the true Church.[9] This is in contrast to the one true church applied to a specific concrete Christian institution, a Christian ecclesiological position maintained by the Catholic Church, the Eastern Orthodox Church, the Oriental Orthodox churches, Assyrian Church of the East and the Ancient Church of the East.[1][10][3]

Most English translations of the New Testament generally use the word church as a translation of the Ancient Greek ἐκκλησία (romanized ecclesia), found in the original Greek texts, which generally meant an "assembly" or "congregation".[11] This term appears in two verses of the Gospel of Matthew, 24 verses of the Acts of the Apostles, 58 verses of the Pauline epistles (including the earliest instances of its use in relation to a Christian body), two verses of the Letter to the Hebrews, one verse of the Epistle of James, three verses of the Third Epistle of John, and 19 verses of the Book of Revelation. In total, ἐκκλησία appears in the New Testament text 114 times, although not every instance is a technical reference to the church.[12] As such it is used for local communities as well as in a universal sense to mean all believers.[13] The earliest recorded use of the term Christianity (Greek: Χριστιανισμός) was by Ignatius of Antioch, in around 100 AD.[14]

The Four Marks of the Church first expressed in the Nicene Creed (381) are that the Church is one, holy, catholic (universal), and apostolic (originating from the apostles).[15]

Etymology

The Greek word ekklēsia, literally "called out" or "called forth" and commonly used to indicate a group of individuals called to gather for some function, in particular an assembly of the citizens of a city, as in Acts 19:32–41, is the New Testament term referring to the Christian Church (either a particular local group or the whole body of the faithful). In the Septuagint, the Greek word "ἐκκλησία" is used to translate the Hebrew "קהל" (qahal). Most Romance and Celtic languages use derivations of this word, either inherited or borrowed from the Latin form ecclesia.

The English language word "church" is from the Old English word cirice, derived from West Germanic *kirika, which in turn comes from the Greek κυριακή kuriakē, meaning "of the Lord" (possessive form of κύριος kurios "ruler" or "lord"). Kuriakē in the sense of "church" is most likely a shortening of κυριακὴ οἰκία kuriakē oikia ("house of the Lord") or ἐκκλησία κυριακή ekklēsia kuriakē ("congregation of the Lord").[16] Some grammarians and scholars say that the word has uncertain roots and may derive from the Anglo-Saxon "kirke" from Latin "circus" and the Greek "kuklos" for "circle", which shape is the form in which many religious groups met and gathered.[17] Christian churches were sometimes called κυριακόν kuriakon (adjective meaning "of the Lord") in Greek starting in the 4th century, but ekklēsia and βασιλική basilikē were more common.[18]

The word is one of many direct Greek-to-Germanic loans of Christian terminology, via the Goths. The Slavic terms for "church" (Old Church Slavonic црькꙑ [crĭky], Russian церковь [cerkov’], Slovenian cerkev) are via the Old High German cognate chirihha.[citation needed]

History

 
An Eastern icon depicting the Descent of the Holy Spirit. The date of Pentecost is considered the "Birthday of the Church".

The Christian Church originated in Roman Judea in the first century AD/CE, founded on the teachings of Jesus of Nazareth, who first gathered disciples. Those disciples later became known as "Christians"; according to Scripture, Jesus commanded them to spread his teachings to all the world. For most Christians, the holiday of Pentecost (an event that occurred after Jesus' ascension to Heaven) represents the birthday of the Church,[19][20][21] signified by the descent of the Holy Spirit on gathered disciples.[Acts 2][22] The leadership of the Christian Church began with the Apostles.

Springing out of Second Temple Judaism, from Christianity's earliest days, Christians accepted non-Jews (Gentiles) without requiring full adoption of Jewish customs (such as circumcision).[Acts 10-15][23] The parallels in the Jewish faith are the Proselytes, Godfearers, and Noahide Law; see also Biblical law in Christianity. Some think that conflict with Jewish religious authorities quickly led to the expulsion of Christians from the synagogues in Jerusalem.[24]

The Church gradually spread throughout the Roman Empire and beyond, gaining major establishments in cities such as Jerusalem, Antioch, and Edessa.[25][26][27] The Roman authorities persecuted it because Christians refused to make sacrifice to the Roman gods, and challenged the imperial cult.[28] The Church was legalized in the Roman empire, and then promoted by Emperors Constantine I and Theodosius I in the 4th century as the State Church of the Roman Empire.

Already in the 2nd century, Christians denounced teachings that they saw as heresies, especially Gnosticism but also Montanism. Ignatius of Antioch at the beginning of that century and Irenaeus at the end saw union with the bishops as the test of correct Christian faith. After legalization of the Church in the 4th century, the debate between Arianism and Trinitarianism, with the emperors favouring now one side now the other, was a major controversy.[29][30]

Use by early Christians

 
  Predominantly Christian region by AD 325
  Predominantly Christian region by AD 600

In using the word ἐκκλησία (ekklēsia), early Christians were employing a term that, while it designated the assembly of a Greek city-state, in which only citizens could participate, was traditionally used by Greek-speaking Jews to speak of Israel, the people of God,[31] and that appeared in the Septuagint in the sense of an assembly gathered for religious reasons, often for a liturgy; in that translation ἐκκλησία stood for the Hebrew word קהל (qahal), which however it also rendered as συναγωγή (synagōgē, "synagogue"), the two Greek words being largely synonymous until Christians distinguished them more clearly.[32]

The term ἐκκλησία appears in only two verses of the Gospels, in both cases in the Gospel of Matthew.[31] When Jesus says to Simon Peter, "You are Peter, and on this rock I will build my church",[33] the church is the community instituted by Christ, but in the other passage the church is the local community to which one belongs: "If he refuses to listen to them, tell it to the church."[34]

The term is used much more frequently in other parts of the New Testament, designating, as in the Gospel of Matthew, either an individual local community or all of them collectively. Even passages that do not use the term ἐκκλησία may refer to the church with other expressions, as in the first 14 chapters of the Epistle to the Romans, in which ἐκκλησία is totally absent but which repeatedly uses the cognate word κλήτοι (klētoi, "called").[35] The church may be referred to also through images traditionally employed in the Bible to speak of the people of God, such as the image of the vineyard used particularly in the Gospel of John.[32]

The New Testament never uses the adjectives "catholic" or "universal" with reference to the Christian Church, but does indicate that the local communities are one church, collectively, that Christians must always seek to be in concord, as the Congregation of God, that the Gospel must extend to the ends of the earth and to all nations, that the church is open to all peoples and must not be divided, etc.[31]

The first recorded application of "catholic" or "universal" to the church is by Ignatius of Antioch in about 107 in his Epistle to the Smyrnaeans, chapter VIII. "Wherever the bishop appears, there let the people be; as wherever Jesus Christ is, there is the Catholic Church."[36]

Church Fathers like Ignatius of Antioch, Irenaeus, Tertullian and Cyprian held to the view that the Christian Church was a visible entity, not an invisible body of believers.

Christianity as Roman state religion

 
An icon depicting Constantine I, accompanied by the bishops of the First Council of Nicaea (325), holding the Niceno–Constantinopolitan Creed of 381.

On February 27, 380, the Roman Empire officially adopted the Nicene version of Christianity as its state religion. Prior to this date, Constantius II (337-361) and Valens (364-378) had personally favored Arian or Semi-Arian forms of Christianity, but Valens' successor Theodosius I supported the more Athanasian or Trinitarian doctrine as expounded in the Nicene Creed from the 1st Council of Nicaea.

On this date, Theodosius I decreed that only the followers of Trinitarian Christianity were entitled to be referred to as Catholic Christians, while all others were to be considered to be heretics, which was considered illegal.[37] In 385, this new legal situation resulted, in the first case of many to come, in the capital punishment of a heretic, namely Priscillian, condemned to death, with several of his followers, by a civil tribunal for the crime of magic.[38] In the centuries of state-sponsored Christianity that followed, pagans and heretical Christians were routinely persecuted by the Empire and the many kingdoms and countries that later occupied its place,[39] but some Germanic tribes remained Arian well into the Middle Ages[40] (see also Christendom).

