Please give me the name of the man, or men, that founded the Catholic Church, and when...

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Radical;7606204 [QUOTE said:
]yah, given the number of Oneness Pentecostals to the total number of Protestants…trinitarians would probably carry the vote by about the same margin at Nicaea 2011. Are you sure the beliefs of the bishops at Nicaea 325 didn’t span quite a spectrum?
But there are more than just oneness pentaostals that do not hold this doctrine.
Do you think the 4 gospels or the Pauline epistles weren’t recognized and used as scriptures until some council made an official declaration?
The question was as to what scripture, there where many other books being circulated at the time as scripture.
and that was the end of Arianism? nobody changed there mind? nobody watered down the decision of Nicaea? Everyone stuck to strick trinitarianism thereafter?
others came and went all which were declared heritics.
an authority? do you mean like an emperor who wanted to ensure unity of belief throughout his empire? …I don’t know about you, but I am kinda happy that the government no longer determines the religion of its citizens.
you will look kinda silly saying this when you discover that an emperor had nothing to do with the decision or how it was implemented.
nope, you are not to take it that way…
your use of the words “i am sure” indicate otherwise.It still stands you can not bind all christianity to this doctrine. Or any other doctrine your group has invented.
 
Hi, Radical,

Your form of evasion through sidetracking annoying issues and asking irrevelant questions has been tedious for a while. Maybe you should just consider answering the questions as you know the answer to be, or do research for those answers you do not know.

Let’s see what we have here…
yah, given the number of Oneness Pentecostals to the total number of Protestants…trinitarians would probably carry the vote by about the same margin at Nicaea 2011. Are you sure the beliefs of the bishops at Nicaea 325 didn’t span quite a spectrum?
There really isn’t anything solid one can accomplish with pure speculation. In my opinion, the best approach is to discuss the reality of what actually took place and what is before us today. Here are a couple of links you may find of benefit:

newadvent.org/cathen/11044a.htm

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First_Council_of_Nicaea

Do you believe in One God? - if so, your belief probably conforms to what was published by the Council at Nicaea! How about that Jesus is True God and true man? Yep, that is from Nicaea, too! And, do you believe in the Trinity - some Protestants have trouble with this doctrine - but, if you do… you can thank the Council of Nicaea for spelling out just what are the beliefs necessary to be a Christian - and for this time frame (325AD) the only Christians out there were Catholics! 👍
Do you think the 4 gospels or the Pauline epistles weren’t recognized and used as scriptures until some council made an official declaration?
Of course they were ‘recognized’ by various groups - that is not the real issue. There were devious individuals (primarily Gnostics) who apparently wanted to ‘hack’ into the treasure of Sacred Scripture and plant bogus works in there to deceive the faithful. Today’s computer hacker’s have quite a long historical trail of destruction. Ultimately, these and other documents were called into question as them being Divinely Inspired - and, the Catholic Church met and determined exactly which books were so Inspired and established the Canon of Sacred Scripture. The idea, Radical, is that you have the assurance that the Bible contains only the Inspired Word of God. Protestants took it upon themselves to remove certain books from the OT, but the NT they left alone. 16th Century Protestants did not add any books. I think this is a genuine recognition as to the validity of the Holy Spirit’s inspiration of the Catholic Church’s work in this area
and that was the end of Arianism? nobody changed there mind? nobody watered down the decision of Nicaea? Everyone stuck to strick trinitarianism thereafter?
Well, Radical, how many gods do you believe in? Is Christ True God AND true man? Is there a Trinity? I am confident that Arianism in various forms is still around today - the issue before us is that we have the Truth about God and the saving mission of Jesus Christ. Are you going to change your mind in fall in with Arianism or not? or are you just spinning your wheels to see how much smoke you can create? :rolleyes:
an authority? do you mean like an emperor who wanted to ensure unity of belief throughout his empire? …I don’t know about you, but I am kinda happy that the government no longer determines the religion of its citizens.
What you appear to lack is a sense of history and the developmental nature of men and institutions over time. You appear to think nothing of using the internet to transmit your thoughts - but, when Constantine the Great was in power he was limited to a pen and paper - the same limitations that the Pope had. What is of interest is that while we see the beginning Catholic Church (beginning with the martyrdom of the Apostles) being persecuted by the Roman Empire - we later see being protected by this same political group. Over time, the roles of Church and state were seen as different and we no longer have this union. Perhaps we can see the destructive nature of this union of politics and religion in the Protestant Revolt. In 1555 the term “Cuius regio, eius religio” meant that the ruler of an area determine the religion of his subjects.

