Episcopalian today?

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Enjoy your pipe GKC! Your participation in any thread to do with the episcopalians or anglicans is so valuable!!

I can understand how painful the last 25-30 years have been for members of these congregations. It is hard for those to understand who have been Catholic their entire life. It is not easy.
It was a quiet and satisfying smoke, except for the wasp hovering over me. I suspect his intent.

And, as usual, after the pipe I feel languid. Likely will require a nap.

Age, no doubt.

GKC
 
Authority really hasn’t been unclear really at any time in the church. Really this isn’t an issue anywhere in the 1-4th centuries.
I have studied the early Church in some depth, although it’s not my primary area of specialization, and I disagree with you entirely.
The orthodox would like to say so obviously they have to in order to survive theologically.
And the same could be said of you–you have to believe that authority was “clear in the early centuries” (in spite, as I see it, of overwhelming evidence) in order to “survive theologically.” (Not in order to be Catholic, but in order to be the sort of rather aggressive and overconfident Catholic that you are.)
No one even the “Orthodox” (big O) had an issue with Rome until much later in the early history of the church. Of course if they do we could go down the not being established by an apostle see issue! :eek:
All sorts of people, many of them saints and Doctors of the Church, had issues with Rome from very early on. Irenaeus had issues with Rome when Pope Victor tried to excommunicate the churches of Asia Minor over the date of Easter. Cyprian had issues with Rome when Rome taught that the baptism of heretics was valid. Basil of Caesarea had issues with Rome’s support of Paulinus over Meletius as the bishop of Antioch. And so on.

Edwin
 
Ok lets try this friend I didn’t write this but same conversation see if you can pull this out.

suppose, then, that you are going to say that you are a member of the Church of God, yes? After all, your Lutheran church is “of God”, right? And capitalization means nothing, right?

And you are a member of the United Church of God, yes? After all, your Lutheran church is “united as the church of God”, right? And capitalization means nothing, right?

And you are a member of Christ’s Sanctified Holy Church, yes?
After all, your Lutheran church is “Christ’s church, and is sanctified, and holy”, right? And capitalization means nothing, right?

And you are a member of the God Is Love Pentecostal Church, yes? After all, your Lutheran church does profess that “God is love”, right? And you recognize Pentecost, yes? And capitalization means nothing, right?

Of course being able to claim Catholic would require a history longer than 490 years.
All of these terms could be appropriately applied.

It’s a question of avoiding confusion. It’s not a question of “getting to” or not “getting to.”

If, for instance, the Christian Churches/Churches of Christ were to say “clearly the rest of you aren’t really Christians,” then that would be an issue. And if the rest of us used “christian” to make it clear that we weren’t members of that particular Restorationist body, and they then said “see, that means you’re not really Christian like we are because you use a lowercase,” it would be necessary to push back to that arrogant and insulting bit of verbal trickery, wouldn’t it? 😛

Of course the case is different here because of the historical continuity Catholics have. However, it’s not as clear-cut as you’re claiming. We all go back 2000 years, and we have all changed. Some of us more than others and in different ways.

Edwin
 
Authority really hasn’t been unclear really at any time in the church. Really this isn’t an issue anywhere in the 1-4th centuries. The orthodox would like to say so obviously they have to in order to survive theologically. No one even the “Orthodox” (big O) had an issue with Rome until much later in the early history of the church. Of course if they do we could go down the not being established by an apostle see issue! :eek:
Of course we didn’t; because in the early history of the Church, Rome wasn’t claiming to have universal, immediate, supreme jurisdiction over the entire Church Militant 🙂
 
Of coure Roman wasn’t added till much much later but the Latin Church of the West along with the Pope has always held Primacy weather that was spelled out at a council or not. One does not get to redefine the terms.
One person’s “spelling it out” is another’s “redefining”😛

I agree that Rome always had primacy, but I know people more learned in early Christianity than I who disagree.