The Church within the Roman Empire was organized under metropolitan sees, with five rising to particular prominence and forming the basis for the Pentarchy proposed by Justinian I. Of these five, one was in the West (Rome) and the rest in the East (Constantinople, Jerusalem, Antioch, and Alexandria).[41]

 
Founded in AD 363, Mar Mattai Monastery, a Nestorian Church, is recognized as one of the oldest Christian monasteries in existence.[42]

Even after the split of the Roman Empire the Church remained a relatively united institution (apart from Oriental Orthodoxy and some other groups which separated from the rest of the state-sanctioned Church earlier). The Church came to be a central and defining institution of the Empire, especially in the East or Byzantine Empire, where Constantinople came to be seen as the center of the Christian world, owing in great part to its economic and political power.[43][44]

Once the Western Empire fell to Germanic incursions in the 5th century, the (Roman) Church became for centuries the primary link to Roman civilization for medieval Western Europe and an important channel of influence in the West for the Eastern Roman, or Byzantine, emperors. While, in the West, the so-called orthodox Church competed against the Arian Christian and pagan faiths of the Germanic rulers and spread outside what had been the Empire to Ireland, Germany, Scandinavia, and the western Slavs, in the East Christianity spread to the Slavs in what is now Russia, south-central and eastern Europe.[45] The reign of Charlemagne in Western Europe is particularly noted for bringing the last major Western Arian tribes into communion with Rome, in part through conquest and forced conversion.

Starting in the 7th century, the Islamic Caliphates rose and gradually began to conquer larger and larger areas of the Christian world.[45] Excepting North Africa and most of Spain, northern and western Europe escaped largely unscathed by Islamic expansion, in great part because richer Constantinople and its empire acted as a magnet for the onslaught.[46] The challenge presented by the Muslims would help to solidify the religious identity of eastern Christians even as it gradually weakened the Eastern Empire.[47] Even in the Muslim World, the Church survived (e.g., the modern Copts, Maronites, and others) albeit at times with great difficulty.[48][49]

Great Schism of 1054

Although there had long been frictions between the Bishop of Rome (i.e., the patriarch of the Catholic Church proper) and the eastern patriarchs within the Byzantine Empire, Rome's changing allegiance from Constantinople to the Frankish king Charlemagne set the Church on a course towards separation. The political and theological divisions would grow until Rome and the East excommunicated each other in the 11th century, ultimately leading to the division of the Church into the Western (Catholic) and Eastern (Orthodox) churches.[45] In 1448, not long before the Byzantine Empire collapsed, the Russian Orthodox Church gained independence from the Patriarch of Constantinople.[50]

As a result of the redevelopment of Western Europe, and the gradual fall of the Eastern Roman Empire to the Arabs and Turks (helped by warfare against Eastern Christians), the final Fall of Constantinople in 1453 resulted in Eastern scholars fleeing the Muslim hordes bringing ancient manuscripts to the West, which was a factor in the beginning of the period of the Western Renaissance there. Rome was seen by the Western Church as Christianity's heartland.[51] Some Eastern churches even broke with Eastern Orthodoxy and entered into communion with Rome (the "Uniate" Eastern Catholic Churches).

Protestant Reformation

The changes brought on by the Renaissance eventually led to the Protestant Reformation during which the Protestant Lutheran and the Reformed followers of Calvin, Hus, Zwingli, Melancthon, Knox, and others split from the Catholic Church. At this time, a series of non-theological disputes also led to the English Reformation which led to the independence of the Church of England. Then, during the Age of Exploration and the Age of Imperialism, Western Europe spread the Catholic Church and the Protestant churches around the world, especially in the Americas.[52][53] These developments in turn have led to Christianity being the largest religion in the world today.[54]

Catholic tradition

The Catholic Church teaches in its doctrine that it is the original church founded by Christ on the Apostles in the 1st century AD. The papal encyclical Mystici corporis (Pope Pius XII, 1943), expresses the dogmatic ecclesiology of the Catholic Church thus: "If we would define and describe this true Church of Jesus Christ—which is the One, Holy, Catholic, Apostolic, Roman Church–we shall find no expression more noble, more sublime, or more divine, than the phrase which calls it 'the Mystical Body of Jesus Christ'." The Second Vatican Council's dogmatic constitution, Lumen gentium (1964), further declares that "the one Church of Christ which in the Creed is professed as one, holy, catholic and apostolic, ... constituted and organized in the world as a society, subsists in the Catholic Church, which is governed by the successor of Peter and by the Bishops in communion with him".[55][56] Likewise, the encyclical of Pope Pius IX, Singulari Quidem, states in a similar vein, "There is only one true, holy, Catholic Church, which is the Apostolic Roman Church. There is only one See founded on Peter by the word of the Lord... Outside of the Church, no one can hope for life or salvation unless he is excused through ignorance beyond his control." It is also a common theme in Catholic devotional and catechetical literature: "The Holy Catholic and Apostolic Church is the only flock of which Jesus Christ, the Son of God, is the only Shepherd." (Catholic Book of Prayers, Pg. 236, "One Flock, One Shepherd")[57]

A 2007 declaration[58] of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith clarified that, in this passage, "'subsistence' means this perduring, historical continuity and the permanence of all the elements instituted by Christ in the Catholic Church, in which the Church of Christ is concretely found on this earth", and acknowledged that grace can be operative within religious communities separated from the Catholic Church due to some "elements of sanctification and truth" within them, but also added "Nevertheless, the word 'subsists' can only be attributed to the Catholic Church alone precisely because it refers to the mark of unity that we profess in the symbols of the faith (I believe... in the 'one' Church); and this 'one' Church subsists in the Catholic Church."

The Catholic Church teaches that only corporate bodies of Christians led by bishops with valid holy orders can be recognized as "churches" in the proper sense. In Catholic documents, communities without such bishops are formally called ecclesial communities.

Eastern Orthodox tradition

The Eastern Orthodox Church each claims to be the original Christian Church. The Eastern Orthodox Church bases its claim primarily on its assertion that it holds to traditions and beliefs of the original Christian Church. It also claims that four out of the five sees of the Pentarchy (excluding Rome) are still a part of it.

Oriental Orthodox tradition

The Oriental Orthodox Churches claims to be the original Christian Church. The Oriental Orthodox churches' bases their claim primarily on its assertion that it holds to traditions and beliefs of the original Christian Church. They never adopted the theory of the Nature of God, which was formulated later than the break that followed the Council of Chalcedon.

Lutheran tradition

 
The Church is the congregation of saints, in which the Gospel is rightly taught and the Sacraments are rightly administered. –Augsburg Confession[59]

The Lutheran churches traditionally hold that their tradition represents the true visible Church.[60] The Augsburg Confession found within the Book of Concord, a compendium of belief of the Lutheran Churches, teaches that "the faith as confessed by Luther and his followers is nothing new, but the true catholic faith, and that their churches represent the true catholic or universal church".[61] When the Lutherans presented the Augsburg Confession to Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor in 1530, they believe to have "showed that each article of faith and practice was true first of all to Holy Scripture, and then also to the teaching of the church fathers and the councils".[61]

Nevertheless, the Lutheran churches teach that "there are indeed true Christians in other churches" as "other denominations also preach the Word of God, though mixed with error"; since the proclamation of the Word of God bears fruit, Lutheran theology accepts the appellation "Church" for other Christian denominations.[60]

Anglican tradition

Anglicans generally understand their tradition as a branch of the historical "Catholic Church" and as a via media ("middle way") between traditions, often Lutheranism and Reformed Christianity, or Roman Catholicism and Reformed Christianity.[62]

Reformed tradition

Reformed theology defines the Church as being invisible and visible—the former includes the entire communion of saints and the latter is the "institution that God provides as an agency for God's saving, justifying, and sustaining activity", which John Calvin referred to as "our mother".[63] The Reformed confessions of faith emphasize "the pure teaching of the gospel (pura doctrina evangelii) and the right administration of the sacraments (recta administratio sacramentorum)" as "the two most necessary signs of the true visible church".[64]

Methodist tradition

 
Methodist preachers are known for promulgating the doctrines of the new birth and entire sanctification to the public at events such as tent revivals, brush arbor revivals, and camp meetings, which they believe is the reason that God raised them up into existence.[65]

Methodists affirm belief in "the one true Church, Apostolic and Universal", viewing their churches as constituting a "privileged branch of this true church".[66][67] With regard to the position of Methodism within Christendom, the founder of the movement "John Wesley once noted that what God had achieved in the development of Methodism was no mere human endeavor but the work of God. As such it would be preserved by God so long as history remained."[68] Calling it "the grand depositum" of the Methodist faith, Wesley specifically taught that the propagation of the doctrine of entire sanctification was the reason that God raised up the Methodists in the world.[69][65]

