jrtrent;10197506]You’re not bothering me, I guess I’m just not understanding your question. In post 127, I wrote:
"Well, once the church is divided, there can no longer exist an undivided church, so there is no organization I can point to which is the undivided church today
…however, there are some groups that could be said to have once been a part of that undivided church and have continued to the present day (such as the afore-mentioned Eastern Orthodox, Oriental Orthodox, and Roman Catholic churches)."
Which of these churches existed in the 1st, 2nd and 3rd century?
The undivided church would have been the Christian churches that existed prior to when they started dividing from one another. To “identify the early, individed, historical church” would be to point out everywhere they existed. Looking just at the first century, a Wikipedia article says:
“Early Christians gathered in small private homes, known as house churches, but a city’s whole Christian community would also be called a church – the Greek noun εκκλησια (or Ecclesia) literally means assembly, gathering, or congregation but is translated as church in most English translations of the New Testament. . . Over 40 such communities were established by the year 100, many in Anatolia, also known as Asia Minor, such as the Seven churches of Asia. By the end of the first century, Christianity had already spread to Rome, India, and major cities in Armenia, Greece and Syria . . .”
Agreed. Those early Christians were not npn-catholics for the simple fact that the east - west schism and the protestant reformation had not occurred - right? That leaves us with the Catholic Church alone, which had to deal with competing sects on occasion, hence the term catholic, to make the distinction. Ignatius of Antioch did not invent the word catholic, However, his letters contain the earliest known uses of the word. Clearly it was in general use before Ignatius because Ignatius writes in such a way that he already expects his readers to be familiar with this term and its meaning. He also uses the term in more than one of his letters, meaning, logically speaking, that he expects early Christians, located in more than one place within the Roman Empire, to be familiar with the term. This indicates that in his day (latter part of the 1st century, into the second century) the term, catholic, was already in widespread use. For it to be used in such a broad manner would require some time to pass in the early Christian communities, meaning that the term probably was coined sometime in the second half of the first century. Much to my surprise, the word “catholic” had become a universal term used to identify Jesus’ Church.
Ignatius wrote the following::“But avoid all divisions, as the beginning of evils. See that you all follow the bishop, even as Jesus Christ does the Father, and the presbytery as you would the apostles; and reverence the deacons, as being the institution of God. Let no man do anything connected with the Church without the bishop. Let that be deemed a proper Eucharist, which is [administered] either by the bishop, or by one to whom he has entrusted it.
Wherever the bishop shall appear, there let the multitude [of the people] also be; even as, wherever Jesus Christ is, there is the Catholic Church."
The first such separation I know of was that of the non-Chalcedonians in 451 AD, but maybe you know of some earlier breaks.
I am no historian but I think you are right.
Here are just a couple of examples; there are many more:
**The Martyrdom of Polycarp - **When finally he concluded his prayer, after remembering all who had at any time come his way – small folk and great folk, distinguished and undistinguished,
and the whole Catholic Church throughout the world – the time for departure came. So they placed him on a (donkey) and brought him into the city on a great Sabbath (
The Martyrdom of Polycarp 8 A.D. 110]).
Irenaeus** - Where was Marcion then, that shipmaster of Pontus, the zealous student of Stoicism? Where was Valentinus then, the disciple of Platonism? For it is evident that those men lived not so long ago – in the reign of Antoninus for the most part –
and that they at first were believers in the doctrine of the Catholic Church,** in the church of Rome** under the episcopate of the blessed Eleutherus, until on account of their ever restless curiosity, with which they even infected the brethren, they were more than once expelled (
The Prescription Against Heretics 22,30
A.D.200])Clement of