Any One Else Noticed Protestants Calling Themselves 'catholic'?

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A Christian calling themselves ‘catholic’ simply means they believe the church of Jesus is universal and salvation is also universal. ‘katholikos’ meaning universal.

Those who call themselves Catholic usually refer to a denomination and not universality of all believers.
I don’t think the term “denomination” fits Catholicism for all sorts of reasons. Denominations are an invention of modern English-speaking Protestant societies. Denominations by definition don’t claim to be the True Church. The closest Catholic counterpart would be a “sui juris church,” of which there are something like 23 within the Catholic Church (though the Roman Catholic Church in the strict sense is by far the largest).
 
This is flat-out wrong. The Lutheran Reformers preferred to call themselves either Christian or Evangelical Catholics to emphasize their insistence on Gospel, rather than submission to Rome; there is nothing modern about it. Dr. Martin Luther in “Admonition Against Insurrection,” 1522:

More info available here: lutherquest.org/walther/articles/nameLuth.htm
They clearly saw themselves as Catholic.

Jon
But whether or not they saw themselves as Catholic, there was clearly disagreement on how the term was used. The link provided suggests that in order for the Lutherans to be the true Catholics, they had to remove the term “Catholic” from the Roman Catholic Church.
But now since the enemies of Christ adorn themselves with this name in order to eat his bread everyone can see that a time has come in which the friend of Christ must clearly declare himself if he does not want to deny his beloved Savior before the world.
Now perhaps others will say: "So you don’t want that! **Fine, then call yourselves Catholic. But to this suggestion we say: God forbid! **Indeed the laughable accusation is often made against Lutherans that they are very much like the Catholics. but who was it that first in public writings truly attacked the Roman papacy as the chair of the antichrist. revealed it to all the world, mortally wounded and killed it? Was it Zwingli? Was it Calvin? Was it Wesley? Wasn’t it our Luther? Did not all other true and supposed reformers continue the attack on the enemy from within the fortress which Luther had taken in the heat of battle? **How could Lutherans call themselves “Catholic” when the archenemy of the Lutheran church calls himself by this name **so that with this beautiful name he might hold captive the consciences of the souls freed by Christ?
Since from this it is now clear that the name “Catholic” has a new meaning, namely the Roman papacy with all its atrocities and in no way the universal Christian Church, and thus indicates a sect, obviously no one who recognizes the Word of God as the true rule of the Christian faith can trouble us to use this name
The RCC couldn’t have been the one to assign a “new” meaning if that’s what the RCC called itself all along. So in fact it could be said that Luther is the one who gave a new meaning to the word, because he is the one who began to make departures and distinctions from the Church to which he once belonged once he decided it was corrupt.

In essence, he was saying (I’m just inferring from what this link says, so correct me if I’m wrong) “I’m a *true *Catholic. But the RCC has been using this term falsely. Therefore, to distinguish myself from it, I will call myself “Christian”. . . .even though I really believe I’m Catholic, and even though the RCC doesn’t deserve the title”

The same is done with the title “Evangelical”:
Now perhaps many others will say: “But what can you find against the name ‘Evangelical’? Wouldn’t it be right to exchange the name Lutheran with this name? With this name you wouldn’t be required to accept a doctrine that you thought was false, would you? Don’t you know that the Evangelicals are made up of those who permit full freedom in the articles in which the Lutheran and Reformed church disagree and leave it to every conscience as to what he will preach as the right understanding?” Of course we know that. That is why we can no longer use the name Evangelical. the name itself is indeed wonderful and precious. Indeed it was the Lutheran church which for a long time was the only one called Evangelical. For two or three hundred years whoever confessed: I am an Evangelical, confessed that he was a Lutheran as all the world knew. It was indeed through Luther that God laid his Gospel again into the hands of all. But times have changed and with them the customs and meanings of names. He who now says: I am an Evangelical, confesses that he is such a Christian that no one can tell what he believes in many of the chief articles of the Christian religion.
And with the label “Protestant”:
Perhaps another will then say: “All right, then call yourselves Protestant.” It is true that for a while after 1529 the Lutherans alone were called Protestants…This name too therefore in no way agrees with the faith in our hearts in that we protests just as much against the erring doctrines of all other churches just as against the Roman Catholic Church. In addition, it is becoming more customary in our days for those Protestants to even call themselves Evangelical-Protestants when in fact they don’t protest against the doctrines of men but instead against Christ, his gospel and all the holy things of his church…Who can ask us to use the same name as such Protestants and to be yoked together with them?
It appears that the confusion over what identification to use came from the Lutherans themselves.
 
