
What is the Church?


This page has three major sections. The first two review
the Catholic and then the Protestant perspectives on the Church.
The third section deals with the question of why there are so
many churches.
The term "Church" is used by Christians in two different, but
closely related, ways. It can refer to all of Jesus' followers,
viewed as a community. It can also refer to specific institutions,
either the local congregation or a national or international body.
It can even be used to refer to the building in which they meet.
The Church is important, because God does not save people in
isolation. An important part of what needs to be restored is our
relationship with other people. That can only be done by the
community as a whole.
God most often reaches us through other people. Mother Theresa's
statements about seeing God in the poor are just one example of a more
general Christian principle. Because a large part of our problem is
self-centeredness, a large part of the remedy is to learn to depend
upon other people, to represent Christ to them and allow Christ to
speak to us through them.
The Church is also the group with which we worship. As such it
has the responsibility to preach the Word of God, and to administrator
the sacraments. (See the section on worship for a discussion of the
sacraments.) These are critical elements in maintaining our
fellowship with God and each other.
The Church also has a responsibility to encourage its members to
make spiritual progress, and to show their faith by their behavior,
both through their ethics and their good works. This responsibility
includes administering brotherly correction when someone errs.
Traditionally the Church has felt a responsibility to discipline, and
if necessary exclude, members whose public lives are not in keeping
with the message of Christianity. Not all churches are equally
careful about carrying this out. It is in fact one of the more
difficult responsibilities to get right. It is very, very easy for
Church discipline to lead to self-righteousness and intolerance.
Jesus referred to the Christian community with several metaphors.
In one he said that he was the vine, and all of his followers are the
branches. In another, he referred to the church as his body. All of
these images emphasized that his followers are spiritually united with
him and with each other. One of the major problems today is that this
union is not completely reflected in the way Christians act.
In this page, I will normally be using the term "Church" to refer to the
universal Church. However I will sometimes use it to refer to
individual communions such as the Catholic Church.
I. THE CATHOLIC PERSPECTIVE
The Catholic and Orthodox traditions see the church as the
successor to the "Apostles" (Jesus' original followers). Jesus gave
the apostles authority to lead the community and make decisions for
them. He also gave an assurance that the community would be guided by
the Holy Spirit, and would be protected.
Organization
By the end of the 1st Century, authority in the Church centered on
bishops. Bishops were seen as successors to the Apostles. Bishops
are consecrated by other bishops (normally at least three). So in
principle every bishop can trace their authority back through an
unbroken line of consecrations to the Apostles, and then Christ.
This is referred to as the "Apostolic succession".
Currently bishops are normally responsible for a city and the
surrounding territory. Of course the exact area depends upon
population density and other considerations.
Bishops have several different kinds of authority and
responsibility. They have the responsibility for maintaining proper
doctrine in the area for which they are responsible. They are
responsible for the proper conduct of the sacraments. They normally
conduct certain sacraments (e.g. confirmation) personally. In other
cases they delegate the authority to priests.
During the first few centuries, certain bishops developed
greater prestige than others. This was often because of the
history or role of their cities. The bishops of these key
cities have special leadership responsibilities. In the East,
they are referred to as "patriarchs". In the West, the bishop
of Rome is regarded as the preeminent bishop. He is normally
referred to as the "Pope". (Note that "pope" is another word
for patriarch. In principle any patriarch can be referred to
as a pope. However currently this would be so confusing that
the term pope is normally reserved for the bishop of Rome.)
The Pope has two conceptually separate roles: First, he is the
patriarch of the Roman Catholic Church. As such, he is ultimately
responsible for everything that happens in that communion. He
makes key appointments and decisions, and can review any action.
In the Catholic tradition, the Pope is also seen as the spokesman
for the Church as a whole. He has a special responsibility for
maintaining proper doctrine and morals. As part of this responsibility,
he or his representative chairs all ecumenical councils. He may also
make authoritative doctrinal decisions on his own authority. Of
course this authority comes from Christ. See the discussion below
of Papal infallibility.
In principle the second role gives him leadership responsibilities
over churches other than the Roman Catholic Church, i.e. churches
of which he is not the patriarch. In such churches the Pope would
not directly govern, but they would still be subject to his overall
doctrinal leadership. There are a few Eastern churches that accept
this concept. (They are often referred to as "uniat" churches.)
