The Church in God's Program is a biblical study covering the entire scope of the church - its beginning, government, ministries, and the new covenant.
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ROBERT L. SAUCY (Westmont College, Dallas Theological Seminary) is a distinguished professor of systematic theology at Talbot Theological Seminary. He previously served as president of the Evangelical Theological Society and addresses that group frequently. He is author of numerous books, including The Church in God’s Program, and is the editor of Women and Men in Ministry: A Complementary Perspective. His shorter works have appeared in many journals including Bibliotheca Sacra, Grace Theological Journal, and Journal of the Evangelical Theological Society. Dr. Saucy resides in Anaheim, California.
Preface,
1. The Meaning and Uses of the Word Church,
2. The Nature of the Church—Part One,
3. The Nature of the Church—Part Two,
4. The Inauguration of the Church,
5. The Church in God's Program,
6. The Organization of the Church,
7. The Ministry of the Church,
8. The Worship of the Church,
9. Baptism and the Lord's Supper,
Bibliography,
Subject Index,
Scripture Index,
The Meaning and Uses of the Word Church
The English Term Church
The English term church, along with the Scottish word kirk and German Kirche, is derived from the Greek kuriakon, which is the neuter adjective of kurios, "Lord," and means, "belonging to the Lord." Kuriakon occurs only twice in the New Testament, neither time with reference to the church as commonly used today. In 1 Corinthians 11:20 it refers to the Lord's Supper and in Revelation 1:10 to the Lord's Day.
Its application to the church stems from its use by early Christians for the place where they met together, denoting it as a place belonging to God, or God's house. With the realization that the place had significance only because of the people of God who met in it, the term was applied to the assembly itself. From this its meaning has extended to various contemporary uses: (1) a place of meeting, (2) a local organization of believers, (3) the universal body of believers, (4) a particular denomination, for example, the Lutheran Church, and (5) an organization of believers related to a particular area or nation, for example, the Church of England.
The Greek Word
THE ETYMOLOGICAL MEANING
The Greek word in the New Testament for the English word church is ekklesia. It is derived from the verb ekkaleo, a compound of ek, "out," and kaleo, "to call or summon," which together mean "to call out." While often this etymological meaning is used to support the biblical doctrine of the church as a people called out, separated from the world by God, the usage of this term both in secular Greek and the Greek Old Testament, which provides the background for the New Testament language, does not lend support to this doctrine from the word ekklesia itself.
IN SECULAR GREEK
Ekklesia was used by the early Greek-speaking people with its full meaning of those called forth. It was a term for the "assembly of citizens summoned by the crier, the legislative assembly." The idea of summoning, however, soon passed away in usage. In Athens, ekklesia signified the constitutional assembly which met on previously fixed dates and did not need to be specifically summoned, much like our modern legislature, while special assemblies summoned to deal with urgent matters were called sunkletoi, in distinction from the ordinary ekklesiai. The word came to stand for any assembly, regardless of its constituents or manner of convening. This broad use is evident even in the New Testament where a confused mob which had rushed into the theater at Ephesus is twice called an ekklesia (Ac 19:32, 41), and in the same context the term is used for "a lawful assembly" (v. 39).
In addition, in secular Greek ekklesia refers only to the assembly or meeting and never to the people which compose that assembly. When the people are not assembled, they are not considered as composing an ekklesia. A new ekklesia existed each time people assembled.
It is questionable whether ekklesia was ever used in the Greek society for a religious group. The secular use, therefore, provides little for an appreciation of the rich meaning of the New Testament term outside of the formal analogy of an assembly of people meeting for a particular purpose.
IN THE SEPTUAGINT
The primary background for the New Testament use of the term ekklesia, as with most New Testament word thought, is the Old Testament, specifically the Greek translation of the Hebrew Scriptures in the third century B.C. The word ekklesia occurred almost a hundred times in the Septuagint and always translated the Hebrew qahal or a word of the same root. Although qahal is also rendered by seven other Greek words, including sunagoge, which indicates its breadth of meaning, ekklesia is the preeminent translation. Qahal means simply an assembly, convocation or congregation and can be used for almost any type of gathering of people. It refers to assemblies gathered for evil counsel (Gen 49:6; Ps 26:5); for civic affairs (1 Ki 12:3; Pr 5:14); for war or invasion (Num 22:4; Judg 20:2); for a company of returning exiles (Jer 31:8); or for a religious assembly to hear God's Word (Deu 9:10) or worship Him in some way (2 Ch 20:5; Neh 5:13). The word is used for the congregation of Israel (Mic 2:5; Num 16:3), but it is also used for angels (Ps 89:5, ASV) and simply for an assembled multitude (Gen 28:3; 35:11).
