My church is starting a church wide study on "the priorities of Jesus". Just got the small group guide and the first lesson contains the following assertion :
The Greek word for Church is Ekklesia. The meaning is "the called out ones". Ekklesia was a common term in Roman days. The Roman Emperor had his Ekklesia team. They would meet with the emperor regularly to hear his commands. Then they would go into a community and influence the people toward "the Roman way and culture". This was the assimilation process which conquered nations. The goal was to create a united empire.
There's no source listed and in my own brief research I can find no source to corroborate that the word was ever used in such a context. But before I make an idiot out of myself and derail next week's small group discussion, thought I'd ask if anyone has ever heard that interpretation of the word ecclesia before and if they have any reputable sources to back it up (specifically the whole part about the Roman Emperor's task force type of deal).
The Greek word for Church is Ekklesia. The meaning is "the called out ones". Ekklesia was a common term in Roman days. The Roman Emperor had his Ekklesia team. They would meet with the emperor regularly to hear his commands. Then they would go into a community and influence the people toward "the Roman way and culture". This was the assimilation process which conquered nations. The goal was to create a united empire.
There's no source listed and in my own brief research I can find no source to corroborate that the word was ever used in such a context. But before I make an idiot out of myself and derail next week's small group discussion, thought I'd ask if anyone has ever heard that interpretation of the word ecclesia before and if they have any reputable sources to back it up (specifically the whole part about the Roman Emperor's task force type of deal).
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