God bless
 
I would like for any protestant to show me where Jesus gave the authority to any human to go and start their own church. Where does He say: “If you don’t agree or like what you hear from My original Church, go ahead and start one of your own that you can agree with and be comfortable with. If you see corruption, greed or any sinning in My original Church, please go ahead and start your own, since certainly I did not do it right the first time. Maybe one of you humans can do it better. If you go and start many churches, maybe one of them will get it right, because I could not do it right with My own original Church. The more churches there are, the better chance there will be of one of them being 100% right.”

Unless protestants can show where this authority is granted, any other argument is moot.
Radical or any Protestant:
Please respond to the post above.
 
Hi, Rainman10,

I see you are somewhat new to CAF … I have been here a bit longer and have reached a major conclusion that I would like to share with you.

One can not ‘hit and run through evading’ if they stop and actually resond to pointed posts such as you have presented! It is almost like there is this rule - that if you actually engage in honest dialogue (as evidenced by actually answering the quesitons and if you do not know an answer, just say so and then do some research and come back with an answer) you may wind up realizing that all of Protestantism is built on the ‘traditions of men’ … and, that does lead to problems! :eek:

So, do not be discouraged, disappointed or frustrated with either being ignored or your questions simply not answered - no matter how many words re used. So, if there is no response or one that does not really address your post, do not lose heart - just continue to go after a response until you get one. Please read it carefully - but, based on my own experience, there will be very little when it comes to relevency.

And, if it is documentation you want to back up my comment - just look at the non-answers that PRmerger and Progidal have been getting. He doesn’t spend much time with my questions. But, there is a lot of smoke produced from his posts.

God bless
Radical or any Protestant:
Please respond to the post above.
 
Hi, Rainman10,

I see you are somewhat new to CAF … I have been here a bit longer and have reached a major conclusion that I would like to share with you.

One can not ‘hit and run through evading’ if they stop and actually resond to pointed posts such as you have presented! It is almost like there is this rule - that if you actually engage in honest dialogue (as evidenced by actually answering the quesitons and if you do not know an answer, just say so and then do some research and come back with an answer) you may wind up realizing that all of Protestantism is built on the ‘traditions of men’ … and, that does lead to problems! :eek:

So, do not be discouraged, disappointed or frustrated with either being ignored or your questions simply not answered - no matter how many words re used. So, if there is no response or one that does not really address your post, do not lose heart - just continue to go after a response until you get one. Please read it carefully - but, based on my own experience, there will be very little when it comes to relevency.

And, if it is documentation you want to back up my comment - just look at the non-answers that PRmerger and Progidal have been getting. He doesn’t spend much time with my questions. But, there is a lot of smoke produced from his posts.

God bless
Tom,
Thank you for your post. Yes, I have noticed exactly what you posted above. Non-answers or no answers at all is about all they can do, because just as you stated, Protestantism is based on the traditions of men. I really didn’t think I would get a response, because they have no proof of any such thing ever being said by God, Jesus, the Bible, or anywhere else. In a nutshell, they have no leg to stand on, it is all personal opinions and their fallible personal interpretations.
 
I would like for any protestant to show me where Jesus gave the authority to any human to go and start their own church. Where does He say: “If you don’t agree or like what you hear from My original Church, go ahead and start one of your own that you can agree with and be comfortable with. If you see corruption, greed or any sinning in My original Church, please go ahead and start your own, since certainly I did not do it right the first time. Maybe one of you humans can do it better. If you go and start many churches, maybe one of them will get it right, because I could not do it right with My own original Church. The more churches there are, the better chance there will be of one of them being 100% right.”

Unless protestants can show where this authority is granted, any other argument is moot.
You know there’s no verse just as you have no real point. Jesus never said the CC is the church He started which hightens the idea you really don’t have a point.
 
You know there’s no verse just as you have no real point. Jesus never said the CC is the church He started which hightens the idea you really don’t have a point.
Blessings Doki! Actually, my friend I believe you misunderstood. What I believe the individual is referring is to whom did Jesus give any mere mortal the authority to found his or her own church? It is not so much about the name or title of the church because we all know Jesus also never mentions the word Bible. 😛

How is your spiritual journey?

God Bless
 
You know there’s no verse just as you have no real point. Jesus never said the CC is the church He started which hightens the idea you really don’t have a point.
The problem with ‘scriptures don’t specifically state’ Catholic Church is the following. Scriptures never tell us to pay US taxes. Specifically, Christ said to render unto Caesar, that which is Caesar’s.

