K
KjetilK
Guest
No, and that is why we do not say that four legged animals and dogs are the exact same thing.Couldn’t have said it better myself.I guess all four legged animals are dogs.
No, and that is why we do not say that four legged animals and dogs are the exact same thing.Couldn’t have said it better myself.I guess all four legged animals are dogs.
Okay. I think we’ve beaten this one into the ground. I give.No, and that is why we do not say that four legged animals and dogs are the exact same thing.
Just to add, I consulted the German-Latin bilingual edition of the BC on BookOfConcord.org, and “catholicam” is used in the Latin of the Small Catechism and “christliche” (Christian) in the German.It seems, sir, if any change to the creed was done at all, it was done either by Martin Luther or one of his followers. " One, Holy,* Christian *and Apostolic Church" is in Luther’s Small Catechism, Third Article. ourshepherd.org/Small_Catechism.pdf
I do agree that the face of Confessional Lutheran Christianity in America is our business and the business of any Lutheran church in America who faithfully holds to the truth entire contained in the Book of Concord including its Formula. Of course, my church descends from German Lutherans, who might hold a slightly stricter interpretation of the Lutheran Confessions than their Scandinavian counterparts. Of course, holding to the Confessions is what being Confessional is all about.
Well, if someone is saying that “Chinese and Asian is one and the same,” they are saying that the Chinese are Asians, and that Asians are Chinese. The former is correct, the latter is not.Okay. I think we’ve beaten this one into the ground. I give.
My answer was this:I would imagine that in all languages people have figured out how to distinguish one who is Catholic from one who is not. I don’t think they run around confused as to which Church a “Catholic” attends.
The point of this, is that ‘Roman’ (as in ‘person who is in communion with the Roman Pontiff,’ following Pope Pius XII’s use of the word) provides us with a word that actually distinguishes between a Catholic who is in communion with the Roman Pontiff, from a Catholic who is not.It’s called “Roman.” Just ask Pope Pius XII.
No, Kj.The point of this, is that ‘Roman’ (as in ‘person who is in communion with the Roman Pontiff,’ following Pope Pius XII’s use of the word) provides us with a word that actually distinguishes between a Catholic who is in communion with the Roman Pontiff, from a Catholic who is not.
The Catholic Church in Germany used christliche in the creed for years before the Reformation. Of course, this would have only been in German translations. Since Mass was in Latin, catholicam would have been used in the liturgy, of course.What is “the German church”? Do you mean Catholic?
Or, there’s the idea that Catholic refers to all Churches holding valid apostolic succession, and that there is a subset of those, who are the Catholic Churches in communion with the Bishop of Rome, for which a common, inclusive title is Roman Catholic.No, Kj.
There is no special dispensation given to a special group of Catholics who get to disagree freely with the vicar of Christ.
That’s gaga lala nonsense.
That’s Protestantism. That’s part of the rallying cry of the Protestant Reformation.
I might as well say that there’s a group of Lutherans who profess the Trinity, and then there’s another group of Lutherans who don’t have to believe in the Trinity.
That’s gaga lala nonsense, too.
gaga lala, apparently.Or, there’s the idea that Catholic refers to all Churches holding valid apostolic succession, and that there is a subset of those, who are the Catholic Churches in communion with the Bishop of Rome, for which a common, inclusive title is Roman Catholic.
Sure, no one need accept that. Doesn’t bother me what people might call me. And that has been a variable, over the years, to be sure.
GKC
Anglicanus-Catholicus
Again, that doesn’t change the fact that (1) Pope Pius XII used ‘Roman’ in the sense of ‘being in communion with the Roman Pontiff,’ and (2) that ‘Catholic’ is a term that doesn’t in and of itself involve being in communion with the Roman Pontiff, for the reasons I have already made. Can you please engage with my points? Where, for example, am I wrong in my interpretation of St. Ignatius?No, Kj.
There is no special dispensation given to a special group of Catholics who get to disagree freely with the vicar of Christ.
That’s gaga lala nonsense.
That’s Protestantism. That’s part of the rallying cry of the Protestant Reformation.
I might as well say that there’s a group of Lutherans who profess the Trinity, and then there’s another group of Lutherans who don’t have to believe in the Trinity.
That’s gaga lala nonsense, too.
Keyword “variable”.Or, there’s the idea that Catholic refers to all Churches holding valid apostolic succession, and that there is a subset of those, who are the Catholic Churches in communion with the Bishop of Rome, for which a common, inclusive title is Roman Catholic.