However the major Orthodox churches do not accept the
Pope's idea of universal leadership. Many of them would accept him in
some role of spokesman. But generally they do not accept papal
infallibility, and they also believe that he has often attempted to make
decisions for other churches that are properly the responsibility of
their own leadership.
The Catholic and Orthodox traditions emphasize continuity in
doctrine and in worship. Please see the latter parts of Why do Christians Believe This? for the role of
tradition in developing and stabilizing doctrine. The bishops have a
primary role as carriers of the tradition. They are expected to hold
to the original faith as given to the Apostles, and also to work
together and with the Pope (or all the patriarchs, for the Orthodox)
to maintain common doctrine and practice throughout the Church.
The office of priest developed slightly later. Originally they
were seen primarily as assistants to the bishop. Priests are
typically responsible for an individual congregation or church. This
isn't exact: Larger churches may have more than one, and sometimes a
single priest may have more than one church. The priest is
responsible for guiding the life of the congregation, and for
conducting most normal sacraments. Priests are ordained by bishops.
Certain of the sacraments (e.g. communion) may only be performed by a
priest or bishop. This is not just an issue of who has permission to
do it. At ordination, a priest receives spiritual authority. Without that
authority, the transformation of the bread and wine into Christ's
body and blood in communion will not occur.
Authority
Two distinguishing characteristics of the Catholic Church
are its concept of teaching authority, and its approach to church
discipline.
Catholics believe that the Church was given authority by Christ to
make decisions. These include both doctrinal and moral issues. This
authority is lodged primarily in the bishops and the Pope. In
appropriate circumstances, their decisions can be infallible. The
teaching authority of the Church is referred to as the "magisterium".
Catholic writers sometimes distinguish between the "ordinary
magisterium" and infallible teaching.
The ordinary magisterium is the teaching responsibility as carried
out through ordinary preaching and catechesis, as well as through
specific pronouncements such as encyclicals and pastoral letters.
Although teachings of the ordinary magisterium are not exactly
infallible, they are part of a process that is guided by the Holy
Spirit. Thus it is expected that Catholics will receive such teaching
as authoritative.
Catholics also believe that is possible for the Church to
make infallible decisions. There are two ways of doing this: an
ecumenical council, and a direct papal decision. When an
ecumenical council makes doctrinal decisions, in union with the
pope, they may be infallible. In addition to this, the pope
himself may make infallible decisions.
The concept of papal infallibility is often misunderstood. It
does not mean that everything the Pope does is perfect. Many popes
have been seriously flawed. Rather, the belief is that the Holy
Spirit guides the Church in such a way that when the Pope makes
certain solemn pronouncements in the areas of faith and morals, those
pronouncements are infallible. The Pope has this role because he is
the one who speaks for the Church as a whole.
This class of pronouncement is referred to as "ex cathedra" ("from
the chair", i.e. the official bishop's throne). All Catholic scholars
agree that there have been two infallible pronouncements. Many have
longer lists, up to about 20 items. (Note that there is not an
infallible list of infallible pronouncements.) These are in addition
to documents produced by church councils. They may also be regarded
as infallible. But they are not specifically based on exercise of
papal infallibility.
Historically, Catholics have been very concerned about maintaining
high moral standards among their members. Members are required to
confess their sins to a priest. The priest is expected to provide
both spiritual and ethical guidance.
The Catholic church has a set of rules describing the way it
functions. These rules also cover a variety of moral issues, as well
as procedures for marriage and other church activities. This is
referred to as "canon law". The most complex and problematical parts
tend to focus on sexual matters, particularly on the regulation of
marriage and annulment.
Marks of the Church
For the Catholic tradition the key marks of the Church are defined
by four phrases used in the Apostles' creed: It is the one, holy,
Catholic, and Apostolic church.
The term "Catholic" means "universal". The Church is
universal, and it is one. Its doctrines can be traced to the
Apostles.
Of course there is some question how literally the Church can be
said to be one at the moment. There are at least three major branches
of the Church. However both the Catholic and Orthodox traditions
believe that they maintain the full continuity with the original
Apostles, and thus that in some sense the entire body of Christ is
centered in their community. Other Christians participate in this
unity in an incomplete sense.
II. THE PROTESTANT PERSPECTIVE
For Protestants, these issues are more complex, because there are
more Protestant churches. See below for the question "Why are there
so many Churches?".
Protestants tend to distinguish between the Church as the
universal body of Christ and individual organizations. To avoid
confusion, the individual organizations are often referred to as
"denominations". Protestants also accept the Apostles' creed, so they
agree that the Church is one and universal. However they tend to see
its unity and universality as being a spiritual matter. It is a
consequence of our unity in Christ. It need not be reflected in a
single organization.