Evangelical tradition

The local Evangelical Church is the organization that represents the universal Church and is seen by evangelicals as the body of Jesus Christ.[70] It is responsible for teaching and ordinances, mainly the believer's baptism and the Lord's Supper.[71] Many churches are members of Evangelical Christian denominations and adhere to a common confession of faith and regulations, despite the autonomy of the church.[72] Some denominations are members of a national alliance of churches of the World Evangelical Alliance.[73] Some evangelical denominations operate according to episcopal polity or presbyterian polity. However, the most common form of church government within Evangelicalism is congregational polity. This is especially common among non-denominational evangelical churches.[74] Common ministries within evangelical congregations are pastor, elder, deacon, evangelist and worship leader.[75] The ministry of bishop with a function of supervision over churches on a regional or national scale is present in all the Evangelical Christian denominations, even if the titles president of the council or general overseer are mainly used for this function.[76][77]

Divisions and controversies

Today there is a wide diversity of Christian groups, with a variety of different doctrines and traditions. These controversies between the various branches of Christianity naturally include significant differences in their respective ecclesiologies.

Christian denominations

A denomination in Christianity is a generic term for a distinct religious body identified by traits such as a common name, structure, leadership, or doctrine. Individual bodies, however, may use alternative terms to describe themselves, such as "church" or "fellowship". Divisions between one group and another are defined by doctrine and church authority; issues such as the nature of Jesus, the authority of apostolic succession, eschatology, and papal primacy often separate one denomination from another. Groups of denominations often sharing broadly similar beliefs, practices, and historical ties are known as branches of Christianity.

Individual Christian groups vary widely in the degree to which they recognize one another. Several groups claim to be the direct and sole authentic successor the church founded by Jesus Christ in the 1st century AD. Others, however, believe in denominationalism, where some or all Christian groups are legitimate churches of the same religion regardless of their distinguishing labels, beliefs, and practices. Because of this concept, some Christian bodies reject the term "denomination" to describe themselves, to avoid implying equivalency with other churches or denominations.

 
St. Andrew's Church, Darjeeling. Built- 1843, Rebuilt- 1873

The Catholic Church and Eastern Orthodox Church believe that the term one in the Nicene Creed describes and prescribes a visible institutional and doctrinal unity, not only geographically throughout the world, but also historically throughout history. They see unity as one of the four marks that the Creed attributes to the genuine Church, and the essence of a mark is to be visible. A church whose identity and belief varied from country to country and from age to age would not be "one" in their estimation. As such they see themselves not as a denomination, but as pre-denominational; not as one of many faith communities, but the original and sole true Church.

Many Baptist and Congregationalist theologians accept the local sense as the only valid application of the term church. They strongly reject the notion of a universal (catholic) church. These denominations 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.[78][79]

Many Anglicans, Lutherans, Old Catholics, and Independent Catholics view unity as a mark of catholicity, but see the institutional unity of the Catholic Church as manifested in the shared apostolic succession of their episcopacies, rather than a shared episcopal hierarchy or rites.

Reformed Christians hold that every person justified by faith in the Gospel committed to the Apostles is a member of "One, holy, catholic, and apostolic Church". From this perspective, the real unity and holiness of the whole church established through the Apostles is yet to be revealed; and meanwhile, the extent and peace of the church on earth is imperfectly realized in a visible way.

The Lutheran Church–Missouri Synod declares that the Christian Church, properly speaking, consists only of those who have faith in the gospel (i.e., the forgiveness of sins which Christ gained for all people), even if they are in church bodies that teach error, but excluding those who do not have such faith, even if they belong to a church or hold a teaching office in it.[80]

World Christianity

A number of historians have noted a twentieth-century "global shift" in Christianity, from a religion largely found in Europe and the Americas to one which is found in the global south.[81][82][83] Described as "World Christianity" or "Global Christianity", this term attempts to convey the global nature of the Christian religion. However, the term often focuses on “non-Western Christianity” which “comprises (usually the exotic) instances of Christian faith in ‘the global South’, in Asia, Africa and Latin America.”[84] It also includes indigenous or diasporic forms in Western Europe and North America.[85]

Other debates

Other debates include the following:

  • "Churchianity" is a pejorative term for practices of Christianity that are viewed as placing more emphasis on the habits of church life or its institutional traditions than on the teachings of Jesus. Hence the replacement of "Christ" by "Church" in the word "Churchianity". Some Protestants apply it to churches that they view as having moved the central focus from Christ to the Church. Others, such as the Orthodox Church and the Catholic Church, see Christ as the centre, but the Church also as essential (extra Ecclesiam nulla salus) because of the close union between Christ and the Church described in Biblical passages such as the Epistle to the Ephesians (see Bride of Christ).
  • There are many opinions as to the ultimate fate of the souls of individuals who are not part of a particular institutional church, i.e., members of a particular church may or may not believe that the souls of those outside their church organization can or will be saved.
  • It has been debated in Protestantism whether or not the Christian Church is in fact a unified heavenly institution with the earthly institutions relegated to secondary status.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "The Original Christian Church". Orthodox Church in America. Retrieved 27 June 2021.
  2. ^ a b c Weaver, Jonathan (1900). Christian Theology: A Concise and Practical View of the Cardinal Doctrines and Institutions of Christianity. United Brethren Publishing House. p. 245. There are distinctions between the general invisible church and the general visible church, which it is not necessary to carry out to the last analysis. In a sense, they are both visible. All who are members of the general invisible church are members of the general visible church. But all who are members of the general visible church are not members of the general invisible church. A clear and distinct difference between the visible and invisible church may be stated thus: (1) The general invisible church includes all out of every kindred and tongue and people and nation who are truly saved. No one denomination has in its communion all who belong to the invisible church. (2) The visible church includes all who are recognized as members of a Christian church. No one denomination can justly claim to be the general visible church.
  3. ^ a b "What do Catholics believe?". Roman Catholic Diocese of Lansing. Retrieved 29 June 2021. We are the original Christian Church, which began when Jesus himself when he said to the Apostle Peter, "You are the rock on which I will build my church. The gates of hell will not prevail against it." Every pope since then has been part of an unbroken line of succession since Peter, the first pope.
  4. ^ "Eastern Orthodox Church". BBC. 11 June 2008. Retrieved 27 June 2021. The doctrine of the Christian Church was established over the centuries at Councils dating from as early as 325CE where the leaders from all the Christian communities were represented.
  5. ^ Ehrman, Bart D. (29 May 2018). "Inside the Conversion Tactics of the Early Christian Church". History. Retrieved 27 June 2021. And yet, within three centuries, the Christian church could count some 3 million adherents.
  6. ^ F. L. Cross; Elizabeth A. Livingstone, eds. (1997). The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church (3rd ed.). New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-211655-X. OCLC 38435185.
  7. ^ McGrath, Alister E. (4 August 2016). Christian Theology: An Introduction. John Wiley & Sons. p. 362. ISBN 978-1-118-87443-1.
  8. ^ Schaff, Philip (1910). History of the Christian Church. William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company. p. 524.
  9. ^ Kinsman, Frederick Joseph (1924). Americanism and Catholicism. Longman. p. 203. The one most talked about is the "Branch Theory," which assumes that the basis of unity is a valid priesthood. Given the priesthood, it is held that valid Sacraments unite in spite of schisms. Those who hold it assume that the Church is composed of Catholics, Eastern Orthodox, eastern heretics possessing undisputed Orders, and Old Catholics, Anglicans, Swedish Lutherans, Moravians, and any others who might be able to demonstrate that they had perpetuated a valid hierarchy. This is chiefly identified with High Church Anglicans and represents the survival of a seventeenth century contention against Puritans, that Anglicans were not to be classed with Continental Protestants.
  10. ^ "The Church". Catholic Encyclopedia. 2020. Retrieved 27 June 2021. It would appear, then, indisputable that in the earliest years of the Christian Church ecclesiastical functions were in a large measure fulfilled by men who had been specially endowed for this purpose with "charismata" of the Holy Spirit, and that as long as these gifts endured, the local ministry occupied a position of less importance and influence.
  11. ^ Entry for Strong's #1577 - ἐκκλησία - StudyLight.org. Bible Lexicons - Old / New Testament Greek Lexical Dictionary. Retrieved October 20, 2019.
  12. ^ . Acu.edu. Archived from the original on 3 September 2006. Retrieved 3 September 2013.
  13. ^ McKim, Donald K., Westminster Dictionary of Theological Terms, Westminster John Knox Press, 1996
  14. ^ Elwell & Comfort 2001, pp. 266, 828.
  15. ^ Louis Berkhof, Systematic Theology (London: Banner of Truth, 1949), 572.
  16. ^ Harper, Douglas (2001). "church". Online Etymology Dictionary. Retrieved 2008-01-18. O.E. cirice "church," from W.Gmc. *kirika, from Gk. kyriake (oikia) "Lord's (house)," from kyrios "ruler, lord."
  17. ^ [1] - Smith's Bible Dictionary from 1884, page 452. Retrieved October 20, 2019.
  18. ^ Harper, Douglas (2001). "church". Online Etymology Dictionary. Retrieved 2008-01-18. Gk. kyriakon (adj.) "of the Lord" was used of houses of Christian worship since c. 300, especially in the East, though it was less common in this sense than ekklesia or basilike.
  19. ^ "Pentecost | Christianity". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 4 November 2016.
  20. ^ "Religions - Christianity: Pentecost". bbc.co.uk. British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC). Retrieved 4 November 2016.
  21. ^ Milavec, Aaron (2007). Salvation is from the Jews (John 4:22): Saving Grace in Judaism and Messianic Hope in Christianity. Liturgical Press. p. 90. ISBN 9780814659892. Retrieved 4 November 2016.
  22. ^ "Pentecost (Whitsunday)". Catholic Encyclopedia. Accessed on 4 November 2016.
  23. ^ "Church as an Institution", Dictionary of the History of Ideas, University of Virginia Library [2] 2006-10-24 at the Wayback Machine
  24. ^ An Overview of Christian History, Catholic Resources for Bible, Liturgy, and More [3]
  25. ^ Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Acts of the Apostles" . Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
  26. ^ Donald H. Frew, Harran: Last Refuge of Classical Paganism Colorado State University Pueblo "The Virtual Pomegranate". Archived from the original on 2004-08-26. Retrieved 2007-05-19.
  27. ^ From Jesus to Christ: Maps, Archaeology, and Sources: Chronology, PBS, retrieved May 19, 2007 [4]
  28. ^ Sophie Lunn-Rockliffe, Christianity and the Roman Empire: Reasons for persecution, Ancient History: Romans, BBC Home, retrieved May 10, 2007 [5] 2009-08-25 at the Wayback Machine
  29. ^ Michael DiMaio, Jr., Robert Frakes, Constantius II (337-361 A.D.), De Imperatoribus Romanis: An Online Encyclopedia of Roman Rulers and their Families [6]
  30. ^ Michael Hines, Constantine and the Christian State, Church History for the Masses [7]
  31. ^ a b c François Louvel, "Naissance d'un vocabulaire chrétien" in Les Pères Apostoliques (Paris, Cerf, 2006 ISBN 978-2-204-06872-7), pp. 517-518
  32. ^ a b Xavier Léon-Dufour (editor), Vocabulaire de théologie biblique (Paris, Cerf, 1981 ISBN 2-204-01720-5), pp. 323-335.
  33. ^ Matthew 16:18
  34. ^ Matthew 18:17
  35. ^ Julienne Côté, Cent mots-clés de la théologie de Paul (ISBN 2-204-06446-7), pp. 157ff
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External links

