G
GladTidings
Guest
A few bells have been going off lately, and I remember when I subscribed to the idea of belonging to the Ekklesia when I was a Fundamentalist.
Who? You ask. Well, apparently Fundamentalists believe their church always existed even in antiquity through people who were living in the shadows.
These people responded to the Holy Spirit and exist today in any church. Even Catholics? Yes, from what I understand. They are evidently the true Christians. Things they did in history paved the way for modern Christians.
Anywho, to me it is a way for Fundamentalists to say that their church also goes back to an early time. Approximately the third or fourth century.
What I’m wondering is, what is the origin of this theory? Who, (probably a televangelist) was the first to create this idea that certain modern Christians are here because of the early Ekklesia?
Who? You ask. Well, apparently Fundamentalists believe their church always existed even in antiquity through people who were living in the shadows.
These people responded to the Holy Spirit and exist today in any church. Even Catholics? Yes, from what I understand. They are evidently the true Christians. Things they did in history paved the way for modern Christians.
Anywho, to me it is a way for Fundamentalists to say that their church also goes back to an early time. Approximately the third or fourth century.
What I’m wondering is, what is the origin of this theory? Who, (probably a televangelist) was the first to create this idea that certain modern Christians are here because of the early Ekklesia?