And saying that Rome always had primacy doesn’t end the dispute–the further questions are “was the the same as it is today” and “how important was it.”

Edwin
 
Its interesting you say you have studied the ECF in depth so you would know these writings then? Id say this is a good smattering of the men who shaped the Church.

Clement of Rome
Accept our counsel and you will have nothing to regret. . . . If anyone disobeys the things which have been said by him [Jesus] through us, let them know that they will involve themselves in no small danger. We, however, shall be innocent of this sin and will pray with entreaty and supplication that the Creator of all may keep unharmed the number of his elect (Letter to the Corinthians 58:2, 59:1[A.D. 95]).

Ignatius of Antioch
You [the See of Rome] have envied no one, but others have you taught. I desire only that what you have enjoined in your instructions may remain in force (Epistle to the Romans 3:1 [A.D. 110]).

Irenaeus
But since it would be too long to enumerate in such a volume as this the succession of all the churches, we shall confound all those who, in whatever manner, whether through self-satisfaction or vainglory, or through blindness and wicked opinion, assemble other than where it is proper, by pointing out here the successions of the bishops of the greatest and most ancient church known to all, founded and organized at Rome by the two most glorious apostles. Peter and Paul, that church which has the tradition and the faith which comes down to us after having been announced to men by the apostles. With that church, because of its superior origin, all the churches must agree, that is, all the faithful in the whole world, and it is in her that the faithful everywhere have maintained the apostolic tradition (Against Heresies 3:3:2 [inter A.D. 180-190])

Clement of Alexandria

“[T]he blessed Peter, the chosen, the preeminent, the first among the disciples, for whom alone with himself the Savior paid the tribute [Matt. 17:27], quickly g.asped and understood their meaning. And what does he say? ‘Behold, we have left all and have followed you’ [Matt. 19:27; Mark 10:28]” (Who Is the Rich Man That Is Saved? 21:3–5 [A.D. 200]).

Tertullian
“For though you think that heaven is still shut up, remember that the Lord left the keys of it to Peter here, and through him to the Church, which keys everyone will carry with him if he has been questioned and made a confession [of faith]” (Antidote Against the Scorpion 10 [A.D. 211]).

“[T]he Lord said to Peter, ‘On this rock I will build my Church, I have given you the keys of the kingdom of heaven [and] whatever you shall have bound or loosed on earth will be bound or loosed in heaven’ [Matt. 16:18–19]. . . . Upon you, he says, I will build my Church; and I will give to you the keys, not to the Church” (Modesty 21:9–10 [A.D. 220]).

The Letter of Clement to James
“Be it known to you, my lord, that Simon [Peter], who, for the sake of the true faith, and the most sure foundation of his doctrine, was set apart to be the foundation of the Church, and for this end was by Jesus himself, with his truthful mouth, named Peter, the first fruits of our Lord, the first of the apostles; to whom first the Father revealed the Son; whom the Christ, with good reason, blessed; the called, and elect” (Letter of Clement to James 2 [A.D. 221]).

Origen
“*f we were to attend carefully to the Gospels, we should also find, in relation to those things which seem to be common to Peter . . . a great difference and a preeminence in the things [Jesus] said to Peter, compared with the second class [of apostles]. For it is no small difference that Peter received the keys not of one heaven but of more, and in order that whatsoever things he binds on earth may be bound not in one heaven but in them all, as compared with the many who bind on earth and loose on earth, so that these things are bound and loosed not in [all] the heavens, as in the case of Peter, but in one only; for they do not reach so high a stage with power as Peter to bind and loose in all the heavens” (Commentary on Matthew 13:31 [A.D. 248]).

