A compelling non-Catholic argument

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That presupposes that you actually have made a better case, something which I don’t think has been shown at all.

The original question, which you guys keep dancing around and avoiding is not:

A) Was Linus the bishop of Rome after Peter?
B) Was Linus a real person?
C) Was Linus the leader of the Roman Church?

The question actually was…

How do we know that the bishop of Rome was considered the leader of the church in Linus’ day? How do we know Linus held that authority, rather than just being one bishop among many?
I think you know already that Linus is mentioned by St. Paul in his Epistle to Timothy [II Tim 4:21]. His successor was Anacletus."

Can we take this at face value that the man even existed or is that disputed?
James
 
He then asked me how I knew that the apostles passed authority to Linus. I said that it’s stated in the writings of early Church fathers such as Irenaeus. Now here’s where he brought up a point I’ve never heard before - arguing from the texts of the early Church fathers is sort of begging the question. How do I know that authority lies is Rome? Because the early Church fathers say so. How do I know the early Church Fathers were right? Because they were in communion with Rome.

He brings up the very good point that not all bishops at the time were supportive of Roman authority. So why don’t we accept THEIR account of authority? Because they weren’t in communion with Rome. But our basis for Roman authority comes largely from the writings from the early Church fathers who WERE in communion with Rome? I definitely see the circular logic in this.

So… that being said, how do we justify Roman authority?
Dear OnlyAmbrose and everyone,
Code:
        I hope I've lurked the thread enough not to repeat too many  issues which have already been settled.:)
allow me to go back to the initial main point by your friend: the circularity of any argument based on ECFs. The essence of the point, correct me if I’m mistaken sounds: ECFs do appear to point to (proto)catholic ideas and attitudes, but that happens simply because they have been selected precisely through the criterion of their being (proto)catholic.

Now, this point seems to rest on the presupposition that in later centuries ( when ?) there was a scrupolous selection among a wide pool of early christian writers, and, because of their catholic (catholic/orthodox) credentials, a limited part of them have been promoted to Fathers. The first question about which is: where can we find this large set of authors, among whom the ECFs had been selected ? This is not to mean that there were not early christian writers with non-catholic or anti-catholic attitudes, mirroring the existence of dissents present ab initio, and that a lesser likelyhood of survival to our days of their works has to be considered ( since they were not on the winning side) .

But what is very difficult to see, is the existence of a range of more or less coherent early christian currents, each with its own literature, among which one - the only literature we have today - has been selected by the winning party. Even more difficult, if not impossible, is identifying among those currents, one which can be considered as the forerunner of some modern non-apostolic denominations.

No modern discovery of major early Christian texts which had been lost can justify such a claim. So, ECFs do not appear as an arbitrary portion within early chirstian literature, but rather the main part of it. There is simply no comparable alternative set of early chirstian writers one can rest on.

Therefore, the implicit admission by your friend about the overall
catholic or (proto)catholic flavor of the thrust of ECFs means really a lot. He was this way (unintentionally 🙂 ) telling you how strong the roots of catholicism ( and orthodoxy) are through history, and how nothing else (among which his own beliefs) can claim anything even comparable. You don’t even have to ask him: “Tell me then please, where **your **Fathers are”.

If he then sees the strength of his argument in the lack of hunanimity among ancient bishops about the roman primacy, then:
  • He should believe only what has always been held by ALL bishops through history. Which of his own present beliefs would survive this superhard fictional test ? Which christian belief in general ?
  • Does he accept episcopacy ? If not so, why does he speak about bishops ? If so, what does the bishops’ authority rest on, in his view ? Does he mind scripture makes a compelling case for episcopacy ? Or does he accept some early christian writer about that ? Is he sure the anti-episcopalian witnesses were not selected away just as he seems to believe about the anti-papal ones ? 🤷
 
I can’t speak for others, but some thoughts that come to mind are:
  • Specifically declaring primacy/authority over other bishops at that time in a letter
  • Making a binding statement on the faithful, similar to Acts 15
  • A contemporary writer identifying Linus as “the Rock” of the church or some similar title
  • discovery of an early contemporary liturgy making reference to Linus as a leader with primacy over other leaders
  • catacomb inscriptions according Linus similar titles and/or honours as Peter
Since it appears that none of these exist (I confess to being unsure about catacomb inscriptions and these would hold the least weight with me unless they were made very close to Linus’ demise) the point appears moot. Hence those with papal presuppositions will accept the papacy of Linus on the basis of those presuppositions and those holding other presuppositions will likely be sceptical.
I’m just curious…have you ever drawn a timeline of the lives of each of these guys?

