Protestants: The 1500 yrs

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To all your questions, no one knows. But all (fragmentary) evidence suggests it came from Britain to Ireland. Point is, St. Columba is not the origin in Britain.

GKC
I hear you GKC

It can be traced, but the point remains, you still need to be in full communion with Rome. Once you can accomplish this you the are part of Christs Church. Once you acheive this and can rise to the level of Arch Bishop, Cardinal etc, then you have the authority to attend the conclave.

When you can achieve election their. Then you are in Peters Chair which is the chair that runs the Church Jesus Christ assigned to Peter and is elected through the power of the Holy Spirit. And that would be the only church on Earth with authority from Jesus Christ

If you didn’t do this? Then your either in schism or heresy. And thats exactly how the CCC, and the Dogma and Doctrine of the Church define it.

God Bless, Gary
 
And all that is beside the point. As I said before, that may explain the deeds, the foibles and what happened but it does not excuse what happened. It does not make it right.

GKC tries to downplay this as being a small change when it is not, because as we have seen, there was potential for a big change which did eventuate.

What we are trying to establish here is whether the Anglican Church can rightly claim to be a branch of Catholicism or not. And from everything that we have seen, it is not.

So therefore we are still left with this: the Anglican Church was illegally constituted.

We are not here arguing about what you have written about.

You can write as much explanation for what happened but it still does not justify what happened. GKC has said as much.

While everything you and GKC have written have been enlightening from the point of history, it still does not in anyway prove that:


  1. *]King Henry was right in what he did;
    *]The king was rightly the head of the Church;
    *]The Church of England is a branch of the Catholic Church.

    And if it failed to prove all those then the Anglican Church is not the English branch of the Catholic Church, one that has been illegally established.

    As for being closer to the Catholic Church, which part of Anglicanism? There are many variants. My friend belongs to a totally liberal branch one would think he is in a evangelical revivalist one.

    It is interesting too, that the Anglican Church was the first one to approve artificial contraception.

  1. As I have said before. It is not that Henry was right. It was that the society was going to change. The relationship between the state and the Church as it was in that day, was ending. Henry was only the occasion. GKC doesn’t downplay the change. He says it was as small a change as the then current, and emerging, concepts of sovereign and nation state would allow.

    Lots of sorts of Anglicans out there, true. Part closest to the RCC is found amongst those doctrinally known as Anglo-Catholics (and there are those properly known as Anglo-Papalists. Not many of the truly orthodox, doctrinally, found in the official Anglican Communion, but some bright spots here and there.

    GKC
 
Hi, Gurneyhalleck1

Maybe it is just me having trouble following your train of thought. In prior posts you were basically saying that Henry’s break with the Catholic Church was not such a big deal - no where near the significance of Edward or Elizabeth much later. Maybe an analogy would be helpful here: If an automobile was parked on a hill with the break engaged and the driver in place so that it is not moving we do not have a dangerous situation. A guy named Henry throws the driver out and disengages the break and now the car is quickly rolling down the hill. If I understand your argument correctly, the claim is that the engine and the transmission and radio were not touched so everything is just fine… but, the car is about to crash! :eek::eek: When the accident investigation team arrive and look for why the car crashed - one could say that there was an annoying driver (the one Henry threw out) or the owner’s manual was not being followed or there was a crack in the windshield - or anything thing other than: Henry threw out the driver and released the break! Henry’s actions are the proximate and direct cause for the wreck.

To try and claim that it did not crash on Henry’s watch requires that we overlook the murder of thousands, the total disregard for the conscience of everyone under Henry’s control, and the theft of Church property. It all happened and can not be ignored. Yes, Edward and Elizabeth put their own marks on this wreck - but, they would have never been in such a position if it were not for Henry.

Now, there really isn’t an argument that the revolt from the Catholic Church probably was singularly instrumental in the ultimate development of the nation state. But, that appears a bit remote from this topic… don’t you think?