Please share with us the name of the Church which is the Church, of the same mind and judgment, that Christ did start. Also, please be so kind as to provide us a list of Christian Churches to have existed since Christ’s death and resurrection.

How many things exist in the world today that was not even thought of, much less, in the world then? The Church was new and built by Christ. So man named it! Christ gave the keys to the kingdom of heaven and built His Church upon a ‘man’. Man received his authority from Christ.

Talk about no point…:rolleyes:
 
Hi, Radical,

Your form of evasion through sidetracking annoying issues and asking irrevelant questions has been tedious for a while. Maybe you should just consider answering the questions as you know the answer to be, or do research for those answers you do not know.
here’s the thing tqualey…I post at a rate of a little over a post/day. It seems that every day the Catholic faithful here post about a dozen or so posts that either are a response to something that I have said, or comment on me in some fashion. About a third of those posts amount to “the Catholic Church is right and so you are wrong”. They don’t merit a response. Another third consists of Catholics congratulating each other on what a grand job they are doing in proving that the CC is always right. They don’t deserve a response. The remaining third may contain something of substance that is worthwhile (from my perspective) …and so from that third I choose the best that is offered by the most civil…and you simply don’t make the cut.
 
here’s the thing tqualey…I post at a rate of a little over a post/day. It seems that every day the Catholic faithful here post about a dozen or so posts that either are a response to something that I have said, or comment on me in some fashion. About a third of those posts amount to “the Catholic Church is right and so you are wrong”. They don’t merit a response. Another third consists of Catholics congratulating each other on what a grand job they are doing in proving that the CC is always right. They don’t deserve a response. The remaining third may contain something of substance that is worthwhile (from my perspective) …and so from that third I choose the best that is offered by the most civil…and you simply don’t make the cut.
:tsktsk:

You may want to check your eye Rad…
 
and so from that third I choose the best that is offered by the most civil…and you simply don’t make the cut.
Or, what could also be true is that you don’t respond is because you can’t refute the irrefutable arguments proposed by Catholics here on this thread.

For example, your comment made about 300 men discussing the Trinity led to the comment that these men were, undoubtedly and historically documented, bishops. No response from you because it clearly demonstrates that this was the Catholic Church which was in existence at the time.
 
How about my post concerning the Eucharist…I am anxious to see what you have to say in regards to that one…
here’s the thing tqualey…I post at a rate of a little over a post/day. It seems that every day the Catholic faithful here post about a dozen or so posts that either are a response to something that I have said, or comment on me in some fashion. About a third of those posts amount to “the Catholic Church is right and so you are wrong”. They don’t merit a response. Another third consists of Catholics congratulating each other on what a grand job they are doing in proving that the CC is always right. They don’t deserve a response. The remaining third may contain something of substance that is worthwhile (from my perspective) …and so from that third I choose the best that is offered by the most civil…and you simply don’t make the cut.
 
Hi, Rainman10,

I had no idea the non-responses would be so quick.

What is so amazing to me is that if they even thought they had something of substance - they would have responded with it. As it turns out - we have two non-responses and one with an insult about not making his ‘cut’.

The nice thing about these written dialogues is that they form of history. Every post is available for review and assessment. Literally, the posts on this thread really do speak for themselves. 🙂

God bless
Radical or any Protestant:
Please respond to the post above.
 
Hi, RedDawgMCM,

Buck up old boy… I guess… you didn’t make ‘the cut’, either! 😃

Do you think we are now eligible for ‘free agent status’?!!! 👍

God bless - just don’t hold your breath waiting for anything of substance. These guys are fumbling around with the concept of ‘bishop’ - no way can they handle anything like the Eucharist - except the Catholic Church misunderstood Christ and Paul for 1,500 years! :rolleyes:

God bless
How about my post concerning the Eucharist…I am anxious to see what you have to say in regards to that one…
 
Hello, we are all on the right track. heres a good one to tell non caths. I love to meet them ( jw’s)in front of my local donut shop in the mornings. I first talk friendly to them and dialogue it up . They then ask what church I belong to and I reply ““THE CHURCH OF PETER””…some get it right away and say ‘oh catholic huh?’’ while others that dont know history will just ‘blank stare’’…Amen!!!

Hit them with matt. 16: 18 that will start the church answer .
 
