P
pocohombre
Guest
Looked at some of it, and all say it may have begun as a general term for universal but then became known more of a name to distinguish form other churches. From first to second century is what your sites suggests for the change in more specific usage. Maybe, maybe not, or at least I am not sure it meant much more by Nicea time. As far as Ignatius he did use it once. He used the term church many times (Church of God,Church at Smryna etc) but only once as Catholic.… It is still a stretch in my opinion that it ties into the Acts quote of “thru out” but it is close (but no cigar). …One must also ask just what was the church at each historic juncture that the term “catholic” is applied. For instance at the Council at Nicea there is no indication that the Bishop of Rome was the head, so that the one, holy, apostolic, and “catholic” church seemed patriarchal, unlike todays"RCC… You have explained your position well and with calmness and passion…PS. I am gonna quote Ignatius to Phila. next time when talking about how we are a royal prietshood that we can all enter into the holy of holies. “The priests indeed are good, but the High Priest is better; to whom the holy of holies has been committed, and who alone has been trusted with the secrets of God. He is the door of the Father, by which enter in Abraham, and Isaac, and Jacob, and the prophets, and the apostles, and the Church”. and church here means everybody as your site states:“The word (ecclesia/church) as a technical expression had been transferred to* the community of Christian believers*.” Cath. Encyl.
- Universal in this case means according to the whole, iow, the same exact faith preached and believed everywhere.
I gave you the links to prove my point.