The Church was/is universal, i.e., all those local churches which St. Paul referenced formed the one body of Christ and that one body had a name. It was not simply “church”
I’m not sure we’re even talking about the same thing. You asked me what the Church was called and I wrote that it was “the Church at _____” (Antioch, Thessaloniki, Alexandria, wherever). I was not looking for a proper name (a sort of “nomen concretum” referring to the Church, if you will) because there wasn’t one.
i.e., Bishops gathering at an ecumenical council represented the universal Church of different local churches, and as such proclaimed they were the “Catholic Church”,
Yes, because καθ όλου
kath holou (from whence we get ‘Catholic’) literally means “throughout the whole”. These councils and writers want to emphasize that what they are declaring and writing is the belief of the whole church throughout the world. This in no way contradicts anything I have written.
Chalcedon attests to this
Chalcedon says lots of things, none of which I am bound to believe in the slightest. This is literally the worst possible example you could come up with in trying to make your point to me. I’m not sure whether that’s on purpose or what, but I do not accept it and do not hold anything it has declared as in any way necessarily reflecting the truth of the Orthodox Catholic faith.
Did you notice how they referred to the Church as the Catholic Church and it’s capitalized because it is a proper noun, i.e…, it is not simply an adjective?
No council anywhere ever issued decrees or drafted canons in English. That means absolutely nothing. I imagine that you find the Church just as “Catholic” in Arabic, Ge’ez, Devanagari, Chinese, Hangul, or any of the many other scripts used by Christians that do not have a capital/lowercase distinction. Really, this is not a point at all.
No, it is not a misapplication, the Church is universal/Catholic, i.e., from its inception or rather on Pentecost when the disciples received the Holy Spirit and spoke in various tongues, this signified the birth of the universal/Catholic Church. And if you disbelieve or assume that this is just modern apologetics, then, please explain this quote from St. Augustine:
I actually don’t disagree with what you’ve written above, only with how you’re applying the writings of the fathers to the modern day. The quote from St. Augustine, for instance, makes perfect sense: No heretic will claim to be “the Catholic church”, since they know that their faith is
not what is believed throughout the whole. They know they are not the Catholic church. That does not mean that “The Catholic Church” is now a noun – of course, in a technical, grammatical sense it functions as a noun because it takes a determiner in that phrase, but something tells me that’s not what you meant (as that has no impact on ecclesiology at all; Christianity is not linguistics, though I have dedicated my life to both

). It is, if anything, an adjectival phrase…yes, even in all the ancient writings you’ve quoted.
Really, folks…I can keep repeating the same thing over and over, or you can stop responding to posts that say that the catholic church is not a proper name with this or that quote that say “the Catholic Church” as though I just need to read it
one more time before I abandon my own church’s ecclesiology. It’s not happening.
No, it was not “the Church”, even St. Ignatius knew as much not to call it “the Church”. Moreover, there are significantly many more quotes from the fathers that attest that the Church was called Catholic:
And I agree with all of them, and not with you.
Even EWTN seems to get this distinction:
*
As mentioned in the Acts of the Apostles, it is true that the followers of Christ early became known as “Christians” (cf. Acts 11:26). The name Christian, however, was never commonly applied to the Church herself. In the New Testament itself, the Church is simply called “the Church.” There was only one. In that early time there were not yet any break-away bodies substantial enough to be rival claimants of the name and from which the Church might ever have to distinguish herself.*
They err in the next paragraph and following in presenting the “Catholic Church” as a proper name from early on and connecting it to the modern RCC, but then what else would I expect. I respect RCC ecclesiology even as I disagree with it and find it wrong.