  • Ecclesia at the Christian Iconography web site

christian, church, this, article, about, ecclesiological, concept, buildings, used, christian, worship, church, building, religious, meeting, church, congregation, individual, christian, organization, currents, christian, denomination, other, uses, disambiguat. This article is about the ecclesiological concept For the buildings used in Christian worship see Church building For the religious meeting see Church congregation For individual Christian organization and currents see Christian denomination For other uses see Christian Church disambiguation In ecclesiology the Christian Church is what different Christian denominations conceive of as being the true body of Christians or the original institution established by Jesus 1 2 3 Christian Church has also been used in academia as a synonym for Christianity despite the fact that it is composed of multiple churches or denominations many of which hold a doctrinal claim of being the one true church to the exclusion of the others 4 5 6 Medieval illustration of the ecclesia from the Hortus deliciarum of Herrad of Landsberg 12th century For many Protestant Christians the Christian Church has two components the church visible institutions in which the Word of God purely preached and listened to and the sacraments administered according to Christ s institution as well as the church invisible all who are truly saved with these beings members of the visible church 7 2 8 In this understanding of the invisible church Christian Church or catholic Church does not refer to a particular Christian denomination but includes all individuals who have been saved 2 The branch theory which is maintained by some Anglicans holds that those Churches that have preserved apostolic succession are part of the true Church 9 This is in contrast to the one true church applied to a specific concrete Christian institution a Christian ecclesiological position maintained by the Catholic Church the Eastern Orthodox Church the Oriental Orthodox churches Assyrian Church of the East and the Ancient Church of the East 1 10 3 Most English translations of the New Testament generally use the word church as a translation of the Ancient Greek ἐkklhsia romanized ecclesia found in the original Greek texts which generally meant an assembly or congregation 11 This term appears in two verses of the Gospel of Matthew 24 verses of the Acts of the Apostles 58 verses of the Pauline epistles including the earliest instances of its use in relation to a Christian body two verses of the Letter to the Hebrews one verse of the Epistle of James three verses of the Third Epistle of John and 19 verses of the Book of Revelation In total ἐkklhsia appears in the New Testament text 114 times although not every instance is a technical reference to the church 12 As such it is used for local communities as well as in a universal sense to mean all believers 13 The earliest recorded use of the term Christianity Greek Xristianismos was by Ignatius of Antioch in around 100 AD 14 The Four Marks of the Church first expressed in the Nicene Creed 381 are that the Church is one holy catholic universal and apostolic originating from the apostles 15 Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 2 1 Use by early Christians 2 2 Christianity as Roman state religion 2 3 Great Schism of 1054 2 4 Protestant Reformation 3 Catholic tradition 4 Eastern Orthodox tradition 5 Oriental Orthodox tradition 6 Lutheran tradition 7 Anglican tradition 8 Reformed tradition 9 Methodist tradition 10 Evangelical tradition 11 Divisions and controversies 11 1 Christian denominations 11 2 World Christianity 11 3 Other debates 12 See also 13 References 14 Bibliography 15 External linksEtymology EditThe Greek word ekklesia literally called out or called forth and commonly used to indicate a group of individuals called to gather for some function in particular an assembly of the citizens of a city as in Acts 19 32 41 is the New Testament term referring to the Christian Church either a particular local group or the whole body of the faithful In the Septuagint the Greek word ἐkklhsia is used to translate the Hebrew קהל qahal Most Romance and Celtic languages use derivations of this word either inherited or borrowed from the Latin form ecclesia The English language word church is from the Old English word cirice derived from West Germanic kirika which in turn comes from the Greek kyriakh kuriake meaning of the Lord possessive form of kyrios kurios ruler or lord Kuriake in the sense of church is most likely a shortening of kyriakὴ oἰkia kuriake oikia house of the Lord or ἐkklhsia kyriakh ekklesia kuriake congregation of the Lord 16 Some grammarians and scholars say that the word has uncertain roots and may derive from the Anglo Saxon kirke from Latin circus and the Greek kuklos for circle which shape is the form in which many religious groups met and gathered 17 Christian churches were sometimes called kyriakon kuriakon adjective meaning of the Lord in Greek starting in the 4th century but ekklesia and basilikh basilike were more common 18 The word is one of many direct Greek to Germanic loans of Christian terminology via the Goths The Slavic terms for church Old Church Slavonic crkꙑ crĭky Russian cerkov cerkov Slovenian cerkev are via the Old High German cognate chirihha citation needed History EditFurther information History of Christianity and Council of Jamnia An Eastern icon depicting the Descent of the Holy Spirit The date of Pentecost is considered the Birthday of the Church The Christian Church originated in Roman Judea in the first century AD CE founded on the teachings of Jesus of Nazareth who first gathered disciples Those disciples later became known as Christians according to Scripture Jesus commanded them to spread his teachings to all the world For most Christians the holiday of Pentecost an event that occurred after Jesus ascension to Heaven represents the birthday of the Church 19 20 21 signified by the descent of the Holy Spirit on gathered disciples Acts 2 22 The leadership of the Christian Church began with the Apostles Springing out of Second Temple Judaism from Christianity s earliest days Christians accepted non Jews Gentiles without requiring full adoption of Jewish customs such as circumcision Acts 10 15 23 The parallels in the Jewish faith are the Proselytes Godfearers and Noahide Law see also Biblical law in Christianity Some think that conflict with Jewish religious authorities quickly led to the expulsion of Christians from the synagogues in Jerusalem 24 The Church gradually spread throughout the Roman Empire and beyond gaining major establishments in cities such as Jerusalem Antioch and Edessa 25 26 27 The Roman authorities persecuted it because Christians refused to make sacrifice to the Roman gods and challenged the imperial cult 28 The Church was legalized in the Roman empire and then promoted by Emperors Constantine I and Theodosius I in the 4th century as the State Church of the Roman Empire Already in the 2nd century Christians denounced teachings that they saw as heresies especially Gnosticism but also Montanism Ignatius of Antioch at the beginning of that century and Irenaeus at the end saw union with the bishops as the test of correct Christian faith After legalization of the Church in the 4th century the debate between Arianism and Trinitarianism with the emperors favouring now one side now the other was a major controversy 29 30 Use by early Christians Edit Main article Early Christianity Predominantly Christian region by AD 325 Predominantly Christian region by AD 600 In using the word ἐkklhsia ekklesia early Christians were employing a term that while it designated the assembly of a Greek city state in which only citizens could participate was traditionally used by Greek speaking Jews to speak of Israel the people of God 31 and that appeared in the Septuagint in the sense of an assembly gathered for religious reasons often for a liturgy in that translation ἐkklhsia stood for the Hebrew word קהל qahal which however it also rendered as synagwgh synagōge synagogue the two Greek words being largely synonymous until Christians distinguished them more clearly 32 The term ἐkklhsia appears in only two verses of the Gospels in both cases in the Gospel of Matthew 31 When Jesus says to Simon Peter You are Peter and on this rock I will build my church 33 the church is the community instituted by Christ but in the other passage the church is the local community to which one belongs If he refuses to listen to them tell it to the church 34 The term is used much more frequently in other parts of the New Testament designating as in the Gospel of Matthew either an individual local community or all of them collectively Even passages that do not use the term ἐkklhsia may refer to the church with other expressions as in the first 14 chapters of the Epistle to the Romans in which ἐkklhsia is totally absent but which repeatedly