It only requires one to study Church History. if you have evidence of any other Chrisitan churchs that existed prior to the Great schism please post it. There simply were not any.
I didn’t say that other Christian churches existed prior to the Great schism. I am saying the churches that existed after the Great schism are not the continuations of the Church that existed before. That pre-schism Church is preserved now only in the invisible union that exists between members of the body of Christ that are willing to look beyond visible church membership and to see the one that yet remains in the body of Christ.
Again a reading of Church History shows that the Catholic Church is the same church it has been from the first century on. Read the writings of the Church fathers and you will see this is true.
You may read it that way, but I most certainly do not. In fact I think you are fooling yourself if you believe this to be true. It was exactly for this reason that I made my reference to Orwellian thinking.
They most certainly believed the Catholic Church was the Church founded by Christ , as did ALL Christians until the so called reformation occured. There was no concept of Christs Church being invisible until the 16th century .
The doctines /beliefs of Protestant denominations can not be found in Scripture, tradition or History.
Again that is what you choose to believe. Personally, I think you are greatly in error, and I think that if this is truly what is being taught in the Catholic church that it is teaching error and has been doing so ever since this heresy entered the thinking of the leadership in Rome in the years leading up to the Great Schism. You make me think of another story, the King who wore no clothes, only it would be the Catholic church who has dressed her self up in nothing and claimed it is the teaching of the ancient, truly catholic Church.
I know you will not accept this critique of mine. But you base your defense of so many beliefs in the idea that God would not allow his church to be in error for 1500 years. You misread the scriptures and you misunderstand yourself in thinking he was speaking of the Catholic church you imagine in your mind. He was indeed speaking of the very church you say was not even conceived of till the 16th century. It was conceived of years, centuries before by people like Peter, Paul, James, John, Silas, Barnabbas, Timothy, Apollus, Priscilla, Aquilla, Epaphroditus, Philemon, Onesimus, Demas, Demetrius and Luke. And after them by people like Clement, Ignatius, Irenaeus, Justin Martyr, and Polycarp.
But when Cyprian of Carthage said “outside the church there is no salvation”, he was wrong. It wasn’t the Holy Spirit or scripture that guided him to that conclusion. And while I don’t hold to Novatian’s intercessory view of the church, he was certainly right to stand against Cornelius in suggesting that a bishop could forgive sins for it assumes that the bishop can dictate the activity of the Spirit.
Or do you think that Cyprian was right? And was this same Cyprian right when he, like Iraneus, challenged the bishop of Rome when they thought him to be in error? This idea that the bishop of Rome was always the first among equals is another invention of the Catholic church that was unknown by the catholic Church. There is no conclusive evidence that the bishop of Rome ever exercised jurisdiction outside of Rome prior to the time of Constantine. Honor yes. Jurisdiction no. That the Catholic church today teaches otherwise is just another part of the Orwellian nature I was referring to earlier.
I believe that what Ignatius meant when he said that the Church was catholic was that though there were many congregations, each with their own bishop or presbyter, that wherever individual congregations might gather, they were not separate institutions but one in Christ. So, though there were many scatter congregations and though (despite what I expect you to claim) there was no central authority, it was still one Church because it all belonged to the one Christ. I submit that this is what we still have today. Though there are some that look to their own particular bishop or presbyter for governance of their local congreation(s), we still belong to the one Christ (thus there is no need for any other central authority) and this body of Christ represented by Orthodox and Roman and Coptic and various protestant congregations spread around the world (each with many different earthly leaders) is still one catholic Church in the sense that Ignatius first used the term. Any other interpretation is simply to move away from what Ignatius taught at the time.