Options for Thinking about ‘Church’ “What is the Being of the Church?” Dr. Dennis Bielfeldt South Dakota State University
Options for Thinking about ‘Church’
“What is the Being of the Church?”
Dr. Dennis Bielfeldt
South Dakota State University
What’s at Stake?
The adoption of Called to Common Mission in 1999 stimulated Lutheran interest in ecclesiological matters
The opposition to CCM birthed the WordAlone Network
There has been much subsequent opposition to this WordAlone opposition
What “deeper picture” generates each of these oppositions?
At question is the nature of Church
Called to Common Mission
The Full Communion agreement with the Episcopal Church USA adopted by the ELCA in August of 1999
This agreement was the result of over two decades of ecumenical discussions
CCM committed the ELCA to the practice of the historic episcopate
CCM seeks to establish a fully interchangeable clergy
Symptoms of Different Understandings of ‘Church’ between
Lutherans and Episcopalians
Clergy and Bishops seem to have a ‘higher status’ in the ECUSA (and Anglicanism generally) than in the ELCA (and Lutheranism generally)
Proper churchly “order” seems more important for Episcopalians
Proper liturgies also seem more important for Episcopalians “Unity” definitely more important for Episcopalians than for
Lutherans historically It seems that Episcopalians are more interested in “church”
than Lutherans
The Tradition on ‘Church’
The Development of the church in the early tradition: towards an apostolic episcopate
Cyprian and the development of the papacy Augustine’s two notions of ‘church’: The visible church and the
invisible collection of the elect The Reformation Critique: The priesthood of believers needs no
means of grace outside of Christ. Word and Sacrament are linked directly to Christ. The church does not exist as “thing” dispensing grace, but is rather is the congregation of those called around Christ’s dispensation of grace.
The Church is not the mother, but the daughter of the Word.
Basic Questions about Church
How is the notion of ‘church’ related to the collection of “true” believers?
How is the notion of ‘church’ related to the notion of the Body of Christ?
How is the notion of ‘church’ related to earthly institutions like the Roman Catholic Church, the Methodist church, the Presbyterian Church, and the ELCA?
Speaking Ontologically
Ontology deals with the question of being What is the Being of the visible Church, that by
virtue of which the visible church is what it is? What is the Being of the invisible Church? What is the Being of the relation between the two? What is the Being of the Body of Christ and its
relation to the Church? What “deeper picture” really has been motivating
our recent Lutheran ecumenical efforts?
The “Deeper Picture”
What is the deeper ontological picture underlying the WordAlone critique and opposition to WordAlone critique?
What is it precisely that is “one, holy, catholic, and apostolic?” To what do the Nicene predicates really apply?
How “divine” is the Church? In what sense can one say that Christ is in the Church, or that Christ’s Body is the Church?
The Church Visible and Hidden
The Lutheran Critique articulated the Notion of the Hidden Church as “those with faith and Holy Spirit in the heart” (Apology, VII/VIII)
The marks of the presence of that church are the gathering of people around Word and Sacrament: For Lutherans there is but one church, hidden then revealed.
Within Lutheran orthodoxy, the four ecclesiological predicates apply properly only to the Hidden Church: all of the faithful are by definition ‘one’, are by Christ’s justificatory act ‘holy’, are by definition ‘catholic’, and are by their faith ‘apostolic’. They apply improperly and by synecdoche to the visible church, because it contains unbelievers.
The Body of Christ and the Institutional Organization
One ontological option is to identify, strictly or loosely, the Church with the Body of Christ
Another ontological option claims that one is an attribute of the other, e.g. the Body of Christ is a property of the Church, or vice-versa
A third option identifies, strictly or loosely, the Church with its earthly, institutional organization
Another option claims that one is an attribute of the other, e.g., Having a particular institutional structure is a property of church, or vice-versa
Digging into the Ontology of Church: A Basic Distinction
Particulars are the basic objects or events of reality that bear properties or can be grouped into classes; When concrete (in space and time) they can exist in only one place at one time, when abstract they exist outside space and time altogether, e.g., numbers, sets, God, etc.
Universals - - if they exist - - are instantiated by particulars; they are either properties or relations, and they are wholly instantiated by more than one particular (whiteness is instantiated by all white objects)
Ontological Options for Understanding the Visible Church
Option I: To be the church visible is to be a member of the set of all individual churches (congregations).
Option II: To be the church visible is to resemble particular churches (congregating events).
Option III: The church is something more than individual churches. It is a universal that can be multiply-instantiated in particular churches.
Option IV: The visible church is the set of all particular “churchly” properties had by any ecclesiological entity
Option V: The visible church is the whole of which all the institutional entities are parts. The church is a visible particular, that is either identical with, or constituted by, its visible parts.
Option I: The Visible Church is the Set of Individual Churches (or Agencies)
Ecclesiological Class Nominalism To be the church visible is to be a member of the set of all individual
churches (congregations). Just as having the property of white is just to be a member of the class of white things, having the property of church is just to be a member of the class of churches. Only particular churches (or congregating events) exist.
Class membership is a primitive notion Strong congregationalist orientation
‘One’, ‘holy’, ‘catholic’ and ‘apostolic’ properly apply only to
individual churches
Option II: The Visible Church is the Set of Resembling Churches (or Agencies)
Ecclesiological Resemblance Nominalism Just as having the property of white is a resemblance among
white things, having the property of church is a resemblance among particular churches (or congregating events). Only particular churches (or congregating events) exist.