uses the cognate word klhtoi kletoi called 35 The church may be referred to also through images traditionally employed in the Bible to speak of the people of God such as the image of the vineyard used particularly in the Gospel of John 32 The New Testament never uses the adjectives catholic or universal with reference to the Christian Church but does indicate that the local communities are one church collectively that Christians must always seek to be in concord as the Congregation of God that the Gospel must extend to the ends of the earth and to all nations that the church is open to all peoples and must not be divided etc 31 The first recorded application of catholic or universal to the church is by Ignatius of Antioch in about 107 in his Epistle to the Smyrnaeans chapter VIII Wherever the bishop appears there let the people be as wherever Jesus Christ is there is the Catholic Church 36 Church Fathers like Ignatius of Antioch Irenaeus Tertullian and Cyprian held to the view that the Christian Church was a visible entity not an invisible body of believers Christianity as Roman state religion Edit An icon depicting Constantine I accompanied by the bishops of the First Council of Nicaea 325 holding the Niceno Constantinopolitan Creed of 381 On February 27 380 the Roman Empire officially adopted the Nicene version of Christianity as its state religion Prior to this date Constantius II 337 361 and Valens 364 378 had personally favored Arian or Semi Arian forms of Christianity but Valens successor Theodosius I supported the more Athanasian or Trinitarian doctrine as expounded in the Nicene Creed from the 1st Council of Nicaea On this date Theodosius I decreed that only the followers of Trinitarian Christianity were entitled to be referred to as Catholic Christians while all others were to be considered to be heretics which was considered illegal 37 In 385 this new legal situation resulted in the first case of many to come in the capital punishment of a heretic namely Priscillian condemned to death with several of his followers by a civil tribunal for the crime of magic 38 In the centuries of state sponsored Christianity that followed pagans and heretical Christians were routinely persecuted by the Empire and the many kingdoms and countries that later occupied its place 39 but some Germanic tribes remained Arian well into the Middle Ages 40 see also Christendom The Church within the Roman Empire was organized under metropolitan sees with five rising to particular prominence and forming the basis for the Pentarchy proposed by Justinian I Of these five one was in the West Rome and the rest in the East Constantinople Jerusalem Antioch and Alexandria 41 Founded in AD 363 Mar Mattai Monastery a Nestorian Church is recognized as one of the oldest Christian monasteries in existence 42 Even after the split of the Roman Empire the Church remained a relatively united institution apart from Oriental Orthodoxy and some other groups which separated from the rest of the state sanctioned Church earlier The Church came to be a central and defining institution of the Empire especially in the East or Byzantine Empire where Constantinople came to be seen as the center of the Christian world owing in great part to its economic and political power 43 44 Once the Western Empire fell to Germanic incursions in the 5th century the Roman Church became for centuries the primary link to Roman civilization for medieval Western Europe and an important channel of influence in the West for the Eastern Roman or Byzantine emperors While in the West the so called orthodox Church competed against the Arian Christian and pagan faiths of the Germanic rulers and spread outside what had been the Empire to Ireland Germany Scandinavia and the western Slavs in the East Christianity spread to the Slavs in what is now Russia south central and eastern Europe 45 The reign of Charlemagne in Western Europe is particularly noted for bringing the last major Western Arian tribes into communion with Rome in part through conquest and forced conversion Starting in the 7th century the Islamic Caliphates rose and gradually began to conquer larger and larger areas of the Christian world 45 Excepting North Africa and most of Spain northern and western Europe escaped largely unscathed by Islamic expansion in great part because richer Constantinople and its empire acted as a magnet for the onslaught 46 The challenge presented by the Muslims would help to solidify the religious identity of eastern Christians even as it gradually weakened the Eastern Empire 47 Even in the Muslim World the Church survived e g the modern Copts Maronites and others albeit at times with great difficulty 48 49 Great Schism of 1054 Edit Although there had long been frictions between the Bishop of Rome i e the patriarch of the Catholic Church proper and the eastern patriarchs within the Byzantine Empire Rome s changing allegiance from Constantinople to the Frankish king Charlemagne set the Church on a course towards separation The political and theological divisions would grow until Rome and the East excommunicated each other in the 11th century ultimately leading to the division of the Church into the Western Catholic and Eastern Orthodox churches 45 In 1448 not long before the Byzantine Empire collapsed the Russian Orthodox Church gained independence from the Patriarch of Constantinople 50 As a result of the redevelopment of Western Europe and the gradual fall of the Eastern Roman Empire to the Arabs and Turks helped by warfare against Eastern Christians the final Fall of Constantinople in 1453 resulted in Eastern scholars fleeing the Muslim hordes bringing ancient manuscripts to the West which was a factor in the beginning of the period of the Western Renaissance there Rome was seen by the Western Church as Christianity s heartland 51 Some Eastern churches even broke with Eastern Orthodoxy and entered into communion with Rome the Uniate Eastern Catholic Churches Protestant Reformation Edit The changes brought on by the Renaissance eventually led to the Protestant Reformation during which the Protestant Lutheran and the Reformed followers of Calvin Hus Zwingli Melancthon Knox and others split from the Catholic Church At this time a series of non theological disputes also led to the English Reformation which led to the independence of the Church of England Then during the Age of Exploration and the Age of Imperialism Western Europe spread the Catholic Church and the Protestant churches around the world especially in the Americas 52 53 These developments in turn have led to Christianity being the largest religion in the world today 54 Catholic tradition EditSee also Historical development of the doctrine of Papal Primacy The Catholic Church teaches in its doctrine that it is the original church founded by Christ on the Apostles in the 1st century AD The papal encyclical Mystici corporis Pope Pius XII 1943 expresses the dogmatic ecclesiology of the Catholic Church thus If we would define and describe this true Church of Jesus Christ which is the One Holy Catholic Apostolic Roman Church we shall find no expression more noble more sublime or more divine than the phrase which calls it the Mystical Body of Jesus Christ The Second Vatican Council s dogmatic constitution Lumen gentium 1964 further declares that the one Church of Christ which in the Creed is professed as one holy catholic and apostolic constituted and organized in the world as a society subsists in the Catholic Church which is governed by the successor of Peter and by the Bishops in communion with him 55 56 Likewise the encyclical of Pope Pius IX Singulari Quidem states in a similar vein There is only one true holy Catholic Church which is the Apostolic Roman Church There is only one See founded on Peter by the word of the Lord Outside of the Church no one can hope for life or salvation unless he is excused through ignorance beyond his control It is also a common theme in Catholic devotional and catechetical literature The Holy Catholic and Apostolic Church is the only flock of which Jesus Christ the Son of God is the only Shepherd Catholic Book of Prayers Pg 236 One Flock One Shepherd 57 A 2007 declaration 58 of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith clarified that in this passage subsistence means this perduring historical continuity and the permanence of all the elements instituted by Christ in the Catholic Church in which the Church of Christ is concretely found on this earth and acknowledged that grace can be operative within religious communities separated from the Catholic Church due to some elements of sanctification and truth within them but also added Nevertheless the word subsists can only be attributed to the Catholic Church alone precisely because it refers to the mark of unity that we profess in the symbols of the faith I believe in the one Church and this one Church subsists in the Catholic Church The Catholic Church teaches that only corporate