John (15-100)
Linus (?-79?)
Clement (30-100)
Polycarp (69-155)
Irenaeus (120-200)

Irenaeus of Lyons listed Linus as the second pope and Clement as the fourth in a letter written in the second century.

Irenaeus was not originally from Lyons…he was a disciple of Polycarp of Smyrna who sent Irenaeus to serve as bishop in Lyons. Polycarp, of course, was a disciple of the Apostle John.

I think it is pretty reasonable to conclude that Irenaeus knew who the leaders of the Church at Rome were just as you and I know who the presidents of the United States since World War II: Roosevelt, Truman, Eisenhower, Kennedy, Johnson, Nixon, Ford, Carter, Reagan, Bush, Clinton, Bush. That list covers 75 years of American history. I suspect that Irenaeus could handle a list of similar size and span of years.

Whether any documents survive from Linus’ own hand or not matters very little; we know with reasonable certainty that he sat upon the chair of Peter after the death of the Apostle.

Hope this helps. :tiphat:
 
How do we know that the bishop of Rome was considered the leader of the church in Linus’ day? How do we know Linus held that authority, rather than just being one bishop among many?
Assume for the moment that Linus was NOT considered the leader of the Church during Linus’ own day. What does that matter? All that does matter is that he WAS the successor of Peter (whether he realized it or not) and that he, in turn, was succeeded by Anacletus. Is it really necessary for Linus to have understood his election to the chair of Peter and his own infallibility in order for him to have served as Pope?

I don’t think so. I think development of doctrine is reasonable.

Linus WAS the Pope whether He understood his office as we do or not.

Hope this helps. :tiphat:
 
Thanks for the new replies, especially pneuma’s, that was very helpful. 🙂 Just a few things I’d like to reply to:
  • He should believe only what has always been held by ALL bishops through history. Which of his own present beliefs would survive this superhard fictional test ? Which christian belief in general ?
His stance isn’t that any doctrine should be held as true by all bishops, his stance is that since no (basically) doctrine has ever been held true by all bishops, we should simply refer back only to the writings of the apostles.

Randy, your posts were very helpful too, but I think your second one is based on some false reasoning:
Assume for the moment that Linus was NOT considered the leader of the Church during Linus’ own day. What does that matter? All that does matter is that he WAS the successor of Peter (whether he realized it or not) and that he, in turn, was succeeded by Anacletus. Is it really necessary for Linus to have understood his election to the chair of Peter and his own infallibility in order for him to have served as Pope?
I don’t think so. I think development of doctrine is reasonable.
Linus WAS the Pope whether He understood his office as we do or not.
Hope this helps.
If Linus didn’t know he was Pope, then obviously the apostles never passed authority to him. And if he didn’t receive his authority from the apostles (who received theirs from Christ), then I can’t see a clear line between the pope and Christ. We can’t just arbitrarily pick a person and say “he was pope. he just didn’t know it.”
 
pneuma mentioned a good point. History is usually written by the victor. To me, this makes it difficult, if not impossible, to find evidence countering heresies if the heresies won out.
I think it is pretty reasonable to conclude that Irenaeus knew who the leaders of the Church at Rome were just as you and I know who the presidents of the United States since World War II: Roosevelt, Truman, Eisenhower, Kennedy, Johnson, Nixon, Ford, Carter, Reagan, Bush, Clinton, Bush. That list covers 75 years of American history. I suspect that Irenaeus could handle a list of similar size and span of years.
While I agree, it seems odd to think that Tertullian wouldn’t know the leaders of the early church in proper order. After all, even though many citizens of the US can’t name them all, they can at least name the first several.