This varied use indicates that no technical meaning was attached to qahal in the Old Testament or to its Septuagint Greek translation, ekklesia. Apparently in the interest of demonstrating continuity between Israel and the New Testament church, it is often argued that qahal became a sort of technical term for Israel in the Old Testament, meaning the people of God. This meaning is then said to provide the real background for the New Testament use of ekklesia as the early disciples saw themselves as the new Israel of God, the continuation of the Old Testament Israel. There is no evidence, however, that such is the case. Qahal and its Greek translation simply mean an assembly. Who assembles and the significance of the assembly must be added explicitly or implicitly in the context. It is only the addition of "Lord" which makes it plain that an assembly is the congregation of God. Campbell examines the seven passages in the Old Testament where the terminology "qahal of the Lord" is used. This terminology is suggested as that which gives the technical meaning of "people of God" to the term ekklesia. He concludes that these passages afford no adequate basis for the assertion that the "qahal of the Lord" is the usual term for Israel as the people of God, nor for the supposition that a Christian reader of the Septuagint would be led to think that "ekklesia of the Lord," which is found in only five of the seven passages, had that meaning. He notes that if this is true even with the addition of the qualifying phrase "of the Lord," it is surely clear that qahal alone cannot have had such a technical meaning. Corroboration of this conclusion appears in the fact that in the book of Romans, which concerns itself with the relationship of the New Testament church with God's Old Testament people, and also in 1 Peter, where perhaps the most notable of Old Testament references describing Israel is applied to the church (1 Pe 2:4-10), the term ekklesia is entirely absent.
Moreover, the Old Testament qahal with its Septuagint translation, ekklesia, like the secular Greek use, never seems to refer to other than an actual meeting. However, a synonymous term, edah, did come to have the broader meaning referring to the congregation, whether actually assembled or not. In this sense it is nearer to the New Testament use of ekklesia than qahal; yet, it is never translated ekklesia in the Septuagint but, rather, predominantly by synagoge, which is also a common translation of qahal.
Although the Septuagint use of ekklesia based upon the meaning of qahal does not reveal any of the technical sense or the full meaning of the New Testament ekklesia, its use for a worshiping assembly, especially in the Psalms, makes it the most suitable biblical word for the early meetings of the New Testament believers. As we shall see, it is with this primary meaning that the word enters New Testament usage. Synagoge meant essentially the same thing to the Jewish people and could be used for an early Christian meeting (Ja 2:2). But its distinct Jewish reference, along with the fact that synagoge came to have particular reference to the place of meeting, hindered its general acceptance by the Christian community.
An interesting development of the term ekklesia appears in the apocryphal book of Ecclesiasticus where, in addition to using the term ekklesia in its Old Testament and secular sense of assembly, the writer appears to go beyond this sense to the people who make up the group even when not actually together. Very probably such usage provides the transition from the limited meaning of the Old Testament to the broader concept of the New.
IN THE NEW TESTAMENT
The New Testament meaning of ekklesia. The New Testament reveals a development of the term ekklesia from the simple nontechnical meaning of assembly to the full-blown technical designation for the Christian people of God. That ekklesia does not immediately mean something entirely different from the secular and Septuagint usage is evident by these uses retained in the New Testament. In Acts 19 the purely secular meaning is used twice for an unruly mob (vv. 32, 41) and again for a lawful assembly (v. 39). The Septuagint usage occurs in Acts 7:38, where it describes the assembly of Israel in the wilderness, and in Hebrews 2:12, which cites the Septuagint of Psalm 22:22: "In the midst of the ekklesia I will sing praises to thee." None of these references alludes to the New Testament church.
The same general nontechnical meaning of assembly occurs in the uses of the term with qualifying phrases. Although the development is probably already taking place where ekklesia alone stands for the Christian assembly, there are several uses in the early writings of Paul where modifying words are used, indicating that the term itself had not yet fully developed to its technical meaning. The apostle addresses his first letter "unto the church of the Thessalonians which is in God the Father and in the Lord Jesus Christ" (1 Th 1:1). In the same letter he writes, "The churches of God which in Judea are in Christ Jesus" (2:14), while in the second epistle to the same church, which is still very early, the apostle uses the address: "Unto the church of the Thessalonians in God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ" (2 Th 1:1). These phrases indicate that ekklesia itself still carried a general meaning of "assembly"; the particular kind of assembly had to be indicated by qualifiers similar to the Septuagint usage.
Shortly, however, ekklesia developed into its full technical sense. Through use, it became so completely identified with the specific Christian assembly that the term took on that particular meaning itself and could stand for that assembly without being confused with others. The majority of the New Testament references have this technical meaning.