bodies of Christians led by bishops with valid holy orders can be recognized as churches in the proper sense In Catholic documents communities without such bishops are formally called ecclesial communities Eastern Orthodox tradition EditThe Eastern Orthodox Church each claims to be the original Christian Church The Eastern Orthodox Church bases its claim primarily on its assertion that it holds to traditions and beliefs of the original Christian Church It also claims that four out of the five sees of the Pentarchy excluding Rome are still a part of it Oriental Orthodox tradition EditThe Oriental Orthodox Churches claims to be the original Christian Church The Oriental Orthodox churches bases their claim primarily on its assertion that it holds to traditions and beliefs of the original Christian Church They never adopted the theory of the Nature of God which was formulated later than the break that followed the Council of Chalcedon Lutheran tradition Edit The Church is the congregation of saints in which the Gospel is rightly taught and the Sacraments are rightly administered Augsburg Confession 59 The Lutheran churches traditionally hold that their tradition represents the true visible Church 60 The Augsburg Confession found within the Book of Concord a compendium of belief of the Lutheran Churches teaches that the faith as confessed by Luther and his followers is nothing new but the true catholic faith and that their churches represent the true catholic or universal church 61 When the Lutherans presented the Augsburg Confession to Charles V Holy Roman Emperor in 1530 they believe to have showed that each article of faith and practice was true first of all to Holy Scripture and then also to the teaching of the church fathers and the councils 61 Nevertheless the Lutheran churches teach that there are indeed true Christians in other churches as other denominations also preach the Word of God though mixed with error since the proclamation of the Word of God bears fruit Lutheran theology accepts the appellation Church for other Christian denominations 60 Anglican tradition EditAnglicans generally understand their tradition as a branch of the historical Catholic Church and as a via media middle way between traditions often Lutheranism and Reformed Christianity or Roman Catholicism and Reformed Christianity 62 Reformed tradition EditReformed theology defines the Church as being invisible and visible the former includes the entire communion of saints and the latter is the institution that God provides as an agency for God s saving justifying and sustaining activity which John Calvin referred to as our mother 63 The Reformed confessions of faith emphasize the pure teaching of the gospel pura doctrina evangelii and the right administration of the sacraments recta administratio sacramentorum as the two most necessary signs of the true visible church 64 Methodist tradition Edit Methodist preachers are known for promulgating the doctrines of the new birth and entire sanctification to the public at events such as tent revivals brush arbor revivals and camp meetings which they believe is the reason that God raised them up into existence 65 Methodists affirm belief in the one true Church Apostolic and Universal viewing their churches as constituting a privileged branch of this true church 66 67 With regard to the position of Methodism within Christendom the founder of the movement John Wesley once noted that what God had achieved in the development of Methodism was no mere human endeavor but the work of God As such it would be preserved by God so long as history remained 68 Calling it the grand depositum of the Methodist faith Wesley specifically taught that the propagation of the doctrine of entire sanctification was the reason that God raised up the Methodists in the world 69 65 Evangelical tradition EditThe local Evangelical Church is the organization that represents the universal Church and is seen by evangelicals as the body of Jesus Christ 70 It is responsible for teaching and ordinances mainly the believer s baptism and the Lord s Supper 71 Many churches are members of Evangelical Christian denominations and adhere to a common confession of faith and regulations despite the autonomy of the church 72 Some denominations are members of a national alliance of churches of the World Evangelical Alliance 73 Some evangelical denominations operate according to episcopal polity or presbyterian polity However the most common form of church government within Evangelicalism is congregational polity This is especially common among non denominational evangelical churches 74 Common ministries within evangelical congregations are pastor elder deacon evangelist and worship leader 75 The ministry of bishop with a function of supervision over churches on a regional or national scale is present in all the Evangelical Christian denominations even if the titles president of the council or general overseer are mainly used for this function 76 77 Divisions and controversies EditToday there is a wide diversity of Christian groups with a variety of different doctrines and traditions These controversies between the various branches of Christianity naturally include significant differences in their respective ecclesiologies Christian denominations Edit Main article Christian denominations A denomination in Christianity is a generic term for a distinct religious body identified by traits such as a common name structure leadership or doctrine Individual bodies however may use alternative terms to describe themselves such as church or fellowship Divisions between one group and another are defined by doctrine and church authority issues such as the nature of Jesus the authority of apostolic succession eschatology and papal primacy often separate one denomination from another Groups of denominations often sharing broadly similar beliefs practices and historical ties are known as branches of Christianity Individual Christian groups vary widely in the degree to which they recognize one another Several groups claim to be the direct and sole authentic successor the church founded by Jesus Christ in the 1st century AD Others however believe in denominationalism where some or all Christian groups are legitimate churches of the same religion regardless of their distinguishing labels beliefs and practices Because of this concept some Christian bodies reject the term denomination to describe themselves to avoid implying equivalency with other churches or denominations The nave of St Peter s Church Phibsborough Dublin Ireland St Andrew s Church Darjeeling Built 1843 Rebuilt 1873 The Catholic Church and Eastern Orthodox Church believe that the term one in the Nicene Creed describes and prescribes a visible institutional and doctrinal unity not only geographically throughout the world but also historically throughout history They see unity as one of the four marks that the Creed attributes to the genuine Church and the essence of a mark is to be visible A church whose identity and belief varied from country to country and from age to age would not be one in their estimation As such they see themselves not as a denomination but as pre denominational not as one of many faith communities but the original and sole true Church Many Baptist and Congregationalist theologians accept the local sense as the only valid application of the term church They strongly reject the notion of a universal catholic church These denominations 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 78 79 Many Anglicans Lutherans Old Catholics and Independent Catholics view unity as a mark of catholicity but see the institutional unity of the Catholic Church as manifested in the shared apostolic succession of their episcopacies rather than a shared episcopal hierarchy or rites Reformed Christians hold that every person justified by faith in the Gospel committed to the Apostles is a member of One holy catholic and apostolic Church From this perspective the real unity and holiness of the whole church established through the Apostles is yet to be revealed and meanwhile the extent and peace of the church on earth is imperfectly realized in a visible way The Lutheran Church Missouri Synod declares that the Christian Church properly speaking consists only of those who have faith in the gospel i e the forgiveness of sins which Christ gained for all people even if they are in church bodies that teach error but excluding those who do not have such faith even if they belong to a church or hold a teaching office in it 80 World Christianity Edit Main article World Christianity A number of historians have noted a twentieth century global shift in Christianity from a religion largely found in Europe and the Americas to one which is found in the global south 81 82 83 Described as World Christianity or Global Christianity this term attempts to convey the global nature of the Christian religion However the term often focuses on non