Organization
In general Protestants vary a lot in the way that their churches
are organized. There is far more variation here then in beliefs and
practices. Many Protestants would say that a single scheme of church
organization is not described in the Bible, although certain guiding
principles are given. This leaves individual churches free to adopt
different patterns.
Protestant churches may be classified on a spectrum with
"connectional" churches on one end and "congregational" churches on
the other end. In connectional churches, there are national and
regional bodies, which have a good deal of authority. Quite often
higher-level bodies review what lower bodies do, and can take action
to overrule them. In the Presbyterian Church, it is possible for a
Presbytery to unseat the Session (governing board) of a local church,
and appoint its own governing board. This is typically done in a
situation where there is a conflict within the local church that it
does not appear the church can handle for itself. In some
connectional churches (e.g. the Methodists), pastors are assigned to
local churches by a central authority (in this case the bishop).
In congregational churches, each congregation is independent.
They call their own pastor and make their own decisions. No higher
level body can intervene. Many congregational churches still have
national and regional organizations. They coordinate programs that
require cooperation beyond a single congregation, e.g. sending
missionaries, preparing Sunday School curriculum material, and running
seminaries (colleges for training pastors). However a few traditions
(particularly more conservative portions of the Church of Christ) do
not believe that any higher level body is permissible, even for
voluntary cooperation.
There is quite a variety of patterns between these two extremes.
Protestant Churches base their organization on a few common
patterns. Many Protestant churches have bishops. Except in a few
cases (Anglicans, Lutherans in Scandanavia), these bishops do not
have the Apostolic succession. They are simply
elected by the church as leaders. Thus these bishops are sometimes
called "titular bishops", to distinguish them from canonical bishops that do
have the Apostolic succession. In general the Lutheran and
Methodist traditions include bishops. Since the Pentecostal and
Holiness churches are developments from the Methodists, they often
have bishops as well.
Almost all Protestant churches have elected leaders.
Normally there is a governing board of some sort for the local
church. For connectional denominations, the
national and regional levels also have elected groups that function
more or less as legislatures. (The U.S. government is modeled after
Presbyterian church government.) Clergy and bishops (if any) normally
serve in these bodies, either as part of a single body or (in a few
churches) as a separate "house", like the Senate and House of
Representatives.
Protestant Churches try to base their church organization on the
Bible. While the Bible doesn't give a specific plan of government,
several offices are referred to. These include deacon,
elder, bishop, and apostle. Not all churches use all offices. Most
churches believe that the office of apostle applied only to Christ's
followers, and that there are no longer apostles. Some identify two
offices, or split a single office into two variants.
In the Catholic and Orthodox traditions, there is a clear
distinction between "lay people" and "clergy": clergy have been
ordained. Ordination is a sacrament, which imparts a permanent
metaphysical mark on the soul. Clergy include bishops and priests,
and in some sense also permanent deacons.
For Protestants, this sort of distinction is not as clear.
Protestants do have leaders that more or less correspond to priests.
They are commonly called pastors or ministers, though a few
Protestant groups use the term "priest".
Pastors commonly have special education, either a graduate
degree or training at a Bible college. They are commonly full-time.
They are normally ordained. That means that they are set apart in a special
ceremony, and that they have the authority to celebrate baptism and
communion.
However for Protestants, ordination doesn't confer any special
metaphysical powers. The fact that only pastors lead in a communion
service is a matter of church order. It is not -- as in the Catholic
tradition -- that only they have the power to make bread and wine
change into Christ's body and blood.
Protestants often use the term "lay" to refer to everyone other
than pastors, although it's not clear to me that the lay/clergy
distinction is actually consistent with Protestant theory. In all
Protestant churches that I know, each congregation has lay leaders
that serve alongside the pastors. Their exact relationship varies
by denomination. However the lay leadership tends to have a stronger
role for Protestant churches than for Catholic ones.
The exact set of lay leaders varies. However one common pattern
has deacons and elders. In this pattern the deacons are typically
responsible for charitable activities, and elders for policy
decisions. However not all churches use both deacons and elders.
In the Reformed tradition (which includes Presbyterians), all
leaders are ordained. Since the distinction between lay and clergy
was traditionally ordination, in some sense this means that Reformed
churches have no lay leadership. However for most purposes Reformed
deacons and elders are thought of as lay: they are not full-time
positions. The positions tend to rotate among the active members of
the congregation.