Yet clearly, one of the two got it wrong, which is almost unthinkable for educated men reporting about the earthly leader of the church.
Whether any documents survive from Linus’ own hand or not matters very little; we know with reasonable certainty that he sat upon the chair of Peter after the death of the Apostle.
I don’t think it even matters too much in regards to Linus in particular. The main point is that whoever it was that was the second bishop of Rome seems to have left no indications that he actually was in charge of the whole church, rather than strictly being the bishop of Rome. The only thing we can do to get that picture is to read history backwards.
Assume for the moment that Linus was NOT considered the leader of the Church during Linus’ own day. What does that matter?
It matters because it demonstrates that the papacy was a later invention of the bishops of Rome, rather than what Christ himself instituted.
Is it really necessary for Linus to have understood his election to the chair of Peter and his own infallibility in order for him to have served as Pope?
Is it really necessary for a king, president, or other leader to understand their own position to serve in that position? I’d say that must be answered with an emphatic yes.
Linus WAS the Pope whether He understood his office as we do or not.
What’s the difference between being bishop and being the pope? Is it not entirely in the extra duties/privileges that come with it? And if none of those are understood or exercised…how can it be said that the office was held?
 
Linus as the first successor of Peter may not have written to every bishop asserting that fact [as it may well have been fully understood to be so by those same Bishops].

Being the first successor after Peter [who was brutally martyred] may be the reason no writings exist … Why? Several scenarios come to my mind …

The Church was persecuted and therefore kept a low profille …

There was no action that made a “definitively authoritative” epistle to the “whole Church” necessary during Linus’ time as the Bishop of Rome … not hard to imagine for a time when comminications were slow and tedious, epsecially during persecutions…

As the first successor - all that ‘succession’ meant was still an item of discovery [both for Linus and the Church] … Imagine the confusion theapostles felt after the death of Jesus … now an emerging church has had the hand picked leader martyred … the church moves slow [thenand now] … they took time to define the Trinity, the two natures of Jesus, etc… Some threee plus centuries to identify the canon … Why would the office of successor to the Petrine Chair be different?

That all of the first “Popes” were martyred and their names recorded speaks to the authorities / followers recognizing their position in the church. At least that appears to be a reasonable conculsion … at least as reasonable as an argument from silence …
 
While I agree, it seems odd to think that Tertullian wouldn’t know the leaders of the early church in proper order. After all, even though many citizens of the US can’t name them all, they can at least name the first several.

Is it really necessary for a king, president, or other leader to understand their own position to serve in that position? I’d say that must be answered with an emphatic yes…then the boy king of Egypt knew what his post was?

What’s the difference between being bishop and being the pope? Is it not entirely in the extra duties/privileges that come with it? And if none of those are understood or exercised…how can it be said that the office was held?/QUOTE …the bishop of Rome is the pope. the reference was made only regarding Linus.because one does not his/her duties does not make their posting any less valid.eg i get a job as a bank teller and i don’t have a clue what i am doing then my job is not a valid job?
 
I also think is is notable that there are not any writings that claim that Linus was not “Pope”

I understand the arguments about history being written by the victors…

But the early christian writings include leters and commentaries that were written by “heretics” … even some who wrote and held positions that are considered orthodox and heretical - at various periods - have come down to us today…

It seems a church [defined as that which comes down as the ‘victor’] would have removed thise same ‘heretical’ writings if it was determined to remove opposing viws from the record …

I ofen think the same as the scriptures … if the Christian Community was promoting a hoax and establishing a ‘religion’ it would have written a better foundational document … more heroic, less imprecise …

Just take the "brothers’ of the Lord arguement … that was discussed early in the church and explained … yet no one ever modified the writings … and today Christians and others are still argung the meaning … I just do not see the absence of dissent being the result of purposeful destruction [non preservation] of the record …
 
While I agree, it seems odd to think that Tertullian wouldn’t know the leaders of the early church in proper order. After all, even though many citizens of the US can’t name them all, they can at least name the first several.
I have memorized the first five popes for the sake of apologetics argument…I could not name the first five presidents in proper order.
Yet clearly, one of the two got it wrong, which is almost unthinkable for educated men reporting about the earthly leader of the church.
Okay…one of these two men was wrong about the sequence. So what? The important point is that there WAS a correct sequence…only one man WAS the pope at any give time (this principle extends to the time of the anti-popes) because there was only one Bishop of Rome at any given time even if Tertullian (or Irenaeus) did not name them in proper order. FWIW, my money’s on Irenaeus.