Hi, Packaroo,

Wecome to CAF! 🙂

It sounds like you have a winning way with the local JWs … 😃 Keep up the good work - but, do be careful … you are in dangerous location - :eek: a donough shop! If I hung out there on a regular basis … I’d need a special door just to get in and out! 😃

Keep up your mission to these sincerely mislead souls - I have been only approached ones by them - and I was in a real hurry at the time … so, I brushed them off the driveway as I thanked them for their time. Probably another missed opportunity on my part.

Again, welcome to CAF - and feel free to engage our slippery Protestants on this thread. As it stands now, we are either ignored (well, me and another guy…) or here are these truly tedious responses that simply fail to even acknowledge the question that is written to them! It sort of makes you wonder why these guys continue to post when they do such a consistently poor job at evading, besides non-responding! 🤷

Have a great day

God bless
Hello, we are all on the right track. heres a good one to tell non caths. I love to meet them ( jw’s)in front of my local donut shop in the mornings. I first talk friendly to them and dialogue it up . They then ask what church I belong to and I reply ““THE CHURCH OF PETER””…some get it right away and say ‘oh catholic huh?’’ while others that dont know history will just ‘blank stare’’…Amen!!!

Hit them with matt. 16: 18 that will start the church answer .
 
yah, given the number of Oneness Pentecostals to the total number of Protestants…trinitarians would probably carry the vote by about the same margin at Nicaea 2011. Are you sure the beliefs of the bishops at Nicaea 325 didn’t span quite a spectrum?

Do you think the 4 gospels or the Pauline epistles weren’t recognized and used as scriptures until some council made an official declaration?

and that was the end of Arianism? nobody changed there mind? nobody watered down the decision of Nicaea? Everyone stuck to strick trinitarianism thereafter?

an authority? do you mean like an emperor who wanted to ensure unity of belief throughout his empire? …I don’t know about you, but I am kinda happy that the government no longer determines the religion of its citizens.

nope, you are not to take it that way…
*Your continuous vitriolic statements are making this thread very boring and unpleasant. Makes me want to switch off. I refer to all your posts. Not good.

Most people enjoy an honest and intelligent exchange with people who do not believe as they do but it must* be honest and it must be intelligent.
🤷🤷
 
u appear to be shy of using the word “bishop” here? Why?
b/c today, “bishop” carries a lot of baggage with it…overseer doesn’t have all that history…
Your answer includes a ministerial duty for the overseer doesn’t it?
yes
That overseer is entitled to the label priest according to the royal priesthood mentioned by Peter…
well, on that basis, every christian is then entitled to the label of “priest”
.
The catholic priest does not offer on our behalf independent of us as if we have nothing to do with it…
well that is just it, we are all of the same priest hood and there is no need for a catholic priest to offer anything on any one’s (other priest’s) behalf…independent or no.
…i welcolme correction by other Catholics here.
be careful of what you ask for here 😉
re rom15:16 do you consider yourself ,as part of the royal priesthood, to have an effect on the validity of the offering of the Gentiles?
first off, I think the NIV is the better translation. It reads: *…to be a minister of Christ Jesus to the Gentiles with the priestly duty of proclaiming the gospel of God, so that the Gentiles might become an offering acceptable to God, sanctified by the Holy Spirit. *
a few things WRT to that verse:

a) we are to live **godly{/b] lives…but we are not to become actual gods. The use of “priestly” doesn’t make the doer an actual priest

b) we are all to proclaim the gospel, so we all share in that priestly duty…we are all part of the priesthood and so in that sense we are all “priests” (clergy no more so than the laity).

c)the absense of the NT and the ECFs (to the end of the 2nd century) designating any particular individual or group of ministers within the Church as a “priest” contrasts dramatically with what proceeded and what followed.

d) this priestly duty, the only one identified for the Church, has nothing to do with the Eucharist…

e) the one specified to possess the priestly duty is an apostle…not an overseer or a bishop. The proclamation is accompanied by signs and wonders (v. 19), so if one wants to assert that the priestly duty contemplated by v. 16 belongs to a priestly office w/i the Church, then I would suggest that the office holder better have the verifying signs and wonders.
I agree that we r required to proclaim the gospel , but it appears a little different in that verse, something about it appeals to something of a more ministerial role of an overseer, don t you agree?
no, for the reasons stated