God bless
Nobody to my knowledge in here has argued that? Edward and Liz made big changes to the Church, some for better, several for the worse. But I think GKC makes an important point, and that is the rise of nation-states. Europe was growing away from the Medievel model of monarchs and papal legates dictating to secular powers how things have to be. If Europe was ever going to emerge from the Dark Ages and toward democracy, the Catholic Church must be ejected from the equation. The Reformation laid the ground work for the rise of nations and political changes. As GKC pointed out, this was destined to happen anyway and the landscape changes necessitated that the pope’s role change or that he be taken out of the picture completely. Arguably England did the best in the Reformation. At least they retained episcopacy, even though you consider it illegitimate. They maintained sacramental theology, anglo-catholicism in some parts, a strong theological tradition yielding men like Thomas Hooker and Lancelot Andrewes, and they didn’t go to the extremes of Calvinism or other groups. To this day, despite the liberalism in some quarters, Anglicanism is closer to Catholicism than other churches for the most part, and many greatly respect it. England could’ve done worse…

Personally I don’t like the idea of ANY politician being the head of the Church. I can’t fathom Obama, Bush, Regan, Clinton, and the gang leading an American Church. Terrifying notion. But I understand that those times necessitated a change toward nationhood and that the pope’s intriguing with the Holy Roman Empire and refusing Henry’s declaration of nullity request was very, very, very foolish on the pope’s part. It ended up biting him in the hiney and causing great strife. He had granted nullity decrees to other monarchs for much less in the past. Ask GKC. He has a zillion examples! 😛

History is complicated…so I’ve been told 😊
 
“The English Church said quite clearly in Henry’s first move, We acknowledge H.M to be the singular protector and supreme lord and so far as the LAW of.Christ Allows, supreme head of the English Church… (1531 AD.) Later on it was renewed, but Henry had already stated the intention was not to claim that the intent of the words to give the Crown authority ,“to see that the spiritual authority discharged its functions for the good order and peace of society” (His. of the Church in England.(O.Wakeman”

“renewed” = removed (typo).

H. O. Wakeman.

GKC
 
=benedictu]Which part of this are you not getting?
Whether Augustine or Saint Columba, both were united to Rome. Read that slowly to get that.[/quotes]
**Again you have proved nothing!
If S.Columba was,’ united,’ to Rome,’ what does that mean? The pope’s heresy didn’t come about till years after. To be in communion with him didn’t signfy acceptance of his heretical beliefs.
That discussion went on for some 800 years. **
It is not a choice of BBC or S Dorotheus but between BBC or you.
You are claiming that it was from St Dorotheus of Tyre but you have not given us any proof of that. I did a quick google and I am assuming you are referring to “the Synopsis” but that claim regarding that on the Synopsis is in conflict with two other traditions.
If you read the posts aright you would see that I have already given the source as the Synopsis as well as the Orthodox Church historians! Regarding the other two’.traditions,'did they deny the early provenance of the Church in Britain? There are certainly other Traditions, Peter, S.Joseph of Arimathea and of course S.Paul. All interesting, the point at discussion is the early presence and you again have failed to convince anyone of your statements about Rome. No matter who brought Christianity to Britain, it came early and it was a Catholic understanding of the faith and the Catholic Faith, then and now, doesn’t include Rome’s pretensions as to authority.

I have already quoted Dinneen, the Monk of Bangor’s statement given by the British Bishops to Augustine. You don’t appear to have read it?
To be deep in history is to cease to be a Protestant.
And I thank you for it, how-and-ever! The important thing is the statements from early Catholic history through e comments of Vincent of Lerins and right down the Archbishop Bramhall in the 17th, Cent, shows the inclination of the Catholic Church. Your own Church sets the parameters for you and your friends when you are told to look at Scripture and Tradition through the Early Fathers!!!
So what if they were in Nicea? The question is were they in communion with Rome. If so then the foundation in Britain is definitely Roman, i.e. Western, i.e. in communion with Rome. So when they were in Nicea they were in union with the Pope.I would if you can come up with something more credible.
Again you lack of history, other than a quick glance at the latest Vatican hand out proves nothing!