Apostolic Succession is valid whether we moderns have the sequence correct or in full. We may have completely forgotten a pope or two throughout the past 2,000 years. Again, so what? Someone has always succeeded Peter, and today, that man is Benedict XVI.
I don’t think it even matters too much in regards to Linus in particular. The main point is that whoever it was that was the second bishop of Rome seems to have left no indications that he actually was in charge of the whole church, rather than strictly being the bishop of Rome. The only thing we can do to get that picture is to read history backwards.
Whether Linus understood that he was head of the entire Church during his bishopric/pontificate matters not a whit. He WAS the head of the entire Church even if he didn’t realize it. Either way, this reality has become unquestionably clear.
It matters because it demonstrates that the papacy was a later invention of the bishops of Rome, rather than what Christ himself instituted.
To the contrary…the authority invested in Peter (and his successors) by Christ forms the ONLY basis for the papacy - later inventions notwithstanding. As you know, MANY theological concepts have taken hundreds of years to mature and become evident. If the fullness of the papacy (and papal infallibility) required some passage of time to ripen, so be it. As the Lord Himself said, “there are many things I would like to tell you, more than you can now bear.”
Is it really necessary for a king, president, or other leader to understand their own position to serve in that position? I’d say that must be answered with an emphatic yes.
Easily spoken NOW. But did Washington foresee the awesome responsibility wielded by a later president who had to determine whether to drop an atomic bomb on Hiroshima and Nagasaki? I think not. The fact that Washington or Adams or Jefferson did not understand the full authority granted to them by the constitution in their own day does not make them lesser presidents or void their presidencies completely. Over time, the separation of powers and the authority of the executive branch of our government has been more clearly defined.
What’s the difference between being bishop and being the pope? Is it not entirely in the extra duties/privileges that come with it? And if none of those are understood or exercised…how can it be said that the office was held?
The office does not depend upon the exercise of privilege or the carrying out of duties. The office of pope has been filled by men who, sadly, had little regard for the spiritual welfare of the Church. Yet, they were validly elected as successors nonetheless.

Jesus Himself pointed to the scribes and pharisees and told His disciples that they must “do everything they tell you because they sit on Moses’ seat.” Their authority did not rest upon their faithful exercising of their “duties” but rather because of the office they held. Authority is not abrogated by dereliction (or ignorance) of duties.

Hope this helps. :tiphat:
 
To be clear,

  1. ]I don’t doubt that there was a Linus,
    ]that he held leadership in the early church,
    ]and that he likely received that leadership as a result of Peter’s presence in Rome.
    ]There is a good deal of historical evidence to prove that.
    Where things get fuzzy is when one tries to look at
    the nature of Linus’ leadership role
    ** and his concept of it. There are a lack of contemporary sources to speak to it. Hence the typical jump to Clement for support.

  1. With those 4 points that you agree with, where is the great leap for you?

    Linus and Clement were contemporaries. The bond which glued them together was that they lived in apostolic times, and personally knew an apostle. Peter and Paul were martyred in Rome during the life of Linus and Clement, and St John at this time was either on Patmos or in Ephesus. John had not written the book of Revelation yet. He was the last apostle to die, c 100A.D. Thus Linus and Clement are called apostolic fathers.

    Irenaeus in the 2nd century writes about Linus succeeding Peter, and Eusebius the historian in the 3rd century writes about him succeeding Peter. And 266 popes later, the papacy has been here for 1,973 years.
 
It’s a shame you didn’t ask yourself this question before sending it on to PC Master. You would have realized at least two other possible answers that are as good or better than a “naming a successor”:
  • Peter wrote two Epistles
  • Peter provided Mark with key information to write his Gospel
In a largely illiterate society, and considering that Peter himself was considered to be illiterate, at least at the time of Pentecost ("… who are these unlearned men …?") - although perhaps he did the first century equivalent of an adult literacy program after being accused of being “unlearned” - but it seems unlikely to me that someone immersed in an oral culture would entrust something that important solely to the written word.

