Reconfiguring Sacred Nature: A Historical-Cultural Interpretation of the Christian Church's Shifting Authority
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.64529/zp8hyh67Keywords:
Church History, Sacredness and Religious-Cultural Representation, Socio-Cultural Transformation, Contemporary Ecclesiology, Secularization and Digitalization of ReligionAbstract
This research makes the historical and socio-cultural development of the Christian Church a key unit of analysis, focusing on how its sacred nature was formed, reinterpreted, and negotiated throughout various historical periods. The purpose of this research is to examine the shift in the role of the Church—from an early persecuted community to a dominant institution in the Middle Ages, to a divided institution during the Reformation era, and to facing the challenges of secularization, globalization, and digital religiosity in the contemporary era. Using historical-critical qualitative methods and interpretive-cultural approaches, this study analyzes primary texts, ecclesiastical documents, theological writings, and cutting-edge scholarly works to trace patterns of continuity, change, and symbolic negotiation in the Church's journey. The study's findings indicate that, although the Church's institutional authority is declining in many Western societies, it continues to exert a significant cultural influence through social justice advocacy, ecological engagement, and digital forms of worship. The sacred nature of the Church shifts from institutional centers to symbolic and aesthetic representations, in line with the reconfiguration of sacred meaning in a secular and pluralistic context. The contribution of this research lies in presenting an integrated framework that connects sacred representations, historical transformations, and cultural adaptations, while illustrating how the Church reinterprets its sacred vocation in the midst of changing global dynamics.
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