Regrettable as it might seem to be out of Communion with Rome is neither here nor there. Large swathes of the East were out of Communion with Rome and no one bothered. At the horrendus quarrels in the third and fourth Cent, large swathes of the east were out of communion with Rome, at one time the pope excommunicated practically the whole African Church and many others, only to be told by his friends, that all he was doing was isolating himself. At the moment he is out of Communion with the Orthodox Church as well as the Oriental orthtodox Churches and the Anglicans!
 
=GaryTaylor;7923031.

Which Conclave did Henry attend in the Catholic Church? I can’t re-call in history his election at any conclave?
neither can I. Perhaps he took a leaf out of the papal history books and elected himself!

Mind you! A better reply would be to point out that no Pope ever attended any Ecumenical Council! In the east and amongst the orthodox they were known as the Imperial Councils.
 
benedictusAnd what has that got to do with your acknowledgement that the Anglican Church was illegally constituted? [/quote said:
**According to Wikipedia:?

I’ve always said there are two sources that I do not accept,
!. First is Foxes Book of Martyrs!
2. The Vatican Publishing.
I should have added another Wikipedia. They are rubbish fed by idiots.
**
Christianity had first arrived in the British Isles around 200 AD during the Roman Empire. (Archbishop Restitutus and others are known to have attended the council of Arles in 314.) Christianity developed roots in Sub-Roman Britain and later Ireland, Scotland and Pictland. The Anglo-Saxons (Germanic pagans who progressively seized British territory) during the 5th, 6th and 7th centuries established a small number of kingdoms and evangelization was carried out by the successors of the Gregorian mission and by Celtic missionaries from Scotland
**What are you telling us, but that Christianity was apparent in Britain at an early age! What have we said that is different?
Incidentally, british and American historians, or some of them, now doubt the Celtic. Saxon War, and appear to rather believe in a political take over!
The BBC, has put out several programmes with responsible archeologists adding weight to the arguments.
**
If the bishops were rightfully successors of the apostles through the office of bishop, then it follows that the successor of Peter who you acknowledge to be prime apostle is also the prime bishop of all the succeeding bishops. Get that?
No it doesn’t!
 
=GaryTaylor
No a better reply would be that since most Christians fall off at the 7th ecumenical council, then there is 14 that they have totally missed:shrug:
:
They are recognised only by Rome, that’s their status. Recognised by a Catholic Sect and ignored patently by the Catholic Church!
 
I’m not so sure that’s the point GKC is trying to make. The Anglicans believe they are part of the one, holy, catholic, apostolic, universal church to which all churches with apostolic succession belongs. The “branch” theory you’re mentioning here, that you’re attributing to GKC’s line of argument, pretty much died out as a theory in the 19th century with the Tractarians/Oxford Movement and has remained a theory amongst a minority.

The problem I see with your line of thinking is that everything you judge in Anglicanism comes from papal thinking. If the Church accepts contraception, if it isn’t 100% in line with the pope, etc. then it’s not “catholic.” Problem is, the Anglicans measure catholicity differently from your measuring stick. The Orthodox do as well! 😉 Speaking of that, I’m off to an Orthodox Divine Liturgy right now. I have to split.

Blessings.
And all that is beside the point. As I said before, that may explain the deeds, the foibles and what happened but it does not excuse what happened. It does not make it right.

GKC tries to downplay this as being a small change when it is not, because as we have seen, there was potential for a big change which did eventuate.

What we are trying to establish here is whether the Anglican Church can rightly claim to be a branch of Catholicism or not. And from everything that we have seen, it is not.

So therefore we are still left with this: the Anglican Church was illegally constituted.

We are not here arguing about what you have written about.

You can write as much explanation for what happened but it still does not justify what happened. GKC has said as much.

