EXCOMMUNICATION
Source: 551, 560, 566, 567
An ecclesiastical penalty, by which they who incur the guilt of any heinous sin, are separated from the church, and deprived of its spiritual advantages. Thus the Jews "put out of the synagogue" those they deemed unworthy Joh 9:22 12:42 16:2. There were two degrees of excommunication among them: one a temporary and partial exclusion form ecclesiastical privileges, and from society; the other a complete excision form the covenant people of God and their numerous privileges, and abandonment to eternal perdition. See ANATHEMA. The right and duty of excommunication when necessary were recognized in the Christian church by Christ and his apostles, Mt 18:15-18 1Co 5:1-13 16:22 Ga 5:12 1Ti 1:20 Tit 3:10. The offender, found guilty and incorrigible, was to be excluded from the Lord’s supper and cut off from the body of believers. This excision from Christian fellowship does not release one from any obligation to obey the law of God and the gospel of Christ; nor exempt him from any relative duties, as a man or a citizen. The censure of the church, on the other hand, is not to be accompanied, as among papists, with enmity, curses, and persecution. Our Savior directs that such an offender be regarded "as heathen man and a publican;" and the apostles charge the church to "withdraw from" those who trouble them, and "keep no company with them," "no, not to eat;" but this is to be understood of those offices of civility and fraternity which a man is at liberty to pay or to withhold, and not of the indispensable duties of humanity, founded on nature, the law of nations, and the spirit of Christianity, 2Th 3:6,15 2Jo 1:10-11.
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EXCOMMUNICATION. → See CHURCH, GOVERNMENT OF → See CHURCH, RULES OF DISCIPLINE IN
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excommunication. Excommunication, n. an ecclesiastical censure
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Ex′com‐mu′ni‐ca″tion (?), n. [[L. excommunicatio: cf. F. excommunication.]] The act of communicating or ejecting; esp., an ecclesiastical censure whereby the person against whom it is pronounced is, for the time, cast out of the communication of the church; exclusion from fellowship in things spiritual. ☞ excommunication is of two kinds, the lesser and the greater; the lesser excommunication is a separation or suspension from partaking of the Eucharist; the greater is an absolute execution of the offender from the church and all its rights and advantages, even from social intercourse with the faithful.