This is flat-out wrong. The Lutheran Reformers preferred to call themselves either Christian or Evangelical Catholics to emphasize their insistence on Gospel, rather than submission to Rome; there is nothing modern about it. Dr. Martin Luther in “Admonition Against Insurrection,” 1522:
“I ask that my name be left silent and people not call themselves Lutheran, but rather Christians. Who is Luther? The doctrine is not mine. I have been crucified for no one. St. Paul in 1 Cor. 3:4-5 would not suffer that the Christians should call themselves of Paul or of Peter, but Christian. How should I, a poor stinking bag of worms, become so that the children of Christ are named with my unholy name? It should not be dear friends. Let us extinguish all factious names and be called Christians whose doctrine we have. The pope’s men rightly have a factious name because they are not satisfied with the doctrine and name of Christ and want to be with the pope, who is their master. I have not been and will not be a master. Along with the church I have the one general teaching of Christ who alone is our maste.”
Once again, where does this say anything about calling themselves “Evangelical Catholic”?

I don’t think anyone takes issue with calling Lutherans “Christians”.
 
helps to shed light on why they (Baptists) would use the term. As I understand it, some Baptists will not even call themselves Protestant because to do so would suggest a tie to Lutheranism, which they see as only a schismatic departure of what they consider to be the “corrupted” Roman Catholic Church. So, in essence, Baptists and other Evangelicals consider themselves to be the true and original Catholic Church (until the Romans corrupted it) - is that correct?
No, not really. Baptists may seem in one sense to be the quintessential evangelicals, but they are quite distinct from other versions of evangelicalism in many ways . The claim not to be Protestant is particularly common among “Landmark Baptists,” who are fundamentalists and think that there have always been true Baptists. But there are various groups (the “Christian churches and churches of Christ” would be one of the best examples) that don’t like to be called Protestants, because the Reformation really doesn’t define what they think they are about. Many Protestants who do acknowledge their ties to the Reformation make the claim described–in fact they are more likely to do so. The folks who claim to be “just Christians” are likely to be the least interested in claiming the term “Catholic,” for the most part.
I have also heard of Baptists calling themselves “Reform Baptists”, to which others will criticize them because it implies too much of a similarity with Protestantism.
There is certainly a debate among Baptists about their relationship to the Reformed tradition, much as there is among Anglicans (of course the alternatives are different in each case).
I’m not sure if I’m understanding. Are you saying that Protestants always called themselves Catholic - even after the Reformation - and then, once the Reformation was complete, they changed the name of Roman Catholics to simply “Romanists” and “Papists”?
No. What I’m saying is that from the beginning they didn’t think that their opponents were the true Catholics. To early Protestants, it would have seemed obvious that “Catholic” meant “one who holds to the fullness of the faith and is part of the true visible Church,” and obviously by definition they thought that fit them and not their “papist” opponents.

I think that Anglicans pioneered the term “Roman Catholic,” because Anglicans were relatively more willing to admit that “Rome” was still in some sense part of the Church.

You may be right that in the 18th century Americans were using the word “Catholic” for those in communion with Rome, but if so I think that indicates how little these American Protestants (or “post-Protestants” perhaps, in Jefferson’s case) now cared for a connection with the historic Christian tradition.
Doesn’t this suggest that somewhere along the way, those in schism with Rome decided to remove the description “Catholic” from “Roman Catholics”?
The other way round. They began to use the word “Catholic” for those still in communion with Rome, but only with the qualifier “Roman.”
I don’t find anything rude about the term “Roman Catholic”, lol - who would find that offensive??😉
Lots of people on this forum, believe it or not. It comes up over and over, and I find it rather tiresome.
Could you refer me to some writings which showed how the term progressed? From retainment the original claim, the subsequent departure from it for differentiation purposes, then the re-adoption of the identifier “Catholic”?
Hmmm–it’s hard to do, because this is a general observation based on having seen a lot of usage from a lot of documents. I could give specific examples of course of each of the usages I describe, but I can’t prove that they are representative. It’s quite likely that I’m oversimplifying things, in fact. But here are a few examples:

Jewel’s Apology, Part I:
Wherefore, if we be heretics, and they (as they would fain be called) be Catholics, why do they not, as they see the fathers, which were Catholic men, have always done? Why do they not convince and master us by the Divine Scriptures?
This is a nice example of the fact that the term “Catholic” was seen as the point in dispute. Catholic is the opposite of heretic. The whole point of Jewel’s apology is to show that the Fathers are on the side of the Protestant Church of England, and thus that Anglicans are Catholics and not heretics. The one thing both sides agree on is that the Fathers were “Catholic men,” and so Jewel is arguing that the Protestant appeal to Scripture is a thoroughly Catholic (i.e., patristic) way to proceed.

Jewel actually seems to avoid any label for his opponents except for “these men”!

Richard Hooker, in his treatise on justification, uses the term “popish heresy” but only in response to a Puritan who had used it first. He prefers the term “Church of Rome,” though he makes it clear that in his view Rome is, in a secondary but very serious sense, heretical.

Richard Baxter is perhaps my best example. Admittedly, Baxter was a remarkably “catholic” Protestant in many respects for his time, being the inventor of the term “mere Christianity” which Lewis would pick up on centuries later. He also used the term “mere Catholic” for the same position. He wrote a 1672 treatise called “The Certainty of Christianity without Popery; or, whether the Catholic-Protestant or the Papist have the surer faith.”

These examples don’t entirely answer you, but they are a few places to start to see how Protestants in the first couple centuries after the Reformation used terminology. They’re all examples from English sources, which may skew results a bit.

Edwin
 
I am glad no one’s feelings are hurt because dialogue brings us together. I rely on current assessments articulated by the Lutheran-Catholic Commission on Unity.
This task is so urgent since
Catholics and Lutherans have never ceased to confess together the faith
in the »one, holy, catholic, and apostolic church
lutheranworld.org/sites/d…0Communion.pdf
Pope Francis met with the Commission on Unity several weeks ago.
We are well aware, as Benedict XVI reminded us many times, that unity is not primarily the result of our efforts, but of the action of the Holy Spirit, to which we must open our hearts with trust in order that it might lead us along the paths to reconciliation and communion”.visnews-en.blogspot.com/2013/10/lutherans-and-catholics-from-conflict.html
 
Any One Else Noticed Protestants Calling Themselves ‘catholic’?
Heh. From my experience, I’d say it varies: many of us are aware of that, but there are also many completely unaware of it.
 
Hey all,

Before I open here I will share something with you. I am in attendance at a men’s substance use recovery ‘retreat’ of sorts, it is ‘faith based’. Every Sunday we go to different churches, but they are always of Protestant denomination (Baptist, etc).

Well today at a ‘Calvalry Baptist Church’ it opened up with the usual koom-bah-yah, along with some open prayer for various infirmities and illnesses.

Then came the sermon…

The tract revolved around how all Christians who believe in the full truth of the Gospel are part of the ‘one.holy.catholic.apostolic.church’. This is how Jesus intended it. Then how no one is more holy than others, catholic is merely universal for the invisible/visible ‘church’, all Christians are inheritors of ‘apostolic tradition’.

As all of this was being said I was trying to pray and rub the Crucifix on my Rosary that I keep around my neck (but underneath my shirt).

**Then the rub…"…but apostolic isn’t about Popes or succession or bishops…" At this point my spirit started to get very angry and on the way out I would not shake the pastor’s hand.

I guess my question is; is my anger misplaced?**
I think I would be surprised if a Baptist didn’t think that way.

The part that seems a little odd to me was the no one is more holy than others part.
 
Well, one ought to know the history behind the word “Catholic.” It seems over the centuries the RCC has claimed the title for themselves but the Orthodox have always been Catholic as well. Lutherans consider themselves Evangelical Catholic, and the term, “Catholic” continued on and still exits (outside Rome).

