The Meaning of Community

n. a social group of any size whose members reside in a specific locality, share government, and often have a common cultural and historical heritage (Webster's College Dictionary, 2010)

History:

According to the Oxford English Dictionary, the word community first appeared in writing in the epic poem The Bruce by the 14th-century Scottish poet John Barbour. In that epic, Barbour used the word to mean "the body of those having common or equal rights or rank, as distinguished from the privileged classes." By the late 18th century, the growing number of meanings for this essential word included "joint or common ownership." Subsequent to the publication of The Communist Manifesto in 1848, it took on the specialized definition of "a socialistic or communistic society," akin to the short-lived "utopia" founded in 1825 by Robert Owen in New Harmony, Indiana. As the term expanded in meaning, 20th-century speakers began to use community to denote "a group of people having common interests." By the 21st century, the connotation began to creep toward "faction" or the ever-evolving "tribe."

Etymology:

Community derives from the Latin adjective communis, meaning "common, public, universal, ordinary." The Latin noun, communitas, meaning "fellowship," passed into Late Middle English as communite, meaning "citizenry."The root from which it shoots is munus, meaning "gift, spectacle, function, tribute, or service." You can see how the different meanings of the original have yielded now-familiar English words such as common, communication, communion, immunity, and municipal. Combining the Latin prefix con- with munus and the suffix -ity, meaning "quality or state of," yields the etymological meaning, "the state of serving or functioning together." The word took on its current spelling in the 16th century.

Effect:

Since community first appeared in English, its common usage has evoked images of civic pride, moral coherence, and neighborliness. Writing in the 18th century, however, Jean-Jacques Rousseau saw the community as an obstacle to the fullest realization of the "authentic individual." Contemporary heirs of that view have developed critical theory as a tool for eroding the older concept. As part of that process, they have promoted identity politics to supplant the idea of a civic community with groupings based on a multiplicity of shared racial, sexual, and other traits, typically called "communities" despite the fragmentation.

Whether in a medieval village, a modern suburb, or the LGBT movement, "communities shape consciousness," Carl Trueman observes in The Rise and Triumph of the Modern Self. Trueman further asserts that "our moral consciousness is very much shaped by our community." So he calls on Christian churches to function as Christian communities as they did in earlier times, caring for people's needs and passing on moral structures based in the realities of the body and objective truth. In his conclusion, Trueman recalls the world of the second century, during which the church "laid down the foundations for the later successes of the third and fourth centuries . . . by existing as a close-knit doctrinally bounded community that required her members to act consistently with their faith and to be good citizens of the earthly city as far as good citizenship was compatible with faithfulness." Distinctly different from modern communities based on online anonymity and an ethic of condemnation, early Christian communities grew from personal interaction and care for others, and were united by a shared faith. Today, faithful Christians could counter our society's increasing fragmentation by heeding Trueman's advice and building on that ancient model of community focused on faith rather than politics.

is a retired secondary teacher of English and philosophy. For forty years he challenged students to dive deep into the classics of the Western canon, to think and write analytically, and to find the cultural constants reflected throughout that literature, art, and thought.

This article originally appeared in Salvo, Issue #58, Fall 2021 Copyright © 2026 Salvo | www.salvomag.com https://salvomag.com/article/salvo58/the-meaning-of-community

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