While everything you and GKC have written have been enlightening from the point of history, it still does not in anyway prove that:


  1. *]King Henry was right in what he did;
    *]The king was rightly the head of the Church;
    *]The Church of England is a branch of the Catholic Church.

    And if it failed to prove all those then the Anglican Church is not the English branch of the Catholic Church, one that has been illegally established.

    As for being closer to the Catholic Church, which part of Anglicanism? There are many variants. My friend belongs to a totally liberal branch one would think he is in a evangelical revivalist one.

    It is interesting too, that the Anglican Church was the first one to approve artificial contraception.
 
To my Protestant friends, I wish I had a better understanding of Protestant thought on this so can you help me? As we know the 1st 1500 yrs are often brought up by Catholics. The East-West 1054 Schism aside, they maintain that sure while there may have been heretical beliefs exisiting among groups, there was one universal Church founded by Christ, existing with the beliefs that we know as Catholic beliefs. Even if some of those beliefs took time to develop into definition. And if Catholic teachings needed reformed, they ask, why did it take Christ 1500 yrs? I asked a Protestant friend of mine and she said my question made absolutely no sense to her.
The reformation took place when it was recognized that reformation was needed, and it began before Luther and the big brouhaha.
 
Code:
 Sorry I can't oblige with your request, as you have probably noticed I am not at my scintillating best owing to an accident, that while it isn't life threatening is incapacitating.
For some days now it (the pain,) has been receding and I am able to sit at my computer desk for no more than Five minutes!
Oh! I thought you were just constitutionall irascible :eek:

I will pray for your recovery, physically, as well as spiritually. What a great tribute to CAF, that you would spent your only few minutes with us! 😃

I gather from this that these issues are of great importance to you, to be willing to invest your lmiited energies in addressing them. 👍

I am sorry I have not caught up with the thread, so if someone has already responded to the posts please forgive me.
The quote I gave was from the TraditionalCatholic.net .Prayer . It is labelled, or headed
Tridentine Creed and is distributed in the next County to returnees to the Holy Roman Church and those other people who need a reminder of what the Roman Doctrine is!

"I…admit and embrace Apostolical and ecclesiastical traditions …"

"I also admit the Holy Scripture according to that sense which our holy mother the Church hath held… Neither will I ever take and interpret them otherwise than according to the unanimous consent of the fathers."

If the False Creed be interpreted as Trent and the Romans apparently intended the arguments put forward to support the Vatican interpretation would never have got to court!
Perhaps you can help us understand why these passages bother you?

Where do you see the "false"hood?

Your last sentence I cannot understand at all. I am not sure what you mean by “Vatican interpreteation”. Are you talking about the Scriptures? Do you think there is such a thing as this?

You do seem to have been influenced by many anti-Catholic sources. have you considered that what you were given to believe is not right?
 
I could not tell whose quote this is! If I have misapplied it’s origin, please forgive me, and correct me.
For once, I find your comments interesting and I appreciate your kindness in qualifying the ECF as the Catholic Fathers. I did know, but thanks anyway! For the First thousand years
as I have been told, there were only Catholic Fathers it was only after Rome became a Catholic Sect ,after Trent, that it became necessary to differentiate between Catholic and Roman.
Can you say some more about how “Rome became a Catholic Sect” and the nature of the sectarianism?
The use of the term, Catholic , is subject to great misuse by the Roman Apologists on this board and it stems from the decree of Trent that the name of the papal Church was the ,‘Holy Roman’ Church! (para 1. Tridentine Creed!
I fear that you have lost me here. Do you think there is another Papal Church that is headquartered somewhere besides Rome?

