*Important
Disclaimer: This is NOT necessarily
an issue of sin or eternal salvation, but rather, of
honoring and praising The Almighty, worshipping Him in
Spirit & TRUTH
----------------------------Also see...
Ayashaya.com/ekklesia.html
https://www.beinaberean.org/writings/church.html
----------------------------
Source:
https://grahamhancock.com/phorum/read.php?4,762067,762067
The word "church" (which was never used to refer to the body
of believers in the first English Bibles) derives from the
word "Circe". The Oxford English Dictionary gives this
etymology of the word "church":
Church - Old English: circe etc. = Old Saxon: kirka
Below are three quotes giving more information about
the etymology of the word "church". The first is from
Wikipedia:
Quote
Church
Wikipedia
The etymology of this word is generally assumed to be
from the Greek, kurios oikos (house of the Lord); but
this is most improbable, as the word existed in all the
Celtic dialects long before the introduction of the
Greek. No doubt the word means ‘a circle.’
The (pagan) places of worship among the German and
Celtic nations were always circular (witness circular
Stonehenge, the most ancient stone megaliths on earth).
Compare Anglo-Saxon 'circe', a small church, with 'circol',
a circle. In Scotland it is called "Kirk" and in Gemany
it is "Kirche," in England it is the word "Circe" (the
"c" having a "k" sound).
"Kirke/Circe" was also the name of a Goddess. Kirke or
Circe was the daughter of the Sun god, who was famous
for taming wild animals for her circus.
Quote
Circe[/size]
[ www.paleothea.com]
Circe was an evil, or perhaps just cruelly quirky,
sorceress. She was very powerful and turned all of
Odysseus' men into swine (they bearly escaped). She also
had the power to purify and cleanse the Argonauts of the
murder of Apsyrtus. Her name means "Falcon" and that
seems pretty appropriate for her character. Circe was
the daughter of Helios (the Sun) and Perse, and was the
aunt of Medea. She was wayyyyy dangerous because she was
so powerful and so bored.
Quote
Circe, Kirke, Kirche and Kerk
[ www.iahushua.com]
This is the word used in most English versions as a
rendering of the New Testament's Greek word ekklesia.
Ekklesia really means "a calling out", a meeting or a
gathering. Ekklesia is the Greek equivalent of the
Hebrew qahal, which means an assembly or a congregation.
Neither ekklesia nor qahal means a building. Tyndale, in
his translation, uniformly translated ekklesia as
"congregation" and only used the word "churches" to
translate Acts 19:37 for heathen temples! Whence the
word "church", then? Ecclesiastical sources give the
origin as kuriakon or kyriakon in Greek. However, to
accept this. one has to stretch your imagination in an
attempt to see any resemblance. Also, because kuriakon
means a building (the house of Kurios=Lord), and not a
gathering or meeting of people, as the words ekklesia
and qahal imply, therefore this explanation can only be
regarded as distorted, even if it is true. Our common
dictionaries, however, are honest in revealing to us the
true origin. They all trace the word back to its Old
English or Anglo-Saxon root, namely circe. And the
origin of circe? Any encyclopaedia, or dictionary of
mythology, will reveal who Circe was. She was the
goddess-daughter of Helios, the Sun-deity! Again,
another form of Sun-worship, this time the daughter of
the Sun-deity, had become mixed with the Messianic
Faith.
Some interesting facts emerge from the study of the word
circe. The word is related to "circus", "circle",
"circuit", "Circean", "circulate", and the various words
starting with "circum-". The Latin pronunciation could
have been "sirke" or "sirse". The Old English word circe
may have been pronounced similarly to "kirke", or even "sirse".
However, Circe was in fact originally a Greek goddess
where her name was written as: Kirke, and pronounced as
such—just as in numerous similar cases of words of Greek
origin, e.g. cyst and kustis, cycle and kuklos, cylinder
and kulindros. The word "church" is known in Scotland as
kirk, and in German as Kirche and in Netherlands as kerk.
These words show their direct derivation from the Greek
Kirke even better than the English "church". However,
even the Old English circe for "church", reveals its
origin.
Let us rather use the Scriptural
"Assembly" or "Congregation", and renounce the word that
is derived from Circe, the daughter of the Sun-deity!
----------------------------
Also see...
Ayashaya.com/ekklesia.html
https://www.beinaberean.org/writings/church.html
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