Authority
Protestants do not believe that the Church is infallible. Indeed
they believe that it has made errors. They do accept that the Holy
Spirit guides it. However since the Church is made up of human
beings, it may take wrong turns and have to be corrected or renewed.
Since they believe that organizations and leaders may go astray,
organizational continuity is not as important. Protestants are
primarily concerned with whether a group's views and practices are
consistent with the Bible, and to a lesser extent with the early
Church. This has more importance than whether a group can show that
its leaders trace their pedigrees back through a continuous set of
bishops to the Apostles.
Protestants do not place as much emphasis on either the Church as
an organization or on the authority of its leaders. They see the
Christian community as important. But they are not convinced that the
sort of authority Catholics and Orthodox lodge in the leadership has
justification in the Bible, nor that it has worked out well. Indeed
Protestants tend to see the Catholic hierarchy and canon law as being
very similar to the Jewish leaders and legal tradition which
Jesus opposed.
Protestants do not normally confess their sins directly to a
pastor. This means that they do not have the same kind of detailed
supervision of their lives that Catholics do. This is one reason that
there is no need for canon law: the moral components of canon law
evolved to guide priests as they supervised their members' lives.
There are clearly advantages and disadvantages to each approach.
At its worst, the Catholic approach can turn into barren legalism.
Personal reports from Catholic friends suggest that it may also lead
to dishonesty. (I'm told that it is very naive for me to assume that
all Catholics confess to the priest honestly.) However Protestant
practice runs the risk of encouraging members to be morally lax. The
detailed supervision provided by regular confession is one of the
primary methods of accountability. To replace this, many Protestant
groups encourage members to meet together in small groups or as
partners. In these groups they are expected to share enough about
their lives that they can hold each other accountable before God.
Marks of the Church
Protestants also accept the characterization of the Church as one,
holy, catholic, and Apostolic. However when Protestants say they
believe in the holy catholic Church, they are using the term
"catholic" in its original meaning of "universal". That is, they are
pointing to the fact that all Christians are united because of our
common relationship with Christ. Protestants do not identify the
unity of the Church with a single organization such as the Catholic
Church. Indeed they find that whole approach odd, given that there
are now at least two major groups claiming to be identical with the
universal church: the Catholics and the Orthodox. (Some other groups
make this claim as well, such as the Mormons and Jehovah's Witnesses.)
Protestants traditionally have identified two or three key marks
of a true church. Most Protestant writers believe that in order to
have a true church, the Gospel must be properly proclaimed, and the
sacraments properly administered. By proper, it is normally meant
that all the essential Scriptural aspects of the Gospel are preached,
and that it is not adulterated by other things. Similarly, the
sacraments are administered as they are defined in the Bible, and they
are not combined with superstitions or other improper additions. Some
writers identify church discipline as a third essential mark of a true
church. However others regard it as important but not essential.
That is, they would not reject a church as being a true church because
it has not managing to maintain discipline among all its members.
III. WHY ARE THERE SO MANY CHURCHES?
Because people are imperfect. The ideal that Jesus taught was
very clear: All of his followers were to form a single community,
united in him. He used the image of a vine and its branches.
Unfortunately Christians have often been unable to agree on
matters of belief and practice. In many cases the disagreements have
been serious enough that it would be difficult for both approaches to
coexist. Thus it has often been necessary for the groups to separate.
Multiple Churches Do Not Always Reflect Serious Disagreements
The differences are often exaggerated. The first thing to
note is that not all churches were founded because of disagreement.
Many Christians consider the basic unit of Christian action to be the
individual congregation. Larger bodies, such as national churches,
exist as a matter of convenience, to help congregations do things that
require cooperation. Thus many Protestants do not particularly want a
single, huge organization that includes all Christians. For those who
take this approach, the unity of that Jesus was talking about is a
spiritual one, not a bureaucratic one.
The second thing to note is that disagreements among Christians
are usually over details of how we go about implementing Jesus'
teachings. There is agreement about many beliefs and practice. Thus
books such as C. S. Lewis' "Mere Christianity", or Kreeft and
Tacelli's "Handbook of Christian Apologetics" can contain fairly
substantial presentations of Christian beliefs that would be
acceptable to just about all Christians.
In my opinion the most significant differences within Christianity
fall into three categories: marginal groups; the long-standing
differences among Protestant, Catholic and Orthodox; and the reaction
to liberalism.