I think of Catholic as the Church united with the successor of Peter. It so happens that Peter was martyred in Rome, and that the Church in Rome was the greatest depository of Apostolic Teaching, owing to the labors of both Peter and Paul there. I think it was unfortunate that the secular authority was passed to the successor of Peter in Rome when the Empire migrated to Byzantium. This conflation of spiritual and secular authority was the unfortunate seed of the Reformation.
Now as for the writers, or their writings being anti-catholic, how would you know, have you read them? In fact the writers, all three of them, are, or were in their time, acclaimed scholars who ran rings with their scholarship, around the Romanist opposition and I would ask you to point out the criteria you use to make judgements on them?!
The titles of the books were sufficient for me. The use of derogatory terms on the cover would seem to speak to the nature of the contents, don’t you think? I have read quite a bit of anti-Roman writings, and that is one of the cues I use.

And, really, if you are going to make a claim about the ECF (and, that would be the Early Catholic Chruch Fathers) then quote them instead of anti-Catholic material that shows its bias in their titles!

sounds like you have an issue or two about Trent. Fine. Don’t be vague, please - state what is the problem - and how Trent taught new material not convered from previous Catholic Church Councils.
 
I don’t know. Sure I know the Catholic faith’s interpretation. 👍 But I also know my front door key binds my lock and loosens it. And I also know others were given a binding/loosening power too. My key though if it were to get bent out of shape might not work properly. And then to bind and loosen my door I’d might need to get a replacement. 🙂
What you are saying, CM, is that Jesus was unwilling or unable to keep HIs promises to lead the Church into “all Truth.”. This position requires that the frailties/ “bent” ness of human beings are stronger than the grace of God, so that God, in His weakness, was unable to make those He placed as shepherds to stand.

Rom 14:4
4 Who are you to pass judgment on the servant of another? It is before his own master that he stands or falls. And he will be upheld, for the Master is able to make him stand.

You are repudiating the teaching of the Apostle here, since you are saying that the master was unable to make the successors of Peter stand.

And setting aside the human element here, your position requires that what is given by God is actually mutable by frail humans. The Key, which comes to Peter from God Himself, is able to be “bent” by Peter misusing it. The gift of God, then, is corruptible.

And lastly, that if the successor of Peter was able to corrupt that which comes from God, God is unable to “unbend” that which became useless to open the door. He had to find a “replacement” key.

Indeed, replacment of keys is usually done by duplicating, but if the original is bend so as to be useless, then the lock itself must be re-keyed. In fact, the Reformation went way beyond the formation of a new key, but replaced the lock all together. The doctrines were changed, so much so that it can be undestood as a different door.

I think your analagy, though it may suit your personal proclivities to reject the Roman faith, contains many difficulties.
 
I’m not so sure that’s the point GKC is trying to make. The Anglicans believe they are part of the one, holy, catholic, apostolic, universal church to which all churches with apostolic succession belongs. The “branch” theory you’re mentioning here, that you’re attributing to GKC’s line of argument, pretty much died out as a theory in the 19th century with the Tractarians/Oxford Movement and has remained a theory amongst a minority.

The problem I see with your line of thinking is that everything you judge in Anglicanism comes from papal thinking. If the Church accepts contraception, if it isn’t 100% in line with the pope, etc. then it’s not “catholic.” Problem is, the Anglicans measure catholicity differently from your measuring stick. The Orthodox do as well! 😉 Speaking of that, I’m off to an Orthodox Divine Liturgy right now. I have to split.

Blessings.
Yep.

And let us know how things stand, at the DL.

GKC
 
Martin Luther never want to leave the Catholic Church, the Catholic excommunicated Martin Luther.
I think this is true. I think Luther wanted the CC to accept his theology, rather than what was handed down to them from the Apostles. This could not be done because the Church is obligated to preserve the Sacred Tradition, and does not have the liberty to depart from the once for all deposit of faith that was placed in her. When Luther chose to cling to his own ideas over and above those that came from the Apostolic faith, he excommunicated himself. As he said, he could not do otherwise (“here I stand”).
The Catholic Church put a price on Luther"s head and would have killed him as it did other reformers in the past.
Do you have any evidence to support this claim?

