=5Loaves;7831649]Christ is Risen!
Just to touch on a couple of the most obvious problems here… the books of New Testament canon were not written by Roman Catholics.
Friend are you saying that Matthew, Mark, Luke, John, Peter, James, Paul were not and are not Catholic:shrug: On what basis do you hold this unusual view?
The Apostle’s Creed in English reads “I believe in the Holy Spirit, the holy catholic Church…” The current English translation in use by the Latin Church of the
Nicene Creed, which you rather seem to be referring to, reads “We believe in one holy catholic and apostolic Church…” The new translation being adapted by the Latin Church in Advent 2011 reads: “And one, holy, catholic and apostolic Church.”
The Apostle’s Creed in English reads “I believe in the Holy Spirit, the holy catholic Church…” The current English translation in use by the Latin Church of the
Nicene Creed, which you rather seem to be referring to, reads “We believe in one holy catholic and apostolic Church…” The new translation being adapted by the Latin Church in Advent 2011 reads: “And one, holy, catholic and apostolic Church.”
OK

And the difference in the beliefs are?
In the Roman Rite of the Latin Church in the Rite of Baptism the elect are asked “Do you believe in the Holy Spirit, the holy catholic Church…”.
Given the FACT that There has been, Is and will continue to be ONLY ONE Church and Faith Founded by Christ; what my friend is the issue your raising?
None of these nor other similar professions of faith use the word “Catholic”. In all instances the word is “catholic”, typically translated as “universal”.
Catholic does mean univeral; and that is what we have been;ARE, and shall continue to be. And the CREEDS are an expression of OUR Faith beliefs [so why must it use the term "faith?]
The Progresion of names for todays Catholic Church are historically proveable:
First “the Way” around 33 A.D.
**Then “Christian” **How and when was the word “Christian” first used? The term ‘Christian’ was used to describe a follwer of Christ in terms of the world, from the world’s point of view. The pagans at Antioch called the Apostles “Christians” first (Acts 11:26; 26:28) [AROUND 80 AD] and used it derogatorily because the apostles didn’t follow the commercial world of the pagans. “Christian” is an adjective, not a noun. The substance is not in the word “Christian”, the substance is in the heart of the man it is attempting to describe, and which the pagan user cannot see.
"And then Catholic:
The term “Catholic” is in the Apostles’, Nicene, and Athanasian creeds, and many Protestants, claiming the term for themselves, give it a meaning that is unsupported historically, ignoring the term’s use at the time the creeds were written.
Early Church historian J. N. D. Kelly, a Protestant, writes: “As regards ‘Catholic,’ its original meaning was ‘universal’ or ‘general.’ . . . in the latter half of the second century at latest, we find it conveying the suggestion that the Catholic is the true Church as distinct from heretical congregations (cf., e.g., Muratorian Canon). . . . What these early Fathers were envisaging was almost always the empirical, visible society; they had little or no inkling of the distinction which was later to become important between a visible and an invisible Church” (Early Christian Doctrines, 190–1**)." The term was First used by St. Ignatious of Antioch very early in the second century**.
OK

And the difference in the beliefs are?
In the Roman Rite of the Latin Church in the Rite of Baptism the elect are asked “Do you believe in the Holy Spirit, the holy catholic Church…”.
Given the FACT that htere has been, Is and will continue to be ONLY ONE; what my friend i the issue your raising?
None of these nor other similar professions of faith use the word “Catholic”. In all instances the word is “catholic”, typically translated as “universal”.
TRY as I might; I find no basis for your comments. PLEASE feel free to PROVE me wrong.
God Bless,
Pat