B
BCven86
Guest
I was having a discussion with a protestant friend about tradition and the early church and he brought up a question that I was unsure how to answer:
Was everyone of the early church of like mind and belief? i.e. we derive much of our tradition off of the dogma of the early church, but how can we say that collectively all of the early church believed the same thing? What if Catholicism was just one sect of what the early church actually was?
His reasoning was that, for example, the churches at Ephesis and Corinth were run in very different ways, what makes one way better than the other? and from which did Catholicism get derived?
My response was that we are followers of Peter and gave him the whole Matthew 16 argument.
You guys have any ideas?
Was everyone of the early church of like mind and belief? i.e. we derive much of our tradition off of the dogma of the early church, but how can we say that collectively all of the early church believed the same thing? What if Catholicism was just one sect of what the early church actually was?
His reasoning was that, for example, the churches at Ephesis and Corinth were run in very different ways, what makes one way better than the other? and from which did Catholicism get derived?
My response was that we are followers of Peter and gave him the whole Matthew 16 argument.
You guys have any ideas?