Thoughts on Public Worship: ontic weight?

by | Dec 22, 2010 | Books, Ecclesiology, Practical Theology

I came across a new phrase this week while reading John Jefferson Davis’ Worship and the Reality of God: An Evangelical Theology of Real Presence. As you might have guessed from the title of this post it’s “ontic weight.” Here’s what he says:

The personal presence of God in the ecclesia, by virtue of his covenant promises, his Word, sacraments and Spirit, invests the ecclesia with an ontic weight that does not obtain with merely human organizations and assemblies. (63)

When the church gathers itself together intentionally as a church, in the name of the Lord Jesus…, as an assembly of God for the worship of God, then God himself is present, and the church can experience its full theanthropic and ontological weight – the transcendent Christ is then immanently and really present in the midst of the assembly, investing it with his own reality, authority and weightiness. (66)

Davis argues that the gathered church has greater ontological weight than the scattered church. This implies both sacred space and sacred time.

I agree with J. J. Davis!

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Do We Still Believe in Sola Scriptura?—Three Years Later … | Sam Waldron

Do We Still Believe in Sola Scriptura?—Three Years Later … | Sam Waldron

Almost three and a half years ago I waded into an issue in a blog for which in some circles I was scorched with disagreement and (by some people) with ridicule. I warned that respect for what is called widely “the Great Tradition” was beginning seriously to cause the boat of sola scriptura to list. Events since then have shown that my concerns should not have been dismissed as foolish and ridiculous.

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