Sure, no one need accept that. Doesn’t bother me what people might call me. And that has been a variable, over the years, to be sure.
GKC
Anglicanus-Catholicus
Well, I had another category of variability in mind, but ok.Keyword “variable”.
An argument that might have been persuasive in C. S. Lewis’ time might be abandoned based on recent data that he didn’t have.
Suppose there has been one main steamboat, and several other boats that, for centuries, had been floating very close to the main boat. The people in the small boats might well argue we don’t need to be in the main boat, we are floating in the right direction anyway. But for 50 years or so the journey has been getting much more difficult for everybody. Floating isn’t reliable anymore, as evidenced by the majority (not all) of Anglican, Episcopal, Lutheran, Old Catholic and other generic Catholic type churches that went astray.
Not only is floating not reliable anymore, there are enemies more powerful than ever before. 99% of the attack on Christianity today is attack on the main boat. One might argue that if his own small Catholic boat later floats astray he can make another plan at that point. But in the meantime the main boat is specifically under attack and needs all hands on deck now to defend it.
So yeah, variable.
I am amusing myself merrily imagining a thread here in which a JW professes that he’s a Lutheran. Just a Non-Trinitarian Lutheran.No, Kj.
There is no special dispensation given to a special group of Catholics who get to disagree freely with the vicar of Christ.
That’s gaga lala nonsense.
That’s Protestantism. That’s part of the rallying cry of the Protestant Reformation.
I might as well say that there’s a group of Lutherans who profess the Trinity, and then there’s another group of Lutherans who don’t have to believe in the Trinity.
That’s gaga lala nonsense, too.
It’s nice to know that you take us all seriously.I am amusing myself merrily imagining a thread here in which a JW professes that he’s a Lutheran. Just a Non-Trinitarian Lutheran.
Wouldn’t it be great to have a designation under his Profile as: “Lutheran Jehovah’s Witness”?![]()
Ugh. No, no it wouldn’t…:hypno:I am amusing myself merrily imagining a thread here in which a JW professes that he’s a Lutheran. Just a Non-Trinitarian Lutheran.
Wouldn’t it be great to have a designation under his Profile as: “Lutheran Jehovah’s Witness”?![]()
Here is my source: books.google.com/books?id=EwI2AQAAMAAJ&pg=PA130&lpg=PA130&dq#v=onepage&q&f=falseHello,
I’ve been reading this thread with great interest. The semantics are quite boring, but the spirit behind the fight is helpful.
I’d just like to offer a tentative correction to the quote from S. Augustine that’s been used in this thread on numerous pages, and then a statement about the C-word in general.
I can’t remember the exact work in which this is written, but as no one else gave a source for their quote, I haven’t felt compelled to look for mine.
- Augustine doesn’t say that heretics and others ask for “the Catholic Church”. He says that people came into a city looking for “the christian church”, and he laughed at the idea because there were so many “denominations” (heresies) that the name “Christian” wasn’t specific enough. Any given city had donatists, arians, and other non-Catholic “Christians”. When Augustine said he’d point people to “the Catholic Church”, he meant* the parish which belonged to that communion of churches which professed the Nicene Creed*.
Thanks for the source.Here is my source: books.google.com/books?id=EwI2AQAAMAAJ&pg=PA130&lpg=PA130&dq#v=onepage&q&f=false
“Against the Epistle of Manichaeus”
It does indeed state “Catholic”.
Hence the regrettable tendency to refer to Roman Catholics as ‘Papists’, etc. The English Reformers were unwilling to surrender their own claims to Catholicity.
- The early Anglican “Divines”, at least, were very proud to use the word Catholic. John Jewel, in his famous apologia for the Church of England (1562) repeatedly uses the adjective and says that the reformed C. of E. is much more Catholic than the Roman Church, which (he says) was rejecting true, pure, and patristic Catholicism. Laud, Andrewes, Cosin, Hooker, and many others were adamant about the C-word being used to designate the tradition they were in.
To the Elizabethan & Caroline Divines, Catholicism was about holding the ancient doctrines of the Gospel & Fathers about Jesus Christ, not about incense or candles or chasubles or the Papacy. They repeatedly defended the word “Catholic” as applied to themselves. It was a push towards a redefinition of the word, skirting around the Medieval developments in the Papacy. “High Church” meant anyone defending the authority of the Church, Scripture, and “reformed Catholicism”.
