No one in Rome was even aware of what happened at Pentecost in 33 AD, so we know the RCC was not founded then.
Actually, it is quite possible that there were Jews from Rome at Pentecost, and they were among th 3000 that day. When the returned to Rome, they fellowshipped together, though they had not yet been visited by an Apostle.
In about 50 AD there was a dispute over whether or not gentiles should convert to Judaism to be saved. The apostles met in Jerusalem and there was no appeal to the church in Rome, which probably didn’t exist yet. So in 50 AD there was no RCC.
There was a church alive and well in Rome, though the Magesterium was still located in Jerusalem.
Sometime over the next decade Paul wrote a letter to the church in Rome.
Testifying in that letter that their faith was known “throughout the world” and that he had not yet visited the Church there.
He also refers to not planting in another’s field, which seems to be a reference to another Apostle or designate that had labored in Rome prior to his letter.
According to Irenaeus, Peter and Paul co-founded the church in Rome and placed it in the hands of Linus. Now since Paul was no longer in Rome, and the church in Rome was obviously well established, Linus, not Peter, must have been the bishop there.
You lost me here. What do you mean “no longer in Rome”? He died there!
My guess is that Peter was off doing what he was supposed to doing, laying the foundation of the church in other places. Whether or not Peter was the bishop of Rome is crucial to your claim and it appears that he was not.
There are bishopric lines from Peter in Antioch, also, that were established before the Apostolic line of Peter was started in Rome.
Around 95 AD, there was a dissention in the Corinthian church and the church in Rome was consulted. One could argue that this is evidence for Rome having universal authority at that time; the problem is it’s not consistent with other evidence.
No, and neither does Rome claim that “universal authority” means that valid authority does not exist elsewhere It was just that, because of the foundation laid there by Peter and Paul, the doctrinal base was so solid that all churches were expected to be in communion with Rome.
About 15 years later, Ignatius, the bishop of Antioch, was taken to Rome for martyrdom. In transit, Ignatius wrote five letters to churches in his jurisdiction, one to Rome where he was headed, and one to his friend and fellow bishop, Polycarp. In his letter to the church in Rome, Ignatius referred to it as “presiding in the region of the Romans,” thus indicating that Rome’s jurisdiction was limited to the region of the Romans in the west.
The fact that Rome was the central see for the Latins does not subtract from the universal influence of the see.
Ignatius told the church in Rome that Jesus Christ alone will oversee it in his absence, and that their love, i.e. prayers, would regard it.
This does not mean that Jesus would not work through people to govern the Church. Are you suggesting that the bishops served apart from Jesus overseeeing His Church?
It was Polycarp that Ignatius asked to handle his replacement in the see of Antioch. If Rome held universal jurisdiction this process would have certainly been handled through them.
No. Bishops in all the early communities were appointed and succeeded locally. Rome was only sought when the settlements of disputes was needed.
About 30 or 40 years later, Polycarp traveled to Rome and met with Anicetus, the bishop of Rome, to convince him to follow after the custom he received from the apostles, namely to celebrate the Passover on which ever day it fell. However, Anicetus remained steadfast in the customs he received from his predecessors. The two departed unable to persuade the other and each held to their own tradition. While Polycarp was in Rome, “Anicetus conceded the administration of the Eucharist in the church to Polycarp, manifestly as a mark of respect.” (Eusebius, E.C. 5:24)
So Anicetus demonstrated no authority over Polycarp or the churches in Asia. In fact, he displayed an act of subordinates in the company of Polycarp.
This is certainly consistent with the Apostolic instruction that they “submit to one another”.
Jesus was quite clear that they were to serve one another, and not “lord it over” as the Gentiles did.