Cyprian of Carthage
"The Lord says to Peter: ‘I say to you,’ he says, ‘that you are Peter, and upon this rock I will build my Church.’ . . . On him [Peter] he builds the Church, and to him he gives the command to feed the sheep [John 21:17], and although he assigns a like power to all the apostles, yet he founded a single chair [cathedra], and he established by his own authority a source and an intrinsic reason for that unity. Indeed, the others were that also which Peter was , but a primacy is given to Peter, whereby it is made clear that there is but one Church and one chair. So too, all [the apostles] are shepherds, and the flock is shown to be one, fed by all the apostles in single-minded accord. If someone does not hold fast to this unity of Peter, can he imagine that he still holds the faith? If he [should] desert the chair of Peter upon whom the Church was built, can he still be confident that he is in the Church?" (The Unity of the Catholic Church 4; 1st edition [A.D. 251]).*
 
Cyril of Jerusalem
“The Lord is loving toward men, swift to pardon but slow to punish. Let no man despair of his own salvation. Peter, the first and foremost of the apostles, denied the Lord three times before a little servant girl, but he repented and wept bitterly” (Catechetical Lectures 2:19 [A.D. 350]).
“[Simon Magus] so deceived the city of Rome that Claudius erected a statue of him. . . . While the error was extending itself, Peter and Paul arrived, a noble pair and the rulers of the Church, and they set the error aright. . . . [T]hey launched the weapon of their like-mindedness in prayer against the Magus, and struck him down to earth. It was marvelous enough, and yet no marvel at all, for Peter was there—he that carries about the keys of heaven [Matt. 16:19]” (ibid., 6:14).

“In the power of the same Holy Spirit, Peter, both the chief of the apostles and the keeper of the keys of the kingdom of heaven, in the name of Christ healed Aeneas the paralytic at Lydda, which is now called Diospolis [Acts 9:32–34]” (ibid., 17:27).

Ephraim the Syrian
“[Jesus said:] Simon, my follower, I have made you the foundation of the holy Church. I betimes called you Peter, because you will support all its buildings. You are the inspector of those who will build on Earth a Church for me. If they should wish to build what is false, you, the foundation, will condemn them. You are the head of the fountain from which my teaching flows; you are the chief of my disciples. Through you I will give drink to all peoples. Yours is that life-giving sweetness which I dispense. I have chosen you to be, as it were, the firstborn in my institution so that, as the heir, you may be executor of my treasures. I have given you the keys of my kingdom. Behold, I have given you authority over all my treasures” (Homilies 4:1 [A.D. 351]).

Ambrose of Milan
“[Christ] made answer: ‘You are Peter, and upon this rock will I build my Church. . . .’ Could he not, then, strengthen the faith of the man to whom, acting on his own authority, he gave the kingdom, whom he called the rock, thereby declaring him to be the foundation of the Church [Matt. 16:18]?” (The Faith 4:5 [A.D. 379]).

Pope Damasus I
“Likewise it is decreed . . . that it ought to be announced that . . . the holy Roman Church has been placed at the forefront not by the conciliar decisions of other churches, but has received the primacy by the evangelic voice of our Lord and Savior, who says: ‘You are Peter, and upon this rock I will build my Church, and the gates of hell will not prevail against it; and I will give to you the keys of the kingdom of heaven . . . ’ [Matt. 16:18–19]. The first see, therefore, is that of Peter the apostle, that of the Roman Church, which has neither stain nor blemish nor anything like it” (Decree of Damasus 3 [A.D. 382]).

Jerome
“‘But,’ you [Jovinian] will say, ‘it was on Peter that the Church was founded’ [Matt. 16:18]. Well . . . one among the twelve is chosen to be their head in order to remove any occasion for division” (Against Jovinian 1:26 [A.D. 393]).

“Simon Peter, the son of John, from the village of Bethsaida in the province of Galilee, brother of Andrew the apostle, and himself chief of the apostles, after having been bishop of the church of Antioch and having preached to the Dispersion . . . pushed on to Rome in the second year of Claudius to overthrow Simon Magus, and held the sacerdotal chair there for twenty-five years until the last, that is the fourteenth, year of Nero. At his hands he received the crown of martyrdom being nailed to the cross with his head towards the ground and his feet raised on high, asserting that he was unworthy to be crucified in the same manner as his Lord” (Lives of Illustrious Men 1 [A.D. 396]).