Marginal Groups
This document tries to present a "generic" Christian viewpoint,
which would be acceptable to most Christians. However there are a few
groups whose ideas are far enough away from the mainstream that it is
nearly impossible to include them and still say anything of substance.
In general I classify a group as "marginal" when it rejects major
doctrines such as the Trinity or Incarnation. As far as I know, all
groups that do this also differ from the mainstream in significant
issues of practice as well.
The best-known groups of this sort are the Jehovah's Witnesses and
the Mormons. Both of them differ significantly with the mainstream on
the nature of God and Jesus. The Mormons are large enough (and are
growing fast enough) to be a significant force. There are a number of
smaller groups with similar properties. A number of people who reject
the Trinity are active on the Internet. This tends to make it appear
that there is more opposition to common doctrines such as the Trinity
than actually exists.
The Major Groupings: Catholic, Protestant, Orthodox
The second major division in Christianity involves the three major
groupings: Catholic, Protestant and Orthodox. As the Roman empire
disintegrated, the Church divided into Eastern and Western portions.
In my opinion, this was a consequence of the difficulty in
communication and transportation. There simply wasn't good enough
coordination to deal with differences as they began to develop.
Although there were few major differences in theology, there were
differences in emphasis. The East also objected to the growing power
of the Pope. As a result, Eastern and Western Christianity split into
what is now referred as Orthodox (Eastern) and Catholic (Western)
branches. These groups are still separate, although generally they
acknowledge the validity of each other's sacraments, and agree on most
of the key doctrines.
In the 16th Century, the Western church split further into
Catholic and Protestant streams. Protestants believed that the church
had slowly drifted from Jesus' intentions. Major issues involved the
nature and authority of the hierarchy, the differences in role between
clergy and ordinary Christians, and what Protestants saw as
superstitious or unjustified practices in worship. The Anglicans
could be regarded as a separate stream. They combine some of the
emphases of Catholic and Protestant thought, and sometimes try to
mediate between them.
The Protestant branch has further fragmented, with a dozen or so
significant schools of thought, and innumerable individual churches.
The peak of this fragmentation seems to have been in the 19th Century.
Most of the current schools of thought appeared then, and there have
been few major new ones in the 20th Cent. In the 20th Century, a few
of the larger groups have reunited. There is also a growing degree of
cooperation among the different groups. As mentioned above, many
Protestants do not regard it as important to create a single
organization. They see that as likely to create a hierarchy that is
out of touch with the needs of the people, and as requiring
compromises that would result in a watered-down, "lowest-common
denominator" theology. Thus most Protestants now see Christian unity
as being founded in a common relationship in Christ, and expressed in
mutual respect and cooperative activity, but not in a single
organization.
For Catholics and Orthodox, this situation is a serious problem.
They see the Church as an organic whole, with an organizational unity
that reflects our spiritual union in Christ.
Controversies over Liberalism
The third major division is over what I am calling "liberalism".
The church has been challenged by a number of different trends,
all of which could lead to major changes in belief and practice.
Among these are
- Scholarship that challenges traditional assertions about the
Bible. This includes attacks on its consistency, authorship, and
accuracy.
- Attacks on the coherence of major Christian doctrines such
as the Trinity and Incarnation, and claims that these doctrines
are not properly grounded on Biblical or other evidence.
- Demands to relax ethical standards, particularly in the
area of sexual ethics.
These attacks tend to go together. While it is not always the
case, those that maintain a high concept of the Bible tend also
to hold to the traditional doctrines and ethics.
It is beyond the scope of this document to deal with these in
detail. I will observe that these issues tend to cut across the
historical lines. There are liberals and conservatives among both
Protestants and Catholics. Individual Protestant groups tend to have
a specific place in the liberal/conservative spectrum. Indeed many of
the groups have been created by disagreement over these issues.
However as new issues come up, there is normally a significant spread
of opinion within each group.
Almost all Christian groups have rejected the extremes of
liberalism. There is a fairly clear pattern that the more liberal
groups are unable to retain their members. There is a fairly
consistent tendency for members to be more moderate than their
leaders, in both directions. In the more liberal Protestant groups,
members tend to be upset about the attitudes of leaders towards the
Bible and ethics. In the more conservative groups, survey results
suggest that members have a tendency to ignore some of the more strict
positions on ethics, and to be sceptical of theological positions such
as those that condemn all non-Christians to hell.

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