Basically, we say that we’re Catholic, and there’s also the Roman Catholics. The idea among Evangelicals is that we’re not separated from all others who have accepted Christ.
I understand, but on CAF I generally take “Catholic” (as distinct from “catholic”) to mean only members of the Roman Communion.

(And, for that matter, I take “Roman Catholic” to be short for “Roman-Rite Catholic”, excluding those of us who are Eastern Catholics.)
 
This is flat-out wrong. The Lutheran Reformers preferred to call themselves either Christian or Evangelical Catholics to emphasize their insistence on Gospel, rather than submission to Rome; there is nothing modern about it. Dr. Martin Luther in “Admonition Against Insurrection,” 1522:

More info available here: lutherquest.org/walther/articles/nameLuth.htm
You have a fair point and I see no reason to disbelieve you that Lutherans have always seen themselves as in communion with the “one, holy, catholic and apostolic church” spoken of in the apostle’s creed.

But is the issue really about how Lutherans perceive themselves, or is it about objective reality? Oneness Pentecostals (not that I’m an expert) seem to consider themselves Christians even though they deny the Trinity, what should we make of that?

The issue here is that before the Reformation, it was always the case that groups who denied the primacy of the Petrine office and the genuine apostolic authority held by all successors of the apostles were considered heretics (as noted above, the EO even acknowledge Petrine office even while attempting to justify their refusal to submit). As it stands today, the church is polite about it, but the point still stands: it’s a serious thing to reject the church as Jesus established it and substitute one of human conception and construction instead. The fact that most protestants sincerely believe that they HAVE submitted themselves to authority as intended by Christ certainly reduces culpability. But the fact remains that if Jesus intended the church to be both visible and invisible and that the unity of the visible be manifest in the papacy, rebellion against that reality causes serious harm to the church and to the proclamation of the gospel. God have mercy on us all for the mess we’ve made.
 
Personally I was surprised that the Calvary Baptist preacher quoted the Nicene (not Apostles) creed at all.

Baptists have historically been opposed to the use of any and all Creeds. They have no creeds. They have a creed like statement called the New Hampshire confession ,but that is no creed.

I was raised in the creedless ‘churches of Christ’ related to Baptists. And the original founders of that denomination always confused creeds and confessions. They came from the Presbyterians and what they thought of as a creed were specific doctrinal statements like the Westminster confession, not a creed at all.
 
“Roman Catholic” is a phrase made up by protestants in order to create the pretend distinction you refer to. Before the so called reformation, it didn’t exist. Before the 16th century, all Christians understood that the church is visible, invisible and not divisible from the See of Peter. Even the Eastern Orthodox don’t really object to the primacy of Peter’s see, they just attempt to reduce that primacy to mere figurehead status. Catholic always meant a unity both formal and supernatural.

And even in protestant context, it’s not accurate. The Byzantine Catholic Church is fully in union with the Catholic Church, but if you call one of those guys a “Roman Catholic” they will pop you one. The blunt truth is that you guys redefined the word to permit a requisition of all the ancient texts without the unpleasantly Herculean task of actually reconciling with the universal church, the catholic church.
Where I live there is no Byzantine Church only Roman ones. It is not something I would use in everyday language with others. But I should note that many Episcopalians do refer to themselves as reformed Catholics. If you were to attend one of our masses the only difference you might find is the Lord’s Prayer is in a different part of the liturgy.
 
The issue here is that before the Reformation, it was always the case that groups who denied the primacy of the Petrine office and the genuine apostolic authority held by all successors of the apostles were considered heretics (as noted above, the EO even acknowledge Petrine office even while attempting to justify their refusal to submit). As it stands today, the church is polite about it, but the point still stands: it’s a serious thing to reject the church as Jesus established it and substitute one of human conception and construction instead. The fact that most protestants sincerely believe that they HAVE submitted themselves to authority as intended by Christ certainly reduces culpability. But the fact remains that if Jesus intended the church to be both visible and invisible and that the unity of the visible be manifest in the papacy, rebellion against that reality causes serious harm to the church and to the proclamation of the gospel. God have mercy on us all for the mess we’ve made.
As do many Lutherans. Acknowledging the honorary primacy historically afforded to the Bishop of Rome does not mean accepting the erroneous (in our view, of course) position of universal immediate jurisdiction or papal infallibility. In this particular instance, Lutherans find themselves in a similar stance as our Orthodox brothers.