Pope Innocent I
“In seeking the things of God . . . you have acknowledged that judgment is to be referred to us [the pope], and have shown that you know that is owed to the Apostolic See [Rome], if all of us placed in this position are to desire to follow the apostle himself [Peter] from whom the episcopate itself and the total authority of this name have emerged” (Letters 29:1 [A.D. 408]).
 
Care for me to go on I have thousands more? I’m not sure where in the early church you see a problem with authority of the pope and the Petrine primacy?
 
One person’s “spelling it out” is another’s “redefining”😛

I agree that Rome always had primacy, but I know people more learned in early Christianity than I who disagree.

And saying that Rome always had primacy doesn’t end the dispute–the further questions are “was the the same as it is today” and “how important was it.”

Edwin
Of course saying it doesn’t end the dispute so what can we turn to…well all we have to paint the picture are the ECF writings. That’s it! Guess what they seemed to not have a problem with Papal primacy. So if the glove fits you must convict! Everything else is speculation and opinion. Honestly if one reads the ECF and comes out with anything less that the Roman Catholic church I would question them seriously.
 
Care for me to go on I have thousands more? I’m not sure where in the early church you see a problem with authority of the pope and the Petrine primacy?
If everything positive said about Peter in the early church proved the Vatican I claims with regards to the papacy, then you wouldn’t need to go on.
 
If everything positive said about Peter in the early church proved the Vatican I claims with regards to the papacy, then you wouldn’t need to go on.
Actually we can go backwards. When trouble erupted in the early churches when the apostles were still alive those churches appealed to the Chair of Peter and Rome for a resolution to local issues. An apostle was not sitting at the seat at that time.

Case and Point

it’s generally accepted that 1 Clement was written about 96, and that the Apostle John died about 100. So what? Well, consider how 1 Clement begins. Pope Clement, speaking on behalf of the entire Roman Church, says:

The Church of God which sojourns at Rome, to the Church of God sojourning at Corinth, to those who are called and sanctified by the will of God, through our Lord Jesus Christ: Grace to you, and peace, from Almighty God through Jesus Christ, be multiplied.

Owing, dear brethren, to the sudden and successive calamitous events which have happened to ourselves, we feel that we have been somewhat tardy in turning our attention to the points respecting which you consulted us; and especially to that shameful and detestable sedition, utterly abhorrent to the elect of God, which a few rash and self-confident persons have kindled to such a pitch of frenzy, that your venerable and illustrious name, worthy to be universally loved, has suffered grievous injury.
What does this mean?

It means that when there was schism within the Corinthian church, they appealed all the way to Rome for assistance and consultation, even though the Apostle John was alive at the time. We don’t know exactly when the Corinthians wrote, but it was early enough that Clement is apologetic for his delayed response in 96 A.D.

Apart from the pope and the Apostles, no one is afforded this kind of respect and deference in the Apostolic age. And when Clement responds, he’s not afraid to order the schismatics to return to the true Church:

Ye therefore, who laid the foundation of this sedition, submit yourselves to the presbyters, and receive correction so as to repent, bending the knees of your hearts. Learn to be subject, laying aside the proud and arrogant self-confidence of your tongue. For it is better for you that you should occupy a humble but honourable place in the flock of Christ, than that, being highly exalted, you should be cast out from the hope of His people.
So you have the Roman church intervening in a local church dispute, and issuing orders. You’ve got the Bishop of Rome speaking on behalf of the whole church of Rome. And you’ve got all this going on while the Apostle John is still alive. A standard Protestant ecclesiology would suggest that this matter would have been handled entirely at the congregational level, or barring that, by appealing to the still-living Apostle.
 
And how does the church react to this assertion of Primacy?