The Catholic Church is the Church is headed by Christ, and therefore, does not have the authority to kill anyone. However I will concede that many Catholics have erroneously believed that killing heretics is appropriate. What Paul meant by “delivering to Satan” was the excommunication. Paul believed that only within the protection of the Church was a soul safe from the ravages of Satan, therefore, putting someone out of communion was the same as delivering them to the devil.
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Luther was prepared to go to a church council if one was called to discuss his concerns. When the Catholic Church did call Trent, Lutherans were not allowed to attend.
Church councils are for those who are in the Church. Had Luther remained obedient to his bishop, perhaps things may have gone better. One would hope so. If you look at the history of the Christian Church, heretics have never been invited to Church councils. 🤷

There is no doubt that Luther’s concerns needed to be addressed. They were not his concerns only, but those of the whole of European Latin Catholicism.
Code:
Read our Augsburg Confession and Apology of the Augsburg Confession and then tell me where the Lutherans are wrong.:shrug::signofcross:
I am happy to do this, but I think we should probably start a new thread.
 
If Luther would have left it go and back down, recanted, said he was wrong, would anything had changed? The church would have gone on selling indulgences, selling bishoprics, having uneducated priests and having corruption. 🤷
What you are saying is that God is unable to reform those he has placed in authority without disobedience and heresy. Does that make any practical sense? The Church has never been purified by those who leave her, but always by those who are willing to give their lives for her. In the early days, it was martrys sacrificed by Pagan Rome. The Church is purified by the blood of martyrs. I don’t doubt that bloodshe would have happened. The wolves, being predators, after their nature will ravage the flock.

Separating oneself from the flock, though, only bears the fruit of scattering and fragmentation.

Prayer and fasting are much better spiritual tools to combat evil.
 
The Lutherans and traditional Catholics at the time of the English Reformation used to confound their papist opponents with the cry of, “Where was your Church before Trent.” ( Bishop Hickes 's Reply. 1713. )
If this is a reference to the despicable state of conflation of temporal power with spiritual, then I guess I am following you. If not, then it is a very narrow minded conception. Although the Latins had troubles in Europe, the other 21 Rites of the Catholic Church scattered throughout the world did not suffer these difficulties. In order for one to actually be “confounded”, one would have to be able to also say that the other 21 Catholic Rites were as out of order as the Latin at that time. I have never seen this to be shown.
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In fact the Council was called by the pope as an attempt to call halt to the inroads of both Lutherans and Calvinists in Europe and was classified as a,'General Council,".
But in fact it was a factional Council, being called by a section of the Catholic Church that was already embattled by dissension with the Eastern Church and the Catholic Church in England.
Trent was also lacking in representation from Eastern Catholics. This may be because the problems that existed in Europe at the time were not experienced by Eastern Churches, because there was no conflation of polity with spiritual power.
The pope supplied the organisers, the officials;it was called in a place controlled by the Emperor of Germany a servant and abetter of the popes aspirations to be dictator and no one was allowed to attend unless by permission of the pope.
I guess I can’t see how this is problematic in itself. This has been the case since the first council of Nicea in 325. 🤷

Given the climate, none of the bishops would have been willing to attend had Constantine not guaranteed their safety. Even then, some believed they were going to their martyrdom, but felt obligated to go.
He sent out the invites to a selected few and when he failed to gain enough support from the Church in Europe put pressure on the traditional followers of Rome throughout Italy.
I think we would agree that the majority of Europe was outside of Catholic faith at the time. Of course the council was to include those who clung to the Apostolic faith, however few they may be. Heretics and apostates have never been invited to Church councils. This was the major problem with Luther excommunicating himself. He lost the right to attend or address a gathering of the faithful.
He invited Anglican Bishops , but they were prevented by the State from attending even if they wanted to do so.
I think this political situaiton is also not confined to Trent, but has been an issue throughout Christian history. The political climate has always made the work of the Church challenging.
The main reason it took 300 years to hold the first ecumencal council was the threat of annihilation from political sources.
Code:
Once their they were not even able to formulate an agenda, this was produced by the pope's creatures and revealed piecemeal as necessary!
You had asked how we know that your sources are anti-catholic, and this is a good example. Here the author refers to the servants of the successor of Peter as “pope’s creatures” - a “creatures” was a term that was used to refer to evil demons.
The result was, the medieval innovations complained about by the dissidents were accepted by the papal followers
Do you know what these were?

