ver.: 27 December 2006 xml
What is :
confessional,
consecration,
ecclesia,
paraclete.
confessional:
consecration : a liturgical act in which some object (such as a building, room, communion ware, etc.) is dedicated or 'set apart' solely to God and God's work. This also applies to people : in some traditions, an ordained minister is consecrated as bishop, or a lay person is consecrated as a deacon. Consecrating someone or something does not make it superior; it just means that it is being put to use for a divine purpose.
ecclesia : Greek, "those called out". The Church, in its various forms.
"Well before ekklesia was
used in
a religious way, it referred to the assembly of persons
'called out' from everyday life for a particular purpose."
[[Such as a volunteer army, or a gathering to make political
decisions. (ed.)]] "When the early Christians used the word ekklesia to describe their group, it
showed that they understood that the Holy Spirit had called
them out of one kind of life and into another. They were
different people, and they had a new
purpose."
--- Thomas Kadel, *Living the Creed* (Parish
Life Press), p.62
The meaning of the Greek term paraclete differs in context. The basic root meaning is "one who is called to the side of". From there, it took on a public meaning of "advocate" or "defender", and a private-setting meaning of "one who supports another in difficult moments". Both meanings apply to the Holy Spirit, though the primary one is the public meaning. The root use may actually be the main meaning Jesus intended (even though it was detached from the word generations earlier) : Jesus left, and called on the Holy Spirit to come in His stead to be by our side.
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