Western Christianity which comprises usually the exotic instances of Christian faith in the global South in Asia Africa and Latin America 84 It also includes indigenous or diasporic forms in Western Europe and North America 85 Other debates Edit Other debates include the following Churchianity is a pejorative term for practices of Christianity that are viewed as placing more emphasis on the habits of church life or its institutional traditions than on the teachings of Jesus Hence the replacement of Christ by Church in the word Churchianity Some Protestants apply it to churches that they view as having moved the central focus from Christ to the Church Others such as the Orthodox Church and the Catholic Church see Christ as the centre but the Church also as essential extra Ecclesiam nulla salus because of the close union between Christ and the Church described in Biblical passages such as the Epistle to the Ephesians see Bride of Christ There are many opinions as to the ultimate fate of the souls of individuals who are not part of a particular institutional church i e members of a particular church may or may not believe that the souls of those outside their church organization can or will be saved It has been debated in Protestantism whether or not the Christian Church is in fact a unified heavenly institution with the earthly institutions relegated to secondary status See also Edit Christianity portal Religion portalChicago Lambeth Quadrilateral Christian ecumenism Church architecture Church attendance Churching of women Evangelical Catholic Germanic Christianity Great Church High church and Low church Inculturation Kingdom of God List of Christian denominations List of Christian denominations by number of members List of popes Missiology Priesthood of all believers Restoration Movement Role of the Christian Church in civilization Unam sanctamReferences Edit a b The Original Christian Church Orthodox Church in America Retrieved 27 June 2021 a b c Weaver Jonathan 1900 Christian Theology A Concise and Practical View of the Cardinal Doctrines and Institutions of Christianity United Brethren Publishing House p 245 There are distinctions between the general invisible church and the general visible church which it is not necessary to carry out to the last analysis In a sense they are both visible All who are members of the general invisible church are members of the general visible church But all who are members of the general visible church are not members of the general invisible church A clear and distinct difference between the visible and invisible church may be stated thus 1 The general invisible church includes all out of every kindred and tongue and people and nation who are truly saved No one denomination has in its communion all who belong to the invisible church 2 The visible church includes all who are recognized as members of a Christian church No one denomination can justly claim to be the general visible church a b What do Catholics believe Roman Catholic Diocese of Lansing Retrieved 29 June 2021 We are the original Christian Church which began when Jesus himself when he said to the Apostle Peter You are the rock on which I will build my church The gates of hell will not prevail against it Every pope since then has been part of an unbroken line of succession since Peter the first pope Eastern Orthodox Church BBC 11 June 2008 Retrieved 27 June 2021 The doctrine of the Christian Church was established over the centuries at Councils dating from as early as 325CE where the leaders from all the Christian communities were represented Ehrman Bart D 29 May 2018 Inside the Conversion Tactics of the Early Christian Church History Retrieved 27 June 2021 And yet within three centuries the Christian church could count some 3 million adherents F L Cross Elizabeth A Livingstone eds 1997 The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church 3rd ed New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 211655 X OCLC 38435185 McGrath Alister E 4 August 2016 Christian Theology An Introduction John Wiley amp Sons p 362 ISBN 978 1 118 87443 1 Schaff Philip 1910 History of the Christian Church William B Eerdmans Publishing Company p 524 Kinsman Frederick Joseph 1924 Americanism and Catholicism Longman p 203 The one most talked about is the Branch Theory which assumes that the basis of unity is a valid priesthood Given the priesthood it is held that valid Sacraments unite in spite of schisms Those who hold it assume that the Church is composed of Catholics Eastern Orthodox eastern heretics possessing undisputed Orders and Old Catholics Anglicans Swedish Lutherans Moravians and any others who might be able to demonstrate that they had perpetuated a valid hierarchy This is chiefly identified with High Church Anglicans and represents the survival of a seventeenth century contention against Puritans that Anglicans were not to be classed with Continental Protestants The Church Catholic Encyclopedia 2020 Retrieved 27 June 2021 It would appear then indisputable that in the earliest years of the Christian Church ecclesiastical functions were in a large measure fulfilled by men who had been specially endowed for this purpose with charismata of the Holy Spirit and that as long as these gifts endured the local ministry occupied a position of less importance and influence Entry for Strong s 1577 ἐkklhsia StudyLight org Bible Lexicons Old New Testament Greek Lexical Dictionary Retrieved October 20 2019 Ekklesia A Word Study Acu edu Archived from the original on 3 September 2006 Retrieved 3 September 2013 McKim Donald K Westminster Dictionary of Theological Terms Westminster John Knox Press 1996 Elwell amp Comfort 2001 pp 266 828 Louis Berkhof Systematic Theology London Banner of Truth 1949 572 Harper Douglas 2001 church Online Etymology Dictionary Retrieved 2008 01 18 O E cirice church from W Gmc kirika from Gk kyriake oikia Lord s house from kyrios ruler lord 1 Smith s Bible Dictionary from 1884 page 452 Retrieved October 20 2019 Harper Douglas 2001 church Online Etymology Dictionary Retrieved 2008 01 18 Gk kyriakon adj of the Lord was used of houses of Christian worship since c 300 especially in the East though it was less common in this sense than ekklesia or basilike Pentecost Christianity Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 4 November 2016 Religions Christianity Pentecost bbc co uk British Broadcasting Corporation BBC Retrieved 4 November 2016 Milavec Aaron 2007 Salvation is from the Jews John 4 22 Saving Grace in Judaism and Messianic Hope in Christianity Liturgical Press p 90 ISBN 9780814659892 Retrieved 4 November 2016 Pentecost Whitsunday Catholic Encyclopedia Accessed on 4 November 2016 Church as an Institution Dictionary of the History of Ideas University of Virginia Library 2 Archived 2006 10 24 at the Wayback Machine An Overview of Christian History Catholic Resources for Bible Liturgy and More 3 Herbermann Charles ed 1913 Acts of the Apostles Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company Donald H Frew Harran Last Refuge of Classical Paganism Colorado State University Pueblo The Virtual Pomegranate Archived from the original on 2004 08 26 Retrieved 2007 05 19 From Jesus to Christ Maps Archaeology and Sources Chronology PBS retrieved May 19 2007 4 Sophie Lunn Rockliffe Christianity and the Roman Empire Reasons for persecution Ancient History Romans BBC Home retrieved May 10 2007 5 Archived 2009 08 25 at the Wayback Machine Michael DiMaio Jr Robert Frakes Constantius II 337 361 A D De Imperatoribus Romanis An Online Encyclopedia of Roman Rulers and their Families 6 Michael Hines Constantine and the Christian State Church History for the Masses 7 a b c Francois Louvel Naissance d un vocabulaire chretien in Les Peres Apostoliques Paris Cerf 2006 ISBN 978 2 204 06872 7 pp 517 518 a b Xavier Leon Dufour editor Vocabulaire de theologie biblique Paris Cerf 1981 ISBN 2 204 01720 5 pp 323 335 Matthew 16 18 Matthew 18 17 Julienne Cote Cent mots cles de la theologie de Paul ISBN 2 204 06446 7 pp 157ff St Ignatius of Antioch to the Smyrnaeans Roberts Donaldson translation www earlychristianwritings com Halsall Paul June 1997 Theodosian Code XVI i 2 Medieval Sourcebook Banning of Other Religions Fordham University Retrieved 2006 11 23 Healy Patrick 1913 Priscillianism In Herbermann Charles ed Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company Ramsay MacMullen Christianity and Paganism in the Fourth to Eighth Centuries Yale University Press September 23 1997 Christianity Missions and monasticism Encyclopaedia Britannica Online 8 Deno Geanakoplos A short history of the ecumenical patriarchate of Constantinople Archons of the Ecumenical Patriarch retrieved May 20 2007 9 Moosa Matti 28 April 2012 The Christians Under Turkish Rule MSN Encarta Orthodox Church retrieved May 12 2007 Archived from the original on 2009 10 28 Arias of Study Western Art Department of Art History University of Wisconsin retrieved May 17 2007 10 a b c