Analytic Ecclesiology: The Paradox of the Unity of the Church

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.36421/veritas.v21i2.575

Keywords:

Analytic, Ecclesiology, Unity, Social Ontology, Problem of the Many

Abstract

Analytic Ecclesiology is a new branch within the enter­prise of Analytic Theology. The “analytic” part of the name refers to the analytic method employed to explicate the core claims of Christian theology using the tools of analytic philosophy. In the case of Eccle­siology, the concept of ecclesiastical unity demands cla­rification. The question is not why or how a collection of indi­viduals is united but in what sense they are one. The Scriptural answer to the former is that Christ is the head of the Church. It is the latter that Analytic Ecclesiology is committed to answering. Joshua Cockayne’s work, which focuses on the social ontology and group agency of the Church, has shed some light on the issue. He invites philosophers and theologians in the analytic tradition to think about Ecclesiology analytically. That is my aim in this paper. I hope to expand the discussion on Analytic Ecclesiology, not by building on Cockayne’s work, but rather by taking a step back and arguing that the issue of the unity of the Church must be discussed from the perspective of identity rather than, contra Cockayne, from the perspective of group agency. To achieve this, I shall first assess Cockayne’s account and offer my criticism. Then, drawing insights from Peter Unger’s article “Problem of the Many,” I dis­cuss the paradox of the unity of the Church and conclude that relative identity theory best solves the paradox of the unity of the Church.

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Published

31-12-2022

How to Cite

Oswan, Devina Benlin. “Analytic Ecclesiology: The Paradox of the Unity of the Church”. Veritas: Jurnal Teologi dan Pelayanan 21, no. 2 (December 31, 2022): 179–193. Accessed March 29, 2024. https://ojs.seabs.ac.id/index.php/Veritas/article/view/575.

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Section

Special Themes: (Re)Imagining the Church in a Postpandemic Era