Resemblance is a primitive notion Strong congregationalist orientation ‘One’, ‘holy’, ‘catholic’ and ‘apostolic’ refers only to these
various resembling entities
Option III: The Church as a Universal
Ecclesiological Realism Strong Realism: The universal called ‘church’ exists apart from
its instantiations in particular churches or congregating events Moderate Realism: The universal called ‘church’ exists only in
and through its instantiations in particular congregations and institutions; there is no church apart from instantiation in particular churches, but being church is not reducible to being a collection of particular churches
Particular churches (or congregating events) are “layered”; they are structured so as to possess the property church
‘One’, ‘holy’, ‘catholic’ and ‘apostolic’ refer to the universal church transcending particular churches (or congregating events)
Option IV: The Visible Church is the Set of “Churchly” Properties Exhibited by
Particular Churches
Tropes are abstract particulars; they are properties possessed by entities Ecclesiological Trope Class or Ecclesiological Trope Resemblance
Nominalism Just as being white is the class of all particular occasions of the property
whiteness, the being of church is the set of all particular occasions of the property church
What is common throughout the visible church is not churches or congregating events, but properties had by these churches or agencies
Weakly congregationalist in orientation ‘One’, ‘holy’, ‘catholic’, and ‘apostolic’ are higher-order properties of
the “churchly” properties; just as color is a second-order property of the first-order property red, so is ‘holy’ a second-order property of the property church
Option V: The Visible Church as the Whole of its Parts
On this view, the Church is not a property, but is rather a particular. The Church is a whole consisting of its parts (mereological
construal). On this view, any change of the parts changes what the church is
Just as the United States consists of all 50 states (and not just some of them), and just as no particular state is the United States, so too the Church consists of all its churches and ecclesial agencies (and not just some of them), although no particular church or agency is the Church
‘One’, ‘holy’, ‘catholic’, and ‘apostolic’ pertain to the whole church and cannot apply to any part
But what is the relation between the whole and its parts?
Reduction, Emergence and Supervenience
Is the particular entity church, the whole ‘one, holy, catholic and apostolic church’, reducible to a collection or a particular configuration of churches or agencies?
Does this particular ‘one, holy, catholic and apostolic church’ emerge from these individual churches and agencies? Is it something new, some new entity with novel properties beyond those of its parts?
Is the particular whole church supervenient (dependent, but not reducible) to the individual churches and agencies comprising it?
Ontological Implications of Taking the Hidden Church Seriously
If the true Church is hidden, then ‘church’ applies properly only to the set of all with faith and Holy Spirit (those justified by Christ through faith), and only improperly to a visible entity
The Church becomes the set of all the justified (class nominalism), or the set of all resembling each other with respect to the presence of faith and the Holy Spirit (resemblance nominalism), or the set of the properties held by individuals of faith and the presence of the Holy Spirit (trope nominalism)
The Deflationary Ecclesiology of the Hidden Church
If the Church is a set of individuals, and if this set is revealed around Word and Sacrament, then can one speak in any way about the visible Church having “Being” insofar as it is Church?
The visible Church qua visible Church may have an ontology, but it is of a different order than the hidden (true) church; it is, strictly speaking, not an ontology of church - - at least if we regard the true church as hidden
A deflationary ecclesiology of the hidden church understands church as a collection of justified individuals in relation to Christ
The Relationship between the Hidden Church, the
Visible Church, and the Presencing of the Divine
The hidden Church is exhibited in the activities of the visible Church as people gather around Word and Sacrament
Only individuals within the hidden Church have divine presence as Spirit-worked faith
Gatherings around Word and Sacrament have the participation of individuals with faith, but such gatherings qua gatherings (congregations) do not present the divine outside individual faith or the “real presence” in the Word and Sacrament itself
The Ontology of Relating Church to the Body of Christ
Option I: One can simply identify the Church with the Body of Christ and claim that the two have the same extension (apply to the same things) although they have different intensions (the properties of the Body of Christ are different from that of church)
Option II: One can claim an extensional difference between the church and the Body of Christ despite a metaphorical identification. (For example, one might claim that the Church is made of some not within the Body of Christ.)
Option III: One can argue that the Body of Christ is paradoxically present within the Church: It is not identical to Church, but not wholly different from the Church, that is, “really present” within the Church
The Ontology of Relating the Visible Church and the Institutional Organization
Option I: One can simply identify the visible Church with the institutional organization
One can claim an extensional equivalence despite an intensional difference
Option II: One can claim that the institutional organization metaphorically is the visible Church
Option III: One can claim that the visible church supervenes upon its institutional organization, that the former is dependent, but not reducible to the latter
Summing Up
It is crucially important what is meant by ‘church’ There are various ways we might understand the
being of church, and the relationship between the hidden and manifest church, the visible church, the Body of Christ, and its institutional structure
Lutheran ecclesiology has traditionally been not much interested in questions about the ontology of church, yet the ELCA present ecumenical trajectory takes it right into the midst of these questions
The Important Questions
Can the ELCA be called ‘church’, or is it a collection of congregations? Is the ELCA a church of congregations, or a congregation of churches?
If the ELCA is a church, can we say that this church has “expressions”? Is the church instantiatable in its expressions?
How can the ELCA be part of the western “church”? What are the properties by virtue of which the ELCA is the
ELCA? Is it finally merely an institutional organization in which church might appear?
Of what does the Historic Episcopate sign unity?