After all, even someone with something to pass on to others that is as banal as how the milk-shake machine works in a fast food restaurant does more than just write a manual - he sets up a training program and requires a certain amount of hands-on face to face interaction with the new person, showing him how it works, before leaving him on his own to run the machine by himself.

Should it not be far more so with the greatest machine of all; the One, Holy, Catholic, and Apostolic Church? The writings that St. Peter left behind don’t even include any of the details of how the Church actually works - they’re compilations of stories and sayings, and bits of wisdom, but there’s nothing in there about how to perform a baptism - tantalizingly, he says “baptism now saves you,” but doesn’t mention which of the many possible forms he considers to be valid - or how to conduct a service of Holy Communion, or anything like that - these things were passed down orally and by example - via hands-on apprenticeship, if you will.
 
Ever play telephone? One man tells the next, who tells the next, who tells the next. Even with five or six people, it’s distorted by the time the last guy hears it. And you’re telling me an oral tradition could have continued for 2,000 years? Sounds about like the claimed oral traditions of the Jewish Rabbis.
The Church was not “playing telephone” in any way that would be fun for kids to play today. What the Church did was it repeated the message many times, out loud, so that the first, second, and third people in line (representing generations) could hear it. Then, each generation repeated it, with the succeeding two generations repeating back what they heard from the original, as well.

By the fourth generation, they were already writing it down, not only in the Scriptures but also in the Catacombs, in prayer books, and in hymnals, and they were also making poetry out of it that could easily be memorized (example: the Apostles’ Creed).

If you did that in a game of “telephone,” it wouldn’t be any fun, but one thing I guarantee you is that, even if your line was 266 men long (we have had 266 Popes, including St. Peter), the message would not become distorted by the end of the line. 🙂
 
With those 4 points that you agree with, where is the great leap for you?

Linus and Clement were contemporaries. The bond which glued them together was that they lived in apostolic times, and personally knew an apostle. Peter and Paul were martyred in Rome during the life of Linus and Clement, and St John at this time was either on Patmos or in Ephesus. John had not written the book of Revelation yet. He was the last apostle to die, c 100A.D. Thus Linus and Clement are called apostolic fathers.

Irenaeus in the 2nd century writes about Linus succeeding Peter, and Eusebius the historian in the 3rd century writes about him succeeding Peter. And 266 popes later, the papacy has been here for 1,973 years.
Thanks for reading my previous post and noting that I don’t have a problem with Petrine primacy (subject to proper definition-another thread, another time) 🙂 , the existence of Linus, is having a leadership role, etc. Some have posted trying to convince me of these things when they haven’t been an issue for me.

The issue has been framed as present contemporary evidence that Linus was pope and was acknowledged as such.

I understand that some posting here accept Linus to be pope on the basis of their presuppositions attached to their concept of Petrine primacy and succession. Others accept him on the basis of accounts written hundreds of years later, again based on the same presuppositions. I don’t hold those presuppositions so I’m looking for evidence.

After I got home this evening and read the posts that had been made in my absence, I decided to review Irenaeus, Tertullian, take a quick peek at the Catholic Encycopedia to see if there were other pertinent references and see just what these ECF’s attested to.

Irenaeus appears to claim that Linus was in fact the first bishop of Rome, being placed in that role by “the Apostles” (Peter and Paul) whom he claimed founded the church in Rome. While I tend to accept that Peter and Paul were both in Rome, internal evidence in the book of Romans seems to suggest Paul wasn’t a founder. (another thread another time) 🙂

Irenaeus also lists only Telephorus as a martyr in his list of Roman bishops, although Linus is commonly thought to be a martyr as well.

Tertullian taps Clement for the position of Roman bishop at the hands of Peter, with no mention of Linus. What is important for me in both of these cases is that Peter is not referred to as the Bishop of Rome-Tertullian in fact makes a clear distinction between the ordaining Apostle and the first bishop of a church. Neither of these passages seem to support the later claim that Peter was bishop of Rome and that the bishop of Rome is the pope.

Beyond that the Catholic Encyclopedia entry further casts doubt on the testimony for me. It highlights the contradictions between Irenaeus and Tertullian, the lack of continuity about his being a martyr and the disconnect between their two accounts, some of the timelines from the pontifical lists and later works such as the Apostolic Constitutions where it is suggested that Paul ordained Linus and Peter ordained Clement.

