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Onesiphorus
elders
elders In Israelite society, heads of families; collectively they form the leadership of the tribe (Josh. 9: 11), or, under the monarchy, of the ruling class (2 Sam. 3: 17). Eldership was never the title of an office to which an individual might be appointed or elected. A son might succeed his father as the elder of a clan. Elders were a body of senior persons with influence varying according to their personal qualities and the importance of the social group to which they belonged, and in succeeding centuries it continued to be the case that ‘the elders’ were not the holders of any office, though they were accorded respect, and it was from them that individual leaders emerged. Neither in the synagogues nor at
Qumran were elders members of an order or office.
In the gospels elders (Greek,
presbuteroi) are mentioned five times by Mark. They are associated with high priests and scribes (e.g. 8: 31), and give the impression of being a collective body exercising influence together. In the Acts elders are a constituent part of the Jerusalem authority, and again they appear only as a group, never as holders of an office of eldership or independently of the Jewish rulers and scribes (e.g. Acts 4: 5), and they were not necessarily ‘elderly’ in the sense of aged.
Surprisingly, perhaps, elders are never mentioned in the early letters of Paul, where the local leaders of Churches are addressed as ‘brothers’ (NRSV marg.) as distinct from Church members in general (Phil. 4: 21 f.). So also in Acts (15: 40 and 18: 27) it is ‘the brothers’, the local leaders who are not called ‘elders’, who commend members of the Church. The apostle himself and his fellow workers were all members of a team working together.
However, as the local Churches expanded, and the apostle moved far away, it became essential for someone in each house-church to exercise leadership and to preside over the assemblies. He was possibly chosen because of ability in teaching. Household churches existed in Jerusalem itself (Acts 2: 46; 4: 31) and if they were looking for a title for their local leaders, they might have found it in the
mebaqqer of Qumran,
episkopos in Greek. When these persons met together for corporate consultation, this would be referred to as the elders,
presbuteroi, of Jerusalem. The situation envisaged by the Pastoral Epistles is similar. Over each local house-church, an overseer (
episkopos) presided, and when they met as a group they were the elders (
presbuteroi) of the city's Christians. The writer is urging his readers now to accept the fact that there must be one overseer for all the groups of the place, very much as James was in Jerusalem. The kind of
episkopos commended would be Onesiphorus (2 Tim. 1: 16–18). Just as there was a local leader for the groups meeting in houses, so there now had to be a leader for the whole Church of the city corporately. Local people were encouraged to serve in this capacity (1 Tim. 3: 1), coming forward from among the
presbuteroi. By the time of
Ignatius (
c.107 CE) the single
episkopos (bishop) is established in Antioch as a safeguard for the unity of the Church. He presides at the Eucharist, together with elders, whose duties are not described, and deacons. Possibly these elders were the
episkopoi of a number of neighbouring churches, with local prestige which Ignatius feels must now be surrendered in exchange for the ceremonial honour of sitting round the bishop of the city Church.
When the growth of the Church's numbers exceeded the capacity of a building to hold the whole community of a city under its bishops, it became necessary for him to delegate powers to his
presbuteroi (elders) to preside over local Eucharists—which was to establish the permanent pattern of an ordained ministry of bishops, presbyters, and deacons.
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HELP KIDS ALIVE HELP
Newspaper article from: Post-Tribune (IN); 12/16/1999; 605 words
; ...children who have no other reasonable means of support, Rock said. The mission was founded in China in 1916 as Home of Onesiphorus. In the 1940s, because of the communist takeover in China, the home was closed. A new home and school was opened in Hong...
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JACK M. NIXON | HAZEL E. TICHY | ALBERT NASH | SHIRLEY E. KOE
Newspaper article from: Sun Publications (IL); 5/26/2000; 700+ words
; ...Thursday, May 18, at her daughter's home in Wheaton. She was born Feb. 15, 1905, in Chicago. She worked for Home of Onesiphorus, Sears and Scripture Press as an executive secretary. She was a member of First Baptist Church of Hemet, Calif., and...
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MY FAMILY TREE.
Newspaper article from: The Daily Mail (London, England); 4/8/2006; 594 words
; ...Snows and the Pauls continued when Valentina's brother, George, married, in 1766, the daughter of wool merchant Sir Onesiphorus Paul. Their eldest son, Robert Snow Paul, inherited an estate in Gloucestershire, but he and his banking partners dipped...
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Jane Ball offers preschool reading program
Newspaper article from: Post-Tribune (IN); 11/15/2001; ; 661 words
; ...Whittaker and Genevieve Anderson as they move back to Taiwan to continue their mission work for the Kids Alive International Onesiphorus Children's Home. Gene was a Lowell High school graduate who grew up attending Community Bible Church. The Andersons were...
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Through the keyhole
Newspaper article from: The Scotsman; 9/8/2001; ; 700+ words
; ...carefully restored (today and tomorrow). The House of Falkland, in Fife, was built as a stately home for a gentleman called Onesiphorus Tyndall-Bruce. Though now a school, many vestiges of its elaborate interiors remain (tomorrow only). At the other...
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By Royal appointment
Newspaper article from: Bath Chronicle, The; 10/25/2007; 700+ words
; ...small church is dwarfed by the adjoining manor house, once the home of a curiously-named family of noble repute. Sir Onesiphorus Paul gave nearby Woodchester its wood industry in the 18th-century, while his son George assisted with the prison work...
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The history of Bristol banking
Newspaper article from: Evening Post (Bristol UK); 10/1/2009; 451 words
; ...The first true Bristol bank began in 1750 as Tyndall, Elton, Lloyd, Miller, Knox & Hale. The founding members were Onesiphorus Tyndall, a West Indian merchant with connections to the slave trade; Isaac Elton; Harford Lloyd; William Miller, a grocer...
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Famous Dave's to whet customers' appetites.(Neighbor)
Newspaper article from: Daily Herald (Arlington Heights, IL); 7/5/2000; 700+ words
; ...neighborhood. He joined the local civic and charitable organizations, such as the Lydia Children's Home and the Home of Onesiphorus, an orphanage for children with polio. He befriended local businessmen, residents and politicians. "I went to the funerals...
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Onesiphorus
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Onesiphorus , in the New Testament, man whom Paul praised highly for hospitality and kindness.
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elders
Book article from: A Dictionary of the Bible
...overseer for all the groups of the place, very much as James was in Jerusalem. The kind of episkopos commended would be Onesiphorus (2 Tim. 1: 16–18). Just as there was a local leader for the groups meeting in houses, so there now had...
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