Multi–Church?

Multi–site and multi–service ecclesiology has become common place in many areas over recent decades. This innovation has not been subjected to rigorous systematic or analytic theological thought. Therefore, this article subjects these ecclesiological variations to critique and finds them wanting. It...

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Main Author: Jordan L Steffaniak
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Catholic University of Louvain 2020-06-01
Series:TheoLogica
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ojs.uclouvain.be/index.php/theologica/article/view/23653
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spelling doaj-a3714c30affd46b5baecfd950ed60baa2020-11-25T03:45:24ZdeuCatholic University of LouvainTheoLogica2593-02652020-06-014110.14428/thl.v4i1.23653Multi–Church? Jordan L Steffaniak0University of BirminghamMulti–site and multi–service ecclesiology has become common place in many areas over recent decades. This innovation has not been subjected to rigorous systematic or analytic theological thought. Therefore, this article subjects these ecclesiological variations to critique and finds them wanting. It offers four theological principles by which to analyze the nature of the church and determines that multi–site and multi–service churches fail to meet the necessary requirements for what is required of a numerically identical Protestant church. Therefore, it is metaphysically impossible for multi–site and multi–service churches to exist as the numerically same church. Each multi–site or multi–service entity is its own numerically distinct local church. https://ojs.uclouvain.be/index.php/theologica/article/view/23653ChurchEcclesiologyMulti-SiteMulti-ServiceGroup Theory
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jordan L Steffaniak
spellingShingle Jordan L Steffaniak
Multi–Church?
TheoLogica
Church
Ecclesiology
Multi-Site
Multi-Service
Group Theory
author_facet Jordan L Steffaniak
author_sort Jordan L Steffaniak
title Multi–Church?
title_short Multi–Church?
title_full Multi–Church?
title_fullStr Multi–Church?
title_full_unstemmed Multi–Church?
title_sort multi–church?
publisher Catholic University of Louvain
series TheoLogica
issn 2593-0265
publishDate 2020-06-01
description Multi–site and multi–service ecclesiology has become common place in many areas over recent decades. This innovation has not been subjected to rigorous systematic or analytic theological thought. Therefore, this article subjects these ecclesiological variations to critique and finds them wanting. It offers four theological principles by which to analyze the nature of the church and determines that multi–site and multi–service churches fail to meet the necessary requirements for what is required of a numerically identical Protestant church. Therefore, it is metaphysically impossible for multi–site and multi–service churches to exist as the numerically same church. Each multi–site or multi–service entity is its own numerically distinct local church.
topic Church
Ecclesiology
Multi-Site
Multi-Service
Group Theory
url https://ojs.uclouvain.be/index.php/theologica/article/view/23653
work_keys_str_mv AT jordanlsteffaniak multichurch
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