I’ve said all that to reiterate that I find there to be no concrete, contemporary evidence that meets the request of the OP. Rather than admit this, some have proposed the bizarre solution that Linus was head of the universal church without knowing it! :rolleyes: Thanks goodness for those those Catholics who quickly distanced themselves from this solution and what it would mean for the church.

So to sum up, I personally accept that Linus:
  • existed
  • was a leader in the early church at Rome
  • almost certainly knew Peter and Paul
I would be extremely grateful for a contemporary, factual proof that he was recognized/recognized himself as a universal shepherd. Reiterating Matthew’s Rock discourse or the same ECF’s would be of little use, unless someone has more recent research or information to contribute that would shed more light on them.

Thanks to all who have provided information, please accept my assurances that I have indeed considered it. 🙂 I trust it is also proving beneficial to the OP, who has my appreciation for creating such a great thread.
 
In a largely illiterate society, and considering that Peter himself was considered to be illiterate, at least at the time of Pentecost ("… who are these unlearned men …?") - although perhaps he did the first century equivalent of an adult literacy program after being accused of being “unlearned” - but it seems unlikely to me that someone immersed in an oral culture would entrust something that important solely to the written word.

After all, even someone with something to pass on to others that is as banal as how the milk-shake machine works in a fast food restaurant does more than just write a manual - he sets up a training program and requires a certain amount of hands-on face to face interaction with the new person, showing him how it works, before leaving him on his own to run the machine by himself.

Should it not be far more so with the greatest machine of all; the One, Holy, Catholic, and Apostolic Church? The writings that St. Peter left behind don’t even include any of the details of how the Church actually works - they’re compilations of stories and sayings, and bits of wisdom, but there’s nothing in there about how to perform a baptism - tantalizingly, he says “baptism now saves you,” but doesn’t mention which of the many possible forms he considers to be valid - or how to conduct a service of Holy Communion, or anything like that - these things were passed down orally and by example - via hands-on apprenticeship, if you will.
I’ve concurred in previous posts that there is a need for leadership and that Peter almost certainly made provision for that. Teaching and correct praxis would be a key part of any such leadership transfer. Having said that, such leadership preparation neither diminishes the importance of Peter’s contributions to Scripture, nor implies the necessity of a Pope. Linus functioned as a bishop for certain, but I don’t see evidence for any more than that.

With regard to the issue of details in documents, neither the American nor the Canadian constitution explain how to deliver mail, levy taxes, fight wars or make empty promises to citizens. 😃 Yet, in theory, all other legal texts as well as the actions of citizens and residents are reviewed against the contents of the Constitution should the need arise.

(having brought up Supreme Courts, I’ve always thought that both the Canadian and American Supreme Courts provide object lessons of the troubles that can occur when a group of individuals who believe in a “living tradition” are the final authority in interpreting a document of that import) 😉
 
I’ve concurred in previous posts that there is a need for leadership and that Peter almost certainly made provision for that. Teaching and correct praxis would be a key part of any such leadership transfer. Having said that, such leadership preparation neither diminishes the importance of Peter’s contributions to Scripture, nor implies the necessity of a Pope. Linus functioned as a bishop for certain, but I don’t see evidence for any more than that.
Unity of the Bishops was of paramount importance to Christ, and also to those who directly followed after the Apostles - indeed, the letter of Clement to the Corinthians goes on at great length on this very subject. One rather obvious way to unify them (and it seems to me that this actually seems to have occurred to Christ Himself, when I read John 21:15-19) is to provide from among them one who is recognized to be their leader, to whom they take their concerns, and from whom they receive direction.