The New Testament use of ekklesia. A Greek concordance reveals that there are 114 occurrences of ekklesia in the New Testament. Five of these, as seen above, have no reference to the New Testament church, leaving 109 references that are so related. It is interesting to note in passing that the word does not occur in the gospels except for three references in Matthew 16:18 and 18:17. It is also absent from 2 Timothy, Titus, 1 Peter, 2 Peter, 1 John, 2 John, and Jude.
1. The local church. Predominantly, ekklesia applies to a local assembly of all those who profess faith and allegiance to Christ. In this sense the singular ekklesia refers to a specific church, as that at Thessalonica (1 Th 1:1) or any nonspecified individual assembly ("every church," 1 Co 4:17). The plural ekklesiai also designates a group of churches or assemblies in a particular region ("churches of Judea," Gal 1:22); or a nonspecified number of churches ("other churches," 2 Co 11:8); or for all the churches together ("all churches," 1 Co 7:17).
2. The universal church. Ekklesia also designates the universal church. In this usage the concept of a physical assembly gives way to the spiritual unity of all believers in Christ. Ekklesia in this sense is not the assembly itself but rather those constituting it; they are the church whether actually assembled or not. This is clearly evident in the early persecution of the church at Jerusalem. Even when believers are scattered abroad and in their homes, they are "the church" (Ac 8:1-3). The application of traits of personality, such as edification and fear, to the church also shows that it was a term descriptive not only of the Christian assembly but of Christians themselves (Ac 9:31). The ekklesia was therefore all those spiritually united in Christ, the Head of the church. There is no concept of a literal assembly in this sense of ekklesia, nor does the New Testament, as will be seen later, have any organizational structure for the church universal. The unity is that of the Spirit in the body of Christ (Eph 4:4).
Although this universal meaning is occasionally found in the earlier records (Ac 8:3; 9:31; 1 Co 12:28; 15:9), and in the foundational promise made by Christ (Mt 16:18), it is primarily used in the later epistles of Ephesians and Colossians, which constitute the epitome of the biblical theology of the church (e.g., Eph 1:22-23; Col 1:18).
The universal church is often termed invisible, yet the New Testament never speaks of the invisible church. Even as members of a local church are concrete people, so are members of the universal church. It is true that the New Testament uses the term ekklesia for the spiritual reality of the body of Christ and also for the assembly, in which the genuineness of the spiritual reality of every individual professing member cannot be known. To this extent the exact membership in any individual church and the universal church at large cannot be known and is thereby invisible. But even this invisible membership is very visible in the reality of life. As for membership in an invisible church without fellowship with any local assembly, this concept is never contemplated in the New Testament. The universal church was the universal fellowship of believers who met visibly in local assemblies.
Furthermore, it is important to note that the universal use of ekklesia does not denote the one church as the sum of many individual churches, or the many churches together producing the universal church. The one universal church is manifested in a particular locality, yet each individual assembly is the church in that place. Typical of this New Testament concept is Paul's address to the Corinthian believers as "the church of God which is at Corinth" (1 Co 1:1; 2 Co 1:1). The thought of these phrases, as Schmidt explains, is not" 'the Corinthian congregation,' which would stand by the Roman, etc., but 'the congregation, church, assembly as it is in Corinth.'"
It is often difficult and sometimes impossible to separate the local and universal meanings in the early uses of ekklesia (e.g., Ac 2:47; 5:11). The assembly at Jerusalem, while definitely a local church, was also a spiritual unity through the baptism of the Spirit. For a time, therefore, the two uses of ekklesia coincided in the one assembly of believers. The church of Jesus Christ was manifest in the church at Jerusalem. As new local churches were established and organized in other places, these were still viewed as manifestations of the one "church" as well as individually "the churches."
The use of ekklesia in the New Testament is limited to the senses of the local and universal church. Other connotations which have arisen with the English term church are not found with the New Testament word. It is never used for a church building, nor are adjectives ever attached to ekklesia as titles to denote a particular denomination (e.g., Baptist or Presbyterian Church), or a state or territorial church (e.g., the Eastern Church, Church of England). In the New Testament when the locality of a single church is mentioned, it is described either by the name of its members (e.g., 1 Th 1:1, "The church of the Thessalonians") or as in a certain city (1 Co 1:2, "The church ... at Corinth"). Churches of a region are described as being "in" or "of" the region (e.g., 1 Th 2:14, "the churches ... in Judea"; Gal 1:2, "the churches of Galatia"). Titles such as the Church of Ephesus or Galatia are never found. Even such theological concepts as militant or triumphant are never attached to the term ekklesia in the New Testament.
Excerpted from The Church in God's Program by Robert L. Saucy. Copyright © 1972 The Moody Bible Institute of Chicago. Excerpted by permission of Moody Publishers.
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