all the best**
 
for those following along…I thought I would provide a nice quote further verifying what I have said about Peter and the founding of the Roman Church. I am, however, too lazy to type it myself and so “googled” a bit of the quote with the hope that I could find it on the web for copying and pasting purposes. Low and behold I found the quote on this thread from late 2008 where Snow was good enough to do my typing for me. The quote is this:
“That Peter founded the Church in Rome is extremely doubtful and that he served as it’s first bishop (as we understand the term today) for even a year, much less the twenty-five-year period that is claimed for him, is an unfounded tradition that can be traced back to a point no earlier than the third century… The tradition is only vaguely discerned in Hegesippus and may be implied in the suspect letter of Dionysius of Corinth to the Romans (c. 170). By the third century, however, the early assumptions based upon invention or vague unfounded tradition have been transformed into “facts” or history. D. W. O’Conner, Peter in Rome, Columbia University Press, 1969, p207
The funny thing is that Guanophore even responded to the post…but he is still denying the consensus that was building back in 1969. Irish Polock will, no doubt, protest that the quote isn’t from the last 25 years, but then I could point out that Garry Wills repeated the quote with approval in 2000. I think Snow’s post merits repeating (given all the demands for more evidence that I have received on this thread)…so here is the rest of Snow’s summary:

*But for now, I’d like to post what I have run across in my studies about whether or not Peter was actually a monoepiscopal leader over the Church and Bishop of Rome.

He wasn’t - Catholic scholars agree:
  1. “Let’s see what St. Ireneaus has to say on the subject back in the second century between the period of 175-190 A.D.
Adversus Haereses (1:27:1):

“Credo was the one who took his system from the followers of Simon, and came to live in Rome at the time of Hyginus, who held the ninth place in the espiscopal succession from the Apostles downward.” note: 100 plus years after the fact

and
  1. An unquoted and un-cited and unquoted claim that Eusebius said that Peter was the 1st Bishops of Rome. (which would have been about 230 plus years after the fact.
I always enjoy the opportunity to add to my library and so a few trips to the bookstore and local library resulted in the following that indicate that I am far from alone in my assertion that the evidence for Peter as the first pope is lacking (and note that at minimum 5 of the historians below are Catholic - Cahill, McBrian, Duffy, Wills, Johnson, De Rosa - and a number of those were trained in the Catholic priesthood.)
  1. “Vatican propaganda notwithstanding, Peter was never the “bishop of Rome… The first man who can be designated “bishop of Rome” with historical certainty is Anicetus, who stands eleventh in the Vatican’s somewhat fanciful list of early “popes…” Thomas Cahill, Pope John XXIII, Penguin Books 2002, pp1-2
  2. Nothing is known of the length of his residence (in Rome): the story that it lasted 25 years is a 3rd century legend. Ignatius assumes that Peter and Paul wielded special authority over the Roman Church while Iraneus claimed they jointly founded it and inaugurated its succession of bishops. Nothing, however, is known of their constitutional roles, least of all of Peter as presumed leader of the community… In the late 2nd cent. the tradition identified Peter as first bishop of Rome.(J.N.D. Kelly, The Oxford Dictionary of Popes, Oxford University Press, 1986 p6-7)
  3. “The papcy was to claim that Peter was the first bishop of the church at Rome… No proof exists.” Brian Maynahan, The Faith - A History of Christianity, Doubleday, 2002, p41
  4. “(The first succession lists, however, identified Linus, not Peter, as the first Pope. Peter was not regarded as the first Bishop of Rome until the late second or early third century.)” and “St. Irenaeus of Lyons (d. ca. 200) assumes that Peter and Paul jointly founded the church of Rome and inaugurated it’s succession of bishops (Against Heresies 3.1.2: 3.3.3). However, there is no evidence that Peter actually served the church of Rome as its first bishop even though the “fact” is regularly taken for granted by a wide spectrum of Catholics… Indeed, there is no evidence that Rome even had a monoepiscopal form of ecclesiatiscal government until the middle of the second century.” Richard P. McBrien, Lives of the Popes, Harper Collins 1997, pp29-30
  5. “Nor can we assume, as Irenaeus did, that the Apostles established there (Rome) a succession of bishops to carry on their work in the city, for all the indications are that there is no single bishop at Rome for almost a century after the death of the apostles. In fact, wherever we turn, the solid outlines of Petrine succession at Rome seem to blur and dissolve.” Eamon Duffy, Saints and Sinner - A History of the Popes, Yale University Press 1997, pp1-2
  6. Peter and Paul, however, do not appear to have been monarchial bishops handing on office to their successors… The first bishop whose actions suggest monarchial status is Anicetus (c. 155-66).” Paul Johnson, The Papacy, Orion Publishing Group, 1998, p26 *
to be cont…
 
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