James T. Hughes

Ecclesial Solidarity in the Pauline Corpus


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rel="nofollow" href="#ulink_38745e4e-b847-5efc-a858-455c0d7a69d8">250 At particular moments of Roman history, Dionysius presents the assembly as having a crucial role in decision-making,251 and ἐκκλησία is used of meetings of various peoples in various places.252 There is a distinction between the assembly and a council, generally here the Senate.253 The assembly can be of soldiers.254 The plural is used for a series of assemblies, or assemblies in general.255

      Dionysius’s extensive and varied use of ἐκκλησία follows the general pattern and contours established here, from Thucydides onwards. However, the widening of the scope of assembly to include the history of the Roman Republic, and the tendency to be more explicit on what kind of assembly is meeting, show how usage in the first century BC was in some ways different from that in the fifth and fourth century BC. If Dionysius and Diodorus are included in the literature survey, it is no longer the Greek city-state that is primarily in view, and ἐκκλησία can be used for bodies which would not have been recognizable as assemblies by the Athenians and others.

      Implications of Greek Literary Usage

      In looking back over all the authors sampled here, several things can be noted. First, the broad contours of the standard definition of ἐκκλησία still stand: it is a temporary gathering of appropriate men called to decide on a variety of topics pertaining to the wellbeing of the city-state or area. It is a local body, although there are a few occasions noted above where a more representative body is in view.

      Third, as the review above has shown, different authors have different emphases. These emphases can be related to genre; compare the austere decision-making of Thucydides’s assembly with the frivolous mockery of Aristophanes. However, the variety also lies in subject matter, so Dionysius and Diodorus’s inclusion of Roman history changes how they discuss ἐκκλησία and what can be included in the term. Similarly, Plato’s more philosophical discussion of the nature of the assembly introduces the term assemblymen, and Aristotle hints at the conception of the ἐκκλησία as a corporate body; the same may be true in Aristophanes’s idea of the assembly having a child. When considering Paul’s usage, it must be recognized that both the genre and subject matter of his writing are different. The literature I have surveyed does not include many epistles, tends to be for general consumption by an elite audience rather than to a particular community or communities, and has a high-political bias, the doings of great men.

      Ἐκκλησία in the Septuagint and Philo