There is a reason that the Catholic Church holds General Councils less than once a century, and the United Church of Canada holds them once every two years. Having a centralized authority with decision-making capabilities saves a lot of wear and tear on shoe-leather, travelling back and forth from Council meetings. 😉
With regard to the issue of details in documents, neither the American nor the Canadian constitution explain how to deliver mail, levy taxes, fight wars or make empty promises to citizens. 😃 Yet, in theory, all other legal texts as well as the actions of citizens and residents are reviewed against the contents of the Constitution should the need arise.
These traditions tend to be passed on orally - my parents were heavily involved in politics, but I don’t remember them reading anything but Hansard’s (the daily summaries of the various parliamentary bodies, whenever they were in session) - everything else, they learned from those around them, through conversation.
(having brought up Supreme Courts, I’ve always thought that both the Canadian and American Supreme Courts provide object lessons of the troubles that can occur when a group of individuals who believe in a “living tradition” are the final authority in interpreting a document of that import) 😉
Of course, neither the Canadian Constitution nor the Canadian way of life have the promise of the Holy Spirit, either. 😉
 
ECFs do appear to point to (proto)catholic ideas and attitudes, but that happens simply because they have been selected precisely through the criterion of their being (proto)catholic.

But then,who were the early Church fathers that were* not* approved by the Catholic Church? Should we consider Marcion,Valentinus,Arius,or Pelagius to be Church fathers?

The reason why the belief that there was no salvation outside of the Catholic Church came about is because there were,from the beginning,heretics (John calls them anti-christs) preaching false doctrines and leading people away from the teachings of the apostles and of the apostolic Church.
There was only one true Church and it was always called Catholic. There was no entity called the Christian Church or Church of Christ or Biblical Church. There was no entity called the Orthodox Church either,the faith was called orthodox.

"The Article, In one Holy Catholic Church,’ on which, though one might say many things, we will speak but briefly. It is called Catholic then because it extends over all the world, from one end of the earth to the other; and because it teaches universally and completely one and all the doctrines which ought to come to men’s knowledge, concerning things both visible and invisible, heavenly and earthly… for this cause the Faith has securely delivered to thee now the Article, And in one Holy Catholic Church;’ that thou mayest avoid their wretched meetings, and ever abide with the Holy Church Catholic in which thou wast regenerated. And if ever thou art sojourning in cities, inquire not simply where the Lord’s House is (for the other sects of the profane also attempt to call their own dens houses of the Lord), nor merely where the Church is, but where is the Catholic Church. For this is the peculiar name of this Holy Church, the mother of us all, which is the spouse of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Only-begotten Son of God.” Cyril of Jerusalem, Catechetical Lectures, 18:23,26 (A.D. 350).

< Now, this point seems to rest on the presupposition that in later centuries ( when ?) there was a scrupolous selection among a wide pool of early christian writers, and, because of their catholic (catholic/orthodox) credentials, a limited part of them have been promoted to Fathers. >

The writings of Church fathers such as Irenaeus,Basil,Cyril of Alexandria,Athanasius,Jerome,Ambrose,Augustine were recognized by the Roman Catholic Church as orthodox even during their own lifetime or shortly after they died. It is not a matter of their being officially accepted as Church fathers at a certain period much later in time. They are called fathers because they were teachers,and their teachings were well known even in their own lifetime.

< The first question about which is: where can we find this large set of authors, among whom the ECFs had been selected ? >

There are the early Church fathers,and there are the heretics and schismatics who were condemned as such even during their own lifetime. In the case of Origen,he is a Church father even though some of his ideas are heretical and were condemned as such by other Church fathers after he died. Tertullian also is a Church father,but he turned Donatist in the last few years of his life and broke communion with Rome. So Origen and Tertullian were not made saints like the other famous Church fathers.

< This is not to mean that there were not early christian writers with non-catholic or anti-catholic attitudes, mirroring the existence of dissents present ab initio, and that a lesser likelyhood of survival to our days of their works has to be considered ( since they were not on the winning side) . >

There is good reason why they were not on the winning side,if you consider what they believed and taught and how they undermine the fullness of the gospel and the spirit of charity.
It always has something to do with pride – the refusal to abide within the bounds of the apostolic teaching of the Church,and within “catholic” communion.

“Inasmuch, I repeat, as this is the case, we believe also in the Holy Church, [intending thereby] assuredly the Catholic. For both heretics and schismatics style their congregations churches. But heretics, in holding false opinions regarding God, do injury to the faith itself; while schismatics, on the other hand, in wicked separations break off from brotherly charity, although they may believe just what we believe. Wherefore neither do the heretics belong to the Church catholic, which loves God; nor do the schismatics form a part of the same.” Augustine, On Faith and Creed, 10:21 (A.D. 393).
 
