L
LuxMundy
Guest
You offered for my consideration (in this post and the two that followed) nothing more than the RCC party line.
The RCC began with the establishment of orthodoxy in the 4th century.
Incorrect. Firstly, there absolutely was a Church of Rome in the first century—evangelized by Peter and Paul. What there wasn't was all of the Protestant or quasi-Christian sects.
Secondly, the Christian (Catholic) Church is NOT called the "Roman" Catholic Church. It is called the Catholic Church. Roman or Latin simply refers to the Liturgical Rite, and there are over 20 of those.
The Church built by Jesus Christ and established by the twelve apostles was called the “Catholic Church” by the end of the first century— some 1400 years before anybody ever heard of a “Protestant”. This is the same Church that gave you the Bible...
Ignatius of Antioch was an Apostolic Father who was a lifelong student of the Apostle John. He succeeded the See of Antioch from Peter, who ordained him. He wrote the following on the way to his execution while John was presumably still alive:
"Follow your bishop, every one of you, as obediently as Jesus Christ followed the Father. Obey your clergy too as you would the apostles; give your deacons the same reverence that you would to a command of God. Make sure that no step affecting the Church is ever taken by anyone without the bishop’s sanction. The sole Eucharist you should consider valid is one that is celebrated by the bishop himself, or by some person authorized by him. Where the bishop is to be seen, there let all his people be; just as, wherever Jesus Christ is present, there is the Catholic Church". (Letter to the Smyrneans 8:2 [A.D. 107])
The Martyrdom of Polycarp
"When finally he concluded his prayer, after remembering all who had at any time come his way—small folk and great folk, distinguished and undistinguished, and the whole Catholic Church throughout the world—the time for departure came. So they placed him on an ass, and brought him into the city on a great Sabbath". (The Martyrdom of Polycarp 8 [A.D. 150]).
Irenaeus
"The Catholic Church possesses one and the same faith throughout the whole world, as we have already said". (Against Heresies 1:10 [A.D. 189])
Tertullian
"For it is evident that those men lived not so long ago – in the reign of Antoninus for the most part – and that they at first were believers in the doctrine of the Catholic Church, in the church of Rome under the episcopate of the blessed Eleutherus, until on account of their ever restless curiosity, with which they even infected the brethren, they were more than once expelled". (On the Prescription Against Heretics 22,30 [A.D. 200])
Cyprian
"He who does not hold this unity, does not hold the law of God, does not hold the faith of the Father and the Son, does not hold life and salvation". (On the Unity of the Catholic Church 6 [A.D. 251])
Even if you reject Irenaeus's 2nd century work, Against Heresies, which includes a list of Popes from Peter to his own time, Pope Victor 1 decided the Quartodeciman controversy for the whole Church in the 2nd century.
In the 3rd century, Tertullian wrote, Di Pudicitia, in which he addresses Pope Callistus as "Pontifex Maximus" and "Bishop of Bishops".
Three examples of the Papacy before your timeline of the 4th century...
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