I am not aware that there were any “medieval innovations”, so I am eager to learn about them.
Even so , it is estimated that at the early sessions, at least a third of the bishops supported Lutheran ideas by their votes.( Kidd.The Counter Reformation.)
This is because they are not “Lutheran ideas” but part of the Apostolic faith. Luther did not jettison ALL of the One Faith that was handed down to us from the Apostles. It is clear from the Joint Declaration that a significant portion of the conflict resulted from people talking past each other, as people have a tendency to do.
At the end of the Council, the results were sent to Rome for the Pope’s agreement before being affirmed by the Council. This was an innovation of enormous consequence, the hitherto free bishops, the Magisterium, abandoning their responsibilities on to the shoulders of one man, or rather what was known in those days as the ,“Court of Rome.”.+
Is this “+” a reference to the fact that this quote came from a “dictionary”? if so, which one is it?

From the first council held in Jerusalem, the decisions have never been made in separation from the successors of the Apostles. If they were not present, the conciliar results were taken to them for ratification.

How does submitting the results to the successor of Peter equate to the Magesterium “abandoning their responsibilities”? Do you think the Council of of Rome under Gelasius “invalidated” the previous councils in Hippo and Carthage the formalized the canon of the NT? Frankly, the premise seems absurd to me. The bishops fulfilled their God given duties. The Successor of Peter added his consent to the work that was done.
 
then became a sect.
I am afraid you lost me here. Is he saying that the Roman Rite became a “sect” because the council of Trent sent the findings to the successor of Peter?

If that is true, why did not the Roman Rite become a “sect” when the results of the councils of Hippo and Carthage were sent to him in the late 300’s?
After Trent the guidance of the Church was assumed in an increasingly exclusive and direct fashion
+Dictionary
I can not understand why this would be problematic. It seems to me if this had been done sooner, the Reformation might have been avoided! It was rogue clerics, acting as wolves among the sheep, who corrupted the faithful in the first place.
A sect being a breakaway from parent organisation on a single principle. such as Baptism , or Calvinism.
In this case the breakaway was on the principle of authority in the Catholic Church, being Revelation, Scripture and Bishops in Council. (Seven Ecumenical Councils.)
I think the error in this view is that the successor of Peter is not separated from the Bishops in council. He does not act singularly, in isolation, or unilaterally. His decisions are always in concert with the Bishops in council, as he is one of them. One has to push him into a unilateral and capricious role that does not belong to him to support this view.
The guidance of the Church was assumed in an increasingly exclusive and direct fashion by the Bishop of Rome, through a series of structured reforms effectuated or brought to a completion in the decades immediately following the close of the Council.
This seems like it is intended as a complaint, rather than a compliment. Better late than never! If the Church guidance had been more forceful and direct from the beginning, Europe would not have been infested with faithless, uneducated, self serving clerics. It is a puzzle to me why anyone would complain about getting this corrected. :confused:
To emphasise their beliefs there was a change of name, the organisation became The Holy Roman Church . This according to the Tridentine Creed. (TraditionalCatholic.net.prayer.
This is just a blatant error. This title predated Trent by almost 1000 years. When the Emperor moved from Rome to Constantinople, the successor of Peter was given the title of “Pontiff”, and placed in control of secular matters. From my point of view, this was the beginning of the problems that resulted in the Reformation. During the middle ages, the Latin Church became separated from her Eastern members through war, politics, and economics. She seemed to be unaware of them, and took to referring to herself as the Holy Roman Church. All those lands supposedly Christianized and governed by her were called the Holy Roman Empire (governed by kings crowned