That presupposes that you actually have made a better case, something which I don’t think has been shown at all.

The original question, which you guys keep dancing around and avoiding is not:

A) Was Linus the bishop of Rome after Peter?
B) Was Linus a real person?
C) Was Linus the leader of the Roman Church?

The question actually was…

How do we know that the bishop of Rome was considered the leader of the church in Linus’ day? How do we know Linus held that authority, rather than just being one bishop among many?
Both things are true. Linus was one Bishop among many. He was given the Keys to the Kingdom by Peter.
 
I can’t speak for others, but some thoughts that come to mind are:
  • Specifically declaring primacy/authority over other bishops at that time in a letter
Already laid out in scripture. When Jesus spoke to Peter in Jn 21:16, after the resurrection, He said to Peter alone, but in front of all the apostles, to feed and rule His Church. The second time Jesus says to Peter feed my sheep, the word in Greek is poimaino which means to rule. And we see this in writings of the ECF’s
scripturecatholic.com/primacy_of_peter.html#tradition_III
Non:
  • Making a binding statement on the faithful, similar to Acts 15
Jesus gave the power to bind and loose to His Church but to Peter in a specific way… You know the scripture passages I’m referring to
Non:
  • A contemporary writer identifying Linus as “the Rock” of the church or some similar title
Only Peter was renamed Rock. That doesn’t mean Peter’s successors aren’t really successors or don’t have authority over the Church.

scripturecatholic.com/the_church.html
Also refer again to the above link.
Non:
  • discovery of an early contemporary liturgy making reference to Linus as a leader with primacy over other leaders
The fact He’s successor to Peter is enough.
Non:
  • catacomb inscriptions according Linus similar titles and/or honours as Peter
    Since it appears that none of these exist
poke around the link given. I think you’ll find many of your questions answered.
Non:
Bearing in mind that the teaching of the mustard seed might simply refer to numerical size rather than appearance, the argument proves little. If I were to mix up six seeds in my hand and then point at six different trees, one would be hard pressed to link seed with tree.
Bad example. The point is, an acorn develops into an oak tree, not a redwood. Seeds grow true to type.
Non:
Likewise the possibility that the tree of the modern papacy may have come from an early mustard seed of apostolic church leadership is equally challenging to prove.
Fire… ready… aim!!! :rolleyes:
Non:
Others churches claiming apostolic succession have suggested that some papal beliefs have been grafted in. That’s not my axe to grind.
Referring to Orthodox perhaps?
scripturecatholic.com/church_qa.html#tradition-9
Non:
Personally, my studies in the New Testament suggest a plurality of episcopal leadership at the local church level as opposed to a monarchical episcopate, hence my interest in this particular subject. To discover evidence that demonstrated that the monarchical episcopate was the Apostles’ intent for the church would cause me to seriously re-evaluate my beliefs. 🙂
If you’re really serious about remaining Catholic, the link provided here is loaded with material that one should read. Here is the home page
scripturecatholic.com/index.html
 
I am still Catholic :rolleyes:
Super! 😃 I have a couple other thoughts on the matter…:

**The following ECFs list the first 2 Roman Bishops as Peter…Linus.
**Hegesippus (ca 160) who, like Irenaeus et al, lists the order understood today (Peter, Linus, Cletus, Clement)
Irenaeus (ca 180)
Julius Africanus (ca 200)
Hippolytus (ca 270)
Eusebius (ca 300)
Augustine (ca 390)

The following ECFs list the first 2 Roman Bishops as Peter…Clement:
Tertullian (ca 200)
Jerome (ca 370) (actually wrote the list both ways)

Another treatment on the matter is over here. Universally, Linus is listed second. It would seem to me that Tertullian may have referenced what was Clement’s ordination as an auxiliary bishop and would explain the variation.

At any rate…we aren’t even sure who wrote the book of Job, parts of Isaiah, Lamentations, etc…we’re not sure how much of the Pentateuch was written by Moses…there’s still debate on Revelation…etc…we aren’t even sure if Mark was written before Matthew… So once more, I think your pastor friend stands on very shaky, and hypocritical ground. 😊 We have a far better case for Papal succession, and he should become Catholic. 🙂
 
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