| TERM |
EXPLANATION |
| AC/CE |
"In the Year of Our Lord": the Christian year
dates from the birth of Jesus. Also called Anno Domini or the Common
Era |
| Anglican |
churches in full communion with the See of Canterbury.
A member of this Church. |
| Arminian |
a system of belief, named after the Dutch theologian Arminius
(1560-1609), whose chief tenets were (in opposition to Calvinist beliefs)
that God's sovereignty is not incompatible with man's free will, and that
Jesus Christ died for all, not for an elect few. |
| Baptist |
a branch of the Church marked off by belief in the independence
of the local gathered church to which the individual is admitted of profession
of faith as a mature adult through total immersion. |
| BC/BCE |
Before Christ: the period of history before the birth of
Jesus. Also known as 'before the Common Era' |
| Bible |
the holy book of Christians; it comes from the Greek biblia
meaning "books" |
| Calvinism |
a system of belief, named after the French reformer John
Calvin (1509-64) whose chief tenets are that scripture is the only rule
of faith, that man is justified by faith not works, and that there is absolute
predestination of the elect to salvation and of the reprobate to damnation.
|
| catechism |
a book of questions and answers used to teach a new member
of the Church the basic facts and beliefs of the Christian faith |
| Catholic |
'universal'. The catholic faith, seen as the universal
church throughout the world |
| Christ |
also 'Messiah'. An early Christian title affirming the
status of Jesus. A Greek word meaning "anointed one", or "chosen
one", God's deliverer. Messiah is the Hebrew translation |
| Church |
a community of Christians, or the organisation to which
they belong |
| church |
(with a small c): the building in which Christians worship
|
| Church of England |
the established Church in England; also called the Anglican
Church. Set up by law in the reign of Elizabeth I |
| circuit |
a district in which a Methodist minister or lay preacher
operates |
| Congregationalism |
a form of churchmanship depending on the independence and
autonomy of the local gathered church, but without insistence on believers'
baptism. |
| consubstantiation |
Lutheran view of the nature of the Eucharist |
| Counter Reformation |
the revival of the Roman Catholic Church in Europe in the
sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, which was stimulated by the Protestant
Reformation. The Jesuits were at the forefront of the revival |
| Deist |
an adherent of a system of belief centring on God as Creator
of an ordered universe, a rational Supreme Being to be apprehended by reason.
The deists stood for natural as opposed to revealed religion. |
| denomination |
a type of grouping within the greater Christian Church,
e.g. Roman Catholic, Anglican, Baptist |
| diocese |
the main geographical unit of Church administration, governed
by a Bishop. |
| dissenter |
a general term for those Christians (not including Roman
Catholics) outside the Established Church. |
| Easter |
central Christian festival in memory of the resurrection
of Jesus from the dead |
| ecclesiastical |
having something to do with the Church (organisation or
ritual) from the Greek, ecclesia |
| enthusiasm |
literally 'the state of having God within you', applied
generally to conditions of ecstatic inspiration. Samuel Johnson defined
it as 'a vain confidence of Divine favour or communication'. |
| episcopal |
associated with Bishops. |
| episcopacy |
system of Church government by bishops |
| Established Church |
in England, the Church of England, 'as by law established',
the State Church. |
| evangelical |
group or church placing particular emphasis on the gospel
and the scriptures as the path to salvation |
| Free Churches |
non-conformist denominations, free from state control |
| grace |
the expression of God's active love and acceptance of people
in spite of their unworthiness. Grace is always completely undeserved; a
free gift. |
| High Church |
a general term, normally applied to those Anglicans who
stress the authority of the Church and its Bishops, and who place high value
on the Sacraments. |
| Independent |
another, and older, name for Congregationalists. |
| justification by faith |
protestant doctrine of God's gift to individual Christians
of unmerited forgiveness |
| Latitudinarian |
a term applied in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries
to 'broad' churchmen who were little interested in doctrine, church organisation
or liturgy. |
| liturgy |
divine service according to a prescribed ritual such as
Evensong or the Eucharist |
| Moravians |
a group of Christians from central Europe, formed by Count
von Zinzendorf in 1722 but with roots going back much further. Strong
elements in their tradition include missionary enterprise, hymn-singing,
fellowship meals and general simplicity of approach to life. They
influenced John Wesley. |
| Non-conformist |
a general term for those who do not assent to the Established
Church. Much the same as Dissenter, but the word is much more negative.
The sequence Puritan - Dissenter - Nonconformist is significant of a decline
in intensity. |
| Original Sin |
the doctrine that Adam's sin was passed on to all mankind.
Human beings are thus 'born in sin' and universally in need of redemption.
|
| Pietism |
a movement which started among the German Lutherans in
the seventeenth century to restore life to the Church though Bible reading,
prayer meetings and practical Christianity. |
| Presbyterian |
an adherent of a form of church government through elders.
|
| Protestant |
major division of the Church protesting against Roman Catholic
belief and practice as distinct from Orthodox and Roman Catholic Churches
|
| Quakers |
a nickname for members of the Society of Friends. |
| redemption |
reconciliation (by purchase and liberation) of slaves to
their masters - and so metaphorically of salvation through the death of
Jesus |
| reformation |
a sixteenth century reform movement which led to the formation
of Protestant Churches |
| Roman Catholic |
major division of the Church, owing loyalty to Rome, as
distinct from Orthodox and Protestant Churches |
| Sacrament |
an outward sign of an inward blessing, as in baptism or
the Eucharist |
| See |
strictly, the official 'seat' (sedes) of a Bishop.
This normally stands in the cathedral of the diocese; hence the term is
often transferred to the cathedral city, and sometimes loosely used of the
actual diocese. |
| Society of Friends |
a body of Christians, also known as Quakers, whose founder
was George Fox. Distinctive tenets are the absence of a paid ministry,
the refusal to be bound by creeds, the use of silence in worship, pacifism,
and a belief in the Inner Light. |
| Socinian |
a term applied (after two sixteenth-century theologians
named Sozzini - in Latin, Socinus - to those who deny the divinity of Christ;
often used loosely for Unitarian. |
| Transubstantiation |
the doctrine that the substance of the Eucharistic elements
is converted into the body and blood of Christ at consecration, only the
appearances of bread and wine still remaining. |
| Trinity |
three persons in one God - doctrine of the triune nature
of Father, Son and Holy Spirit |
| Trinitarian |
a believer in the traditional Christian doctrine that God
is a Trinity (Father, Son and Spirit) and yet a unity. |
| Unitarian |
one who disbelieves in the orthodox Christian doctrine
of the Trinity by denying the divinity of Jesus. |
| Vatican |
the residence of the Pope in Rome and the administrative
centre of the Roman Catholic Church |