Of course, being Lutheran, I would consider my communion to always have been part of the church catholic. But I think the case can be made from an objective perspective, as well. Cardinal Ratzinger thought this too, when he mused that the Augsburg Confession could be considered a Catholic statement of faith. His thought also continued into his papal service, when he detailed how the Lutheran understanding of Sola Fide (which ought not to be confused with modern protestant misappropriations of the term!) can be considered congruent with Roman Catholic teaching.
 
This is all very interesting but I am noticing a trend. There seems to be an effort to muddy the waters as to what the word “Catholic” with a capital “C” actually means. No one will argue that “catholic” means universal. But the Church was called “Catholic” as a proper name within the first century.

Here is a portion of the Epistle of Ignatius to the Smyrnaeans which was written around 110 AD and references the “Catholic Church” with no explanation, indicating that the term was in common useage before he wrote the letter:

“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.”

The word “Catholic” was used to draw a distinction between the Apostolic Church with validly ordained bishops as opposed to any splinter groups in existence at the time.

So those who wish to co-opt the name “Catholic” while rejecting, to various degrees, the Church which was first called Catholic, seems to be a little disingenuous to me. The fact that the Catholic Church is not restricted to the Latin rite does not mean that anyone and everyone can then lay claim to the name, as if, for instance, “Evangelical Catholic” is just as valid a term as “Coptic” or “Maronite” or “Chaldean” Catholics. “Evangelical Catholics” are Lutherans, plain and simple, and most take great pride in their differences with the Catholic Church. As long as this is the case there can be no true unity and therefore those denominations who broke with the Catholic Church have no real right to call themselves Catholic at all. The same principal would apply to any denomination for the simple fact that they broke away from the “Catholic Church”.

“Let the time come when those who should oblige the servant of God, do the contrary to him, and what degree of patience and humility he has then, that is the degree he has and no more.” - St. Francis of Assisi
This is the heart of what I’m getting at. I see it this same way. At the same time, I should put my spirit in check as regards looking to unity, not divisiveness.

However, several people appeared to have glossed over what I wrote in the original post. Maybe I didn’t explain it properly, as to what boiled my kettle. It was the preachers comment that “…Apostolic has nothing to do with bishops and popes…”..

If anything is divisive, that is.
 
Those denominations that ascribe to the Nicene Creed use the term “catholic” with a small c meaning universal -no confusion or identification with the Roman Catholic Church whatsoever:cool:
 
Personally I was surprised that the Calvary Baptist preacher quoted the Nicene (not Apostles) creed at all.

Baptists have historically been opposed to the use of any and all Creeds. They have no creeds. They have a creed like statement called the New Hampshire confession ,but that is no creed.

I was raised in the creedless ‘churches of Christ’ related to Baptists. And the original founders of that denomination always confused creeds and confessions. They came from the Presbyterians and what they thought of as a creed were specific doctrinal statements like the Westminster confession, not a creed at all.
One.Holy.Catholic.Apostolic…Yes my mistake, Nicene. However, they did open with the Apostles Creed. Perhaps that’s what confused me.

I also found it odd. When I was in my early teens I attended a Baptist school, and that was never brought up.
 
Those denominations that ascribe to the Nicene Creed use the term “catholic” with a small c meaning universal -no confusion or identification with the Roman Catholic Church whatsoever:cool:
If you can locate a copy of the 1928 Episcopal Book of Common Prayer, take a look at the Nicene Creed. Or, in the 79 book, Rite 1, the 2nd Creed.

GKC
 
Well, there are two definitions of “Catholic,” the obvious one relating to the RCC.

In the dictionary, “catholic” is also synonymous with the word “universal”
 
Exactly. 🙂

Although I feel like I should add a qualifier to my previous comments. Namely, I fully understand if (and actually expect that) e.g. on an Eastern Orthodox forum the term “Catholic” is used to mean the EO. Likewise for, say, an Anglican forum or blog that uses “Catholic” in a more inclusive sense. My point was only that here on CAF, “Catholics” (as distinct from “catholics”) should be understood to mean just members of the Roman Communion.
 
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