How do the early Christians respond to this Roman intervention into the affairs of Corinth? Do they view this as a papist usurpation of John’s Apostolic authority, or as a violation of the autonomy of the local church? Nope. On the contrary, the major dispute following Clement’s letter is whether or not it should be considered Scripture.

St. Clement of Alexandria (the other Clement, mentioned earlier), after citing Scriptural passages on martyrdom, continues:

Moreover, in the Epistle to the Corinthians, the Apostle Clement also, drawing a picture of the Gnostic, says: …]
Even as late as St. Jerome’s book De Viris Illustribus (On Illustrious Men), from the late fourth century, we hear that Clement’s letter is still being read liturgically, as if it were Scripture:

He [Clement] wrote, on the part of the church of Rome, an especially valuable Letter to the church of the Corinthians, which in some places is publicly read, and which seems to me to agree in style with the epistle to the Hebrews which passes under the name of Paul but it differs from this same epistle, not only in many of its ideas, but also in respect of the order of words, and its likeness in either respect is not very great.

Of course, this is not to suggest that 1 Clement (or any other papal encyclical, after 2 Peter) is Scripture. Rather, it’s to show that the early Church looks a whole lot more papal than you might expect.

This also puts John’s own Gospel in a whole new light. John makes repeated reference to Petrine authority; for example, in the midst of his Resurrection account, John points out that he waited for Peter before entering the Tomb (John 20:4-5). In the next chapter, he talks about how, at Christ’s command, Peter was able to singlehandedly haul in the net of fish (Jn. 21:11) that the other Apostles were incapable of hauling in (Jn. 21:6). Then he recounts Christ’s commissioning of Peter as Shepherd (Jn. 21:15-17). In each case, these are details that only John reports, and (assuming that the general consensus on the dating of his Gospel is correct) he is doing so decades after Peter’s death. So why emphasize Petrine authority? Because John wasn’t a rival to Clement or any of Peter’s successors. Both men had roles to play in the Body of Christ, and John built up that Body, from the papacy on down.
 
Actually we can go backwards. When trouble erupted in the early churches when the apostles were still alive those churches appealed to the Chair of Peter and Rome for a resolution to local issues. An apostle was not sitting at the seat at that time.
And appeals to other elevated Sees were part of Churchly practice through history, and does nothing to demonstrate the doctrine formulated by the Vatican I Council. In no respect was the appeal to Clement juridical in nature and Clement did nothing that would’ve imposed on the Church in Corinth.

And you needn’t copy and paste from other websites. Just link to them.
 
And appeals to other elevated Sees were part of Churchly practice through history, and does nothing to demonstrate the doctrine formulated by the Vatican I Council. In no respect was the appeal to Clement juridical in nature and Clement did nothing that would’ve imposed on the Church in Corinth.
Wow I mean really WOW!!!

Clement Asserted his authority and they fell into line! It demonstrates everything. Of course these are some of the earliest writings outside of scripture themselves. To say what you just said would mean you have some other evidence to the contrary! I’m guess you don’t…

There is nothing wrong with VATI as it is a practice that was always understood by again literally every ECF and is hammered home in most Early Church writings. I suppose you can produce documentation that all the early churches didn’t submit to Rome and the SEE there?
 
Wow I mean really WOW!!!

Clement Asserted his authority and they fell into line!
The evidence for that, is what? Did Clement remove the Bishop and install another? Were any laity excommunicated, presbyters or deacons removed, etc? Does the historical evidence show a monoepiscopacy in Rome in the late 1st century? What do you mean by falling into line?
 
The evidence for that, is what? Did Clement remove the Bishop and install another? Were any laity excommunicated, presbyters or deacons removed, etc? Does the historical evidence show a monoepiscopacy in Rome in the late 1st century? What do you mean by falling into line?
Seems pretty imposing to me.

