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CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: The Church
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The Church tt=63
The term church (Anglo-Saxon, cirice, circe ; Modern German , Kirche; Swedish, Kyrka ) is the name employed in the Teutonic languages to render the Greek ekklesia ( ecclesia ), the term by which the New Testament writers denote the society founded by Our Lord Jesus Christ. The derivation of the word has been much debated. It is now agreed that it is derived from the Greek kyriakon ( cyriacon ), i.e. the Lord's house, a term which from the third century was used, as well as ekklesia , to signify a Christian place of worship . This, though the less usual expression, had apparently obtained currency among the Teutonic races. The Northern tribes had been accustomed to pillage the Christian churches of the empire, long before their own conversion . Hence, even prior to the arrival of the Saxons in Britain , their language had acquired words to designate some of the externals of the Christian religion .
The present article is arranged as follows:
The term Ecclesia
The Church in prophecy
Its constitution by Christ; the Church after the Ascension
Its organization by the Apostles
The Church, a divine society
The Church, the necessary means of salvation
Visibility of the Church
The principle of authority; infallibili"
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