CHRISTIANITY IN HISTORY Dictionary of the History of Ideas University of Virginia Library 11 Archived 2006 09 09 at the Wayback Machine The Byzantine Empire byzantinos com Archived from the original on 2007 09 28 Retrieved 2007 05 24 BYZANTINE ICONOCLASM AND POLITICAL EARTHQUAKE OF ARAB CONQUESTS AN EMOTIONAL GUST This Century s Review retrieved May 24 2007 12 The History of the Copts California Academy of Sciences Coptic History Archived from the original on 2007 10 13 Retrieved 2007 10 28 retrieved May 24 2007 History of the Maronite Patriarchate Opus Libani retrieved May 24 2007 History of the Maronite Patriarchate Archived from the original on 2007 10 13 Retrieved 2007 10 28 Autocephalous Russian Church Aristeides Papadakis John Meyendorff The Christian East and the Rise of the Papacy The Church 1071 1453 A D St Vladimir s Seminary Press August 1994 ISBN 0 88141 057 8 ISBN 978 0 88141 057 0 Christianity and world religions Encyclopaedia Britannica South America Religion Encyclopaedia Britannica Major Religions of the World Ranked by Number of Adherents Adherents com 13 Lumen gentium Archived September 6 2014 at the Wayback Machine 8 In The Catholicity of the Church p 132 Avery Dulles noted that this document avoided explicitly calling the Church the Roman Catholic Church replacing this term with the equivalent which is governed by the successor of Peter and by the Bishops in communion with him and giving in a footnote a reference to two earlier documents in which the word Roman is used explicitly Catholic Book of Prayers Pg 236 Large Print Edition Nihil Obstat and Impramatur 2005 copyright Catholic Book Publishing Corp New Jersey Responses to Some Questions Regarding Certain Aspects of the Doctrine on the Church Archived August 13 2013 at the Wayback Machine See Augsburg Confession Article 7 Of the Church a b Frey H 1918 Is One Church as Good as Another The Lutheran Witness Vol 37 pp 82 83 a b Ludwig Alan 12 September 2016 Luther s Catholic Reformation The Lutheran Witness When the Lutherans presented the Augsburg Confession before Emperor Charles V in 1530 they carefully showed that each article of faith and practice was true first of all to Holy Scripture and then also to the teaching of the church fathers and the councils and even the canon law of the Church of Rome They boldly claim This is about the Sum of our Doctrine in which as can be seen there is nothing that varies from the Scriptures or from the Church Catholic or from the Church of Rome as known from its writers AC XXI Conclusion 1 The underlying thesis of the Augsburg Confession is that the faith as confessed by Luther and his followers is nothing new but the true catholic faith and that their churches represent the true catholic or universal church In fact it is actually the Church of Rome that has departed from the ancient faith and practice of the catholic church see AC XXIII 13 XXVIII 72 and other places Anglican and Episcopal History Historical Society of the Episcopal Church 2003 p 15 Others had made similar observations Patrick McGrath commenting that the Church of England was not a middle way between Roman Catholic and Protestant but between different forms of Protestantism and William Monter describing the Church of England as a unique style of Protestantism a via media between the Reformed and Lutheran traditions MacCulloch has described Cranmer as seeking a middle way between Zurich and Wittenberg but elsewhere remarks that the Church of England was nearer Zurich and Geneva than Wittenberg McKim Donald K 1 January 2001 The Westminster Handbook to Reformed Theology Westminster John Knox Press p 34 ISBN 9780664224301 Adhinarta Yuzo 14 June 2012 The Doctrine of the Holy Spirit in the Major Reformed Confessions and Catechisms of the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries Langham Monographs p 83 ISBN 9781907713286 a b Gibson James Wesleyan Heritage Series Entire Sanctification South Georgia Confessing Association Archived from the original on 29 May 2018 Retrieved 30 May 2018 Newton William F 1863 The Magazine of the Wesleyan Methodist Church J Fry amp Company p 673 Bloom Linda 20 July 2007 Vatican stance nothing new say church leader The United Methodist Church Retrieved 10 June 2018 William J Abraham 25 August 2016 The Birth Pangs of United Methodism as a Unique Global Orthodox Denomination Retrieved 30 April 2017 Davies Rupert E George A Raymond Rupp Gordon 14 June 2017 A History of the Methodist Church in Great Britain Volume Three Wipf amp Stock Publishers p 225 ISBN 9781532630507 Robert Paul Lightner Handbook of Evangelical Theology Kregel Academic USA 1995 p 228 Robert Paul Lightner Handbook of Evangelical Theology Kregel Academic USA 1995 p 234 Brad Christerson Richard Flory The Rise of Network Christianity Oxford University Press USA 2017 p 58 Brian Stiller Evangelicals Around the World A Global Handbook for the 21st Century Thomas Nelson USA 2015 p 210 Balmer 2002 p 549 Elwell Walter A 2001 Evangelical Dictionary of Theology Baker Academic pp 370 778 John H Y Briggs A Dictionary of European Baptist Life and Thought Wipf and Stock Publishers USA 2009 p 53 William K Kay Pentecostalism A Very Short Introduction OUP Oxford UK 2011 p 81 1689 London Baptist Confession Savoy Declaration Brief Statement of the Doctrinal Position of the Missouri Synod Lutheran Church Missouri Synod 1932 Sections 24 26 Retrieved April 3 2020 Andrew F Walls 1996 Missionary Movement in Christian History Studies in the Transmission of Faith Orbis Books ISBN 978 1 60833 106 2 Robert Dana L April 2000 Shifting Southward Global Christianity Since 1945 PDF International Bulletin of Missionary Research 24 2 50 58 doi 10 1177 239693930002400201 S2CID 152096915 Jenkins Philip 2011 The Next Christendom The Coming of Global Christianity New York Oxford University Press ISBN 9780199767465 Kim Sebastian Kim Kirsteen 2008 Christianity as a World Religion London Continuum p 2 Jehu Hanciles 2008 Beyond Christendom Globalization African Migration and the Transformation of the West Orbis Books ISBN 978 1 60833 103 1 Bibliography EditUniversity of Virginia Dictionary of the History of Ideas Christianity in History retrieved May 10 2007 University of Virginia Dictionary of the History of Ideas Church as an Institution retrieved May 10 2007 Christianity and the Roman Empire Ancient History Romans BBC Home retrieved May 10 2007 14 Archived 2019 08 05 at the Wayback Machine Orthodox Church MSN Encarta retrieved May 10 2007Orthodox Church MSN Encarta Archived from the original on 2009 10 28 Catechism of the Catholic Church 15 Balmer Randall Herbert 2002 Encyclopedia of Evangelicalism Louisville KY Westminster John Knox Press ISBN 978 0 664 22409 7 Retrieved October 25 2011 Elwell Walter Comfort Philip Wesley 2001 Tyndale Bible Dictionary Tyndale House Publishers ISBN 0 8423 7089 7 Mark Gstohl Theological Perspectives of the Reformation The Magisterial Reformation retrieved May 10 2007 16 J Faber The Catholicity of the Belgic Confession Spindle Works The Canadian Reformed Magazine 18 Sept 20 27 Oct 4 11 18 Nov 1 8 1969 17 Boise State University History of the Crusades The Fourth Crusade 18 United States Conference of Catholic Bishops ARTICLE 9 I BELIEVE IN THE HOLY CATHOLIC CHURCH 830 831 19 Provides Catholic interpretations of the term catholic Kenneth D Whitehead Four Marks of the Church EWTN Global Catholic Network 20 Herbermann Charles ed 1913 Unity as a Mark of the Church Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company Church History Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 6 11th ed 1911 pp 330 345 Apostolic Succession The Columbia Encyclopedia Sixth Edition 2001 05 21 Gerd Ludemann Heretics The Other Side of Early Christianity Westminster John Knox Press 1st American ed edition August 1996 ISBN 0 664 22085 1 ISBN 978 0 664 22085 3 From Jesus to Christ Maps Archaeology and Sources Chronology PBS retrieved May 19 2007 22 Bannerman James The Church of Christ A treatise on the nature powers ordinances discipline and government of the Christian Church Still Waters Revival Books Edmonton Reprint Edition May 1991 First Edition 1869 Grudem Wayne Systematic Theology An Introduction to Biblical Doctrine Inter Varsity Press Leicester England 1994 Kuiper R B The Glorious Body of Christ The Banner of Truth Trust Edinburgh 1967 Mannion Gerard and Mudge Lewis eds The Routledge Companion to the Christian Church 2007External links Edit Look up Christian Church in Wiktionary the free dictionary Wikiquote has quotations related to Christian Church Vatican II Dogmatic Constitution on the Church Lumen gentium Christianity vs Churchianity The Church A Protestant Definition Church Structure New Testament Churches vs Today s Institutional Churches Ecclesia at the Christian Iconography web site Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Christian Church amp oldid 1144669687, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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