Receive our counsel, and ye shall have no occasion of regret…. But if certain persons should be disobedient unto the words spoken by Him through us, let them understand that they will entangle themselves in no slight transgression and danger, but we shall be guiltless of this sin.

Yes in the 1st century the Church recognized a central leader in the petrine seat.
 
I know quite a bit about Anglicans actually.
That presumption is precisely the problem.
Of course the Orthodox if they had any hope at even sounding valid would have to discount the 7 councils they say were authoritative which of course had a residing pope.
Oh, you mean like Constantinople in 381, to which neither the bishop of Rome nor any representative of the bishop of Rome was invited, whose canons were not transmitted to Rome in any detail, but which was nonetheless declared by the council’s synodical letter the following year to be “ecumenical” and to demonstrate the will “of the whole world”?

Or like Chalcedon in 451, summoned despite the bishop of Rome’s having declared it unnecessary, critiquing the bishop of Rome’s theological writing despite his having demanded that they merely ratify it, including Dioscurus of Alexandria despite the bishop of Rome’s demand that he must not be present, establishing Constantinople - not Rome - as the court of appeal from provincial synods, and reiterating Constantinople 381’s declaration that Rome’s importance was based upon its political position in the Empire and so Constantinople inherited a similar ecclesiastical importance as the new capital?

The Councils recognised by the Orthodox were not recognised because of the role of the bishop of Rome. They were recognised because the Orthodox ecclesiology was conciliar, which is why Constantinople 381 could alter the Nicene Creed and no one in the East was bothered, but the East rose up when Rome tried to do the same thing with the Filioque.

You can, if you like, claim that the East was wrong not to hold Rome as the supreme authority, but you can only claim that they did hold Rome as the supreme authority by enthusiastically rewriting several hundred years of history.
 
The evidence for that, is what? Did Clement remove the Bishop and install another? Were any laity excommunicated, presbyters or deacons removed, etc? Does the historical evidence show a monoepiscopacy in Rome in the late 1st century? What do you mean by falling into line?
So what does the Church there think?

Clement seems to have intended the letter to be read publicly, and we know that decades later it was still read to the congregation during worship. St. Dionysius, bishop of Corinth around 170, wrote in a letter to Pope Soter:

Today we observed the holy day of the Lord and read out your letter, which we shall continue to read from time to time for our admonition, as we do with that formerly sent to us through Clement.

That the Corinthians gave the letter such a welcome tells us that they could hardly have thought Rome was exceeding its authority. Indeed, Clement’s letter was held in such high regard that in the early fourth century, Eusebius could write that it was read publicly not only in Corinth but “in many churches both in the days of old and in our time.”
 
That presumption is precisely the problem.

Oh, you mean like Constantinople in 381, to which neither the bishop of Rome nor any representative of the bishop of Rome was invited, whose canons were not transmitted to Rome in any detail, but which was nonetheless declared by the council’s synodical letter the following year to be “ecumenical” and to demonstrate the will “of the whole world”?

Or like Chalcedon in 451, summoned despite the bishop of Rome’s having declared it unnecessary, critiquing the bishop of Rome’s theological writing despite his having demanded that they merely ratify it, including Dioscurus of Alexandria despite the bishop of Rome’s demand that he must not be present, establishing Constantinople - not Rome - as the court of appeal from provincial synods, and reiterating Constantinople 381’s declaration that Rome’s importance was based upon its political position in the Empire and so Constantinople inherited a similar ecclesiastical importance as the new capital?

The Councils recognised by the Orthodox were not recognised because of the role of the bishop of Rome. They were recognised because the Orthodox ecclesiology was conciliar, which is why Constantinople 381 could alter the Nicene Creed and no one in the East was bothered, but the East rose up when Rome tried to do the same thing with the Filioque.

You can, if you like, claim that the East was wrong not to hold Rome as the supreme authority, but you can only claim that they did hold Rome as the supreme authority by enthusiastically rewriting several hundred years of history.
That’s a great telling of their side of the story.
 
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