This is broadly true. That said, the Reformers are adamant in their status as a reformed/Reformed Church, as well as professing their Catholicism. In this sense, they’re actually largely in step with Calvin & co! In other words, neither the English nor the Continental Reformers fit into the nice, neat categories that generations of Roman Catholics, Anglicans, Lutherans, Calvinists, etc. have wanted to keep them in.Only with the advent of Pietism, Wesleyanism, “Evangelicalism”, and the “Low Church” in the 18th century did the Church of England start to deal with men who declared themselves to be very proudly Protestant and very loudly not Catholic. In short, the Non-Conformist spirit took over many hearts and minds. A blasé period followed. What Rev. J.H. Newman reacted to – in the 1830s-1840s – was this rather recent Protestantizing of his Church. Suddenly, High Church came to mean Roman-esque Ritual, and no longer “reformed catholicism”. Interesting.
That last was was the flowering of the distinct Ritualist movement of the mid 19th century, which followed on the tractarian/Oxford movement of roughly 20 years before, which emphasized continuity of doctrine. I personally use High Church to mean primarily the Ritualist, Anglo-Catholic to refer to the preceding doctrinal movement ; the two strands which formed the classic Anglican position, from that point, in contrast to the reformed side of the spectrum. The distinction is not hard, but can be useful.Hello,
I’ve been reading this thread with great interest. The semantics are quite boring, but the spirit behind the fight is helpful.
I’d just like to offer a tentative correction to the quote from S. Augustine that’s been used in this thread on numerous pages, and then a statement about the C-word in general.
I can’t remember the exact work in which this is written, but as no one else gave a source for their quote, I haven’t felt compelled to look for mine.
- Augustine doesn’t say that heretics and others ask for “the Catholic Church”. He says that people came into a city looking for “the christian church”, and he laughed at the idea because there were so many “denominations” (heresies) that the name “Christian” wasn’t specific enough. Any given city had donatists, arians, and other non-Catholic “Christians”. When Augustine said he’d point people to “the Catholic Church”, he meant* the parish which belonged to that communion of churches which professed the Nicene Creed*.
To the Elizabethan & Caroline Divines, Catholicism was about holding the ancient doctrines of the Gospel & Fathers about Jesus Christ, not about incense or candles or chasubles or the Papacy. They repeatedly defended the word “Catholic” as applied to themselves. It was a push towards a redefinition of the word, skirting around the Medieval developments in the Papacy. “High Church” meant anyone defending the authority of the Church, Scripture, and “reformed Catholicism”.
- The early Anglican “Divines”, at least, were very proud to use the word Catholic. John Jewel, in his famous apologia for the Church of England (1562) repeatedly uses the adjective and says that the reformed C. of E. is much more Catholic than the Roman Church, which (he says) was rejecting true, pure, and patristic Catholicism. Laud, Andrewes, Cosin, Hooker, and many others were adamant about the C-word being used to designate the tradition they were in.
Only with the advent of Pietism, Wesleyanism, “Evangelicalism”, and the “Low Church” in the 18th century did the Church of England start to deal with men who declared themselves to be very proudly Protestant and very loudly not Catholic. In short, the Non-Conformist spirit took over many hearts and minds. A blasé period followed. What Rev. J.H. Newman reacted to – in the 1830s-1840s – was this rather recent Protestantizing of his Church. Suddenly, High Church came to mean Roman-esque Ritual, and no longer “reformed catholicism”. Interesting.
We are agreed.There is nothing in the word ‘catholic’ itself that says you have to be in communion with Rome.
That is correct, with my correction above.In fact, if we go back to the first instance of the word, as far as we know, in the Epistle of St. Ignatius to the Smyrnaeans, we see that -]the/-] one thing needed for catholicity is to be in communion with one’s valid bishop:
See that you all follow the bishop, even as Jesus Christ does the Father, and the presbytery as you would the apostles; and reverence the deacons, as being the institution of God. Let no man do anything connected with the Church without the bishop. Let that be deemed a proper Eucharist, which is [administered] either by the bishop, or by one to whom he has entrusted it. Wherever the bishop shall appear, there let the multitude [of the people] also be; even as, wherever Jesus Christ is, there is the Catholic Church.
Sure.He binds catholicity to being in communion with one’s valid bishop.
We find this also in Lumen gentium 21, which states that the Church is where the people gather around their bishop: “In the bishops, therefore, for whom priests are assistants, Our Lord Jesus Christ, the Supreme High Priest, is present in the midst of those who believe.”
Indeed.Now, the Roman Catholic Church recognises the validity of the ordination of orthodox priests and bishops (including archbishops and patriarchs).
Following that recognition, and following St. Ignatius’ definition of catholicity, the Orthodox are catholic.