James T. Hughes

Ecclesial Solidarity in the Pauline Corpus


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often speak of these congregations collectively as the NT church or the early church, no NT writer uses ekklesia in this collective way.”11 O’Brien writes: “Although we often speak of a group of congregations collectively as ‘the church’ (i.e. of a denomination) neither Paul nor the rest of the New Testament uses ekklēsia in this collective way.”12 Finally, after surveying usage in 1 and 2 Thessalonians, Banks concludes: “the idea of a unified provincial or national church is as foreign to Paul’s thinking as the notion of a universal church.”13

      The implications of this understanding of ἐκκλησία are significant for this study, in particular for the interchurch dimension of ecclesial solidarity. The argument of Knox and others requires further investigation, which will require engagement with usage in Greek literature and the Septuagint (chapter 2 of this book), before examining the Pauline corpus (chapters 3 to 6).

      As can be seen from the foregoing, these definitions are in a sense provisional, and in the conclusion to this study I will comment on their suitability.

      Interchurch Relationships: A Neglected Area

      This study will highlight interchurch relationships, because they are a neglected area of study for five reasons.