D
De_Maria
Guest
Hm?I don’t know of any protestant at all who makes that claim. The word ONLY may be the key word. Most Evangelicals understand that the Church is both a living organism as well as a body of order. I don’t know of any who say otherwise.
From a purportedly Evangelical website:
May '12
Church includes anything and anybody from a building to the Vatican, from a minister to a pope, a pastor to a priest, an evangelical to a scientologist.
Church is derived from kurios, which means Lord, and led to k-ir-k and to ch-ur-ch. However, church cannot be derived from Ekklesia.
Ekklesia comes from ek and kaleo. Kaleo means to “call out” and ek means “out” in the sense of “away” and “from”.
I, therefore, argue that “church” is a bad translation of “ekklesia” and that, as a result of this erroneous translation, the whole concept of “church” is not a New Testament concept so that whatever we understand by “church” today has no Scriptural warrant whatsoever.
“Ekklesia” gives us the concept of “those who have been called out” or “gatherings of those called out by God through the Truth of the Word of the Gospel”.
That’s just an excerpt to be found here.
I also want to note that you seemingly use the words, protestant and evangelical, interchangeably, above. Whereas, I’ve frequently been chastised for doing the same. Not complaining. Just highlighting it for the readers.
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