today:
138
yesterday:
170
Total:
999,444

칼럼

What Fellowship Really Means

Sarah's 2014.03.05 03:28 Views : 1119


Douglas Mangum

If you’ve been part of a church community, you may have noticed how some words acquire “churchy” meanings—like “fellowship.” When is the last time you got together with your colleagues after work for “fellowship”? Never. But in church, we have fellowship luncheons that are held in fellowship halls and we get together for fellowship in our fellowship groups. When we overuse a word, it can lose its meaning. Our overuse of “fellowship” makes an important point in 1 John fall flat.

“That which we have seen and heard we proclaim also to you, so that you too may have fellowship with us; and indeed our fellowship is with the Father and with his Son Jesus Christ.… If we say we have fellowship with him while we walk in darkness, we lie and do not practice the truth. But if we walk in the light, as he is in the light, we have fellowship with one another, and the blood of Jesus his Son cleanses us from all sin” (1 John 1:3, 6–7).

We can determine the meaning of fellowship in this passage by examining it within a New Testament context. To do that, we have to find the Greek root word behind the English term. Using the esv English-Greek Reverse Interlinear, we find that the Greek word underlying “fellowship” is koinonia (κοινωνία).

Same Greek Word, Different English Words

Koinonia is translated many different ways in English Bibles. The first appearance of koinonia in the New Testament appears in Acts 2:42: “And they devoted themselves to the apostles’ teaching and the fellowship (koinonia), to the breaking of bread and the prayers.”

But koinonia is interpreted with another word in 2 Cor 9:13. “They will glorify God because of your submission flowing from your confession of the gospel of Christ, and the generosity of your contribution (koinonia) for them and for all others.” Paul writes to the believers in Philippi: “That I may know him and the power of his resurrection, and may share (koinonia) his sufferings, becoming like him in his death” (Phil 3:10).

Even translations that claim to use close word-for-word consistency, like the ESV, do not always render koinonia as “fellowship.” There’s a reason: Koinonia can be used for a particular aspect of Christianity, or the dynamic whole of Christian living.

Dynamic Relationship

These different translations reflect the nature of koinonia: it depicts an interactive relationship between God and believers who are sharing new life through Christ.

The Greek word captures the entirety of this relationship. It involves active participation in Christian community: sharing in spiritual blessings and giving material blessings. Gentile believers in Macedonia had nothing in common with the Jewish believers in Jerusalem except Christ (Rom 15:26–27).

Having no equivalent in English that captures the whole spectrum of meaning, translators focused on a specific aspect of koinonia in each context. Acts 2 focuses on the relationship among believers while 2 Cor 9 uses koinonia to express generosity in community. Paul also uses koinonia to describe the way he identifies with Christ’s sufferings. John, in his first letter, uses koinonia to describe what connects us to God and to each other through Christ.

What Fellowship Really Means

Fellowship is a word we may use too lightly in our churches. The variety of uses in the New Testament reveals that koinonia involves a deeper level of fellowship than an informal social gathering. The essential element of koinonia is participation—Christ is what connects us.

We should value all that we hold in common as followers of Christ regardless of cultural or denominational differences.

The focus is always on what believers have in common. This is the key to understanding koinonia in the New Testament. So the next time you come across “fellowship” used in a churchy way, remember that fellowship should focus on what we all have in common: new life in Jesus Christ.

No. Subject Views Date
252 영분별의 원리 10가지 2186 2013.04.06
251 세상에서 가장 아름다운 감동이야기 - 몽그리 100번째 손님 2182 2011.05.17
250 [이웃] 국민일보 선정 아름다운 교회길(1) 2171 2010.09.30
249 < 학생 복음 운동의 조상, C.T 스터드 > 2168 2010.12.24
248 [시] 고난의 텃밭 2136 2011.10.14
247 Do You Desire God - Paul Washer(하나님을 갈망하십니까 - 폴 워셔) 2130 2011.10.24
246 당신에게는 꿈이 있습니까? 2124 2011.08.10
245 < '종교 개혁의 아버지' 마틴 루터 > 2119 2010.12.24
244 [기도의 사람_아브라함 링컨 ] 2113 2011.05.16
243 영국의 선구적 종교 개혁가 존 위클리프 2113 2010.12.24
242 The Good Mother (2010) 2111 2011.05.18
241 < 영혼을 사랑했던 인디언 선교사, 데이비드 브레이너드 > 2105 2010.12.24
240 감당할 수 없는 슬픔 그리고 하나님의 은혜 | JoeyDad 2103 2011.06.29
239 일제의 신사참배에 항거, 순교한 소양 주기철(朱基徹) 2094 2010.12.24
238 탁월한 복음주의 지도자 존 스토트(John Stott) 소천하다- 이동희 기자 ⓒ뉴스미션 2091 2011.08.15
237 Christmas Food Court Flash Mob, Hallelujah Chorus - Must See! 2084 2010.12.31
236 기독교 영화 " 이층집 남자" 2076 2011.08.02
235 배우자에게 해서는 안되는 말. 2075 2011.06.20
234 칩 잉그램의 부부회복세미나 I - 행복한 부부생활을 막는 장애물들 2074 2011.09.06
233 < 산돌, 손양원 > 2071 2010.12.24
232 아름다운 선택 | 김철민 2067 2011.06.29
231 로버트 박, '한국교회 회개해야' 2059 2010.12.08
230 마음의 병, 그림으로 치유 2056 2011.06.19
229 더불어 함께 사는 세상을 위하여 -김희연 2056 2010.12.11
228 고구마 전도왕 김기동 집사님 전도 간증 2054 2011.09.13
227 버마인들의 영적 아버지 아도니람 져드슨 2049 2010.12.24
226 소프라노 문혜원의 해설이 있는 오페라 <I LOVE OPERA> 2037 2011.07.06
225 어디를 향해 달리는가 ? -온누리 :마음으로읽는글 2033 2011.10.03
224 한국의 대표 성지 순례코스, 양화진… 아펜젤러·언더우드 첫 기도는 묘비에 생생 2030 2010.09.30
223 바울 이후 신학을 가장 잘 집대성한 어거스틴 2029 2010.12.24