Bible Study Course: Lesson 10 - What Is the Church?
The Historical Background of the Word Church
The Holman Bible Dictionary, in its article "Church," explains
the background of the word church (emphasis added throughout):
"Church is the English translation of the Greek word ekklesia.
The use of the Greek term prior to the emergence of the Christian church is
important as two streams of meaning flow from the history of its usage into
the New Testament understanding of church.
"First, the Greek term which basically means 'called out' was
commonly used to indicate an assembly of citizens of a Greek city and is so
used in Acts 19:32, 39. The citizens who were quite conscious of their privileged
status over against slaves and noncitizens were called to the assembly by a
herald and dealt . . . with matters of common concern. When the early Christians
understood themselves as constituting a church, no doubt exists that they perceived
themselves as called out by God in Jesus Christ for a special purpose and that
their status was a privileged one in Jesus Christ (Eph. 2:19).
"Second, the Greek term was used more than one hundred times in the Greek
translation of the Old Testament in common use in the time of Jesus. The Hebrew
term (qahal) meant simply 'assembly' and could be used in a variety
of ways, referring for example to an assembling of prophets (1 Sam. 19:20),
soldiers (Num. 22:4), or the people of God (Deut. 9:10). The use of the term
in the Old Testament in referring to the people of God is important for understanding
the term 'church' in the New Testament.
"The first Christians were [mostly] Jews who used the Greek translation
of the Old Testament. For them to use a self-designation that was common in
the Old Testament for the people of God reveals their understanding of the continuity
that links the Old and New Testaments. The early Christians understood themselves
as the people of the God who had revealed Himself in the Old Testament (Heb.
1:1-2), as the true children of Israel (Rom. 2:28-29) with Abraham as their
father (Rom. 4:1-25), and as the people of the New Covenant prophesied in the
Old Testament (Heb. 8:1-13).
"As a consequence of this broad background of meaning in the Greek and
Old Testament worlds, the term 'church' is used in the New Testament of a local
congregation of called-out Christians, such as the 'church of God which
is at Corinth' (1 Cor. 1:2), and also of the entire people of God, such as in
the affirmation that Christ is 'the head over all things to the church, which
is his body' (Eph. 1:22-23)."
|