R
rinnie
Guest
Now see Peter that would be the way I would probally define it, even today. Its like you are either Catholic or you are not. If you are not Catholic you would be protestant. Protestant to me would be any other Religion, but being a Christian, but not being Catholic. Because wasn’t everyone prior to the Protestant reformation that were Christians considered Catholic. I was taught that the first Church that Jesus started was the Catholic Church and to follow Jesus you were considered Christian. So would you not have to be considered Catholic? I was taught it wasnt until the Protestant reformation that the Catholic was dropped.One thing that complicates it is that there isn’t any one date that we can point to for when the schism began. The date most commonly given is 1054, which is the year that Cardinal Humbert excommunicated the Patriarch of Constantinople, Michael Cerularius. But some would say that excommunication wasn’t valid, and that the schism didn’t actually begin until the Council of Florence in the 15th century. Others would say that Rome and Constantinople weren’t in full communion for a century or so before 1054, so that’s when the schism should be dated from.
I have also seen (a number of times, on the internet) the claim that prior to the Protestant reformation, all Christians were Catholic. This, to me, is at best a misleading statement – in order for it to be true, you have to define “Catholic” to mean “all Christians who aren’t Protestant” (i.e. Roman Catholics, Eastern Orthodox, Old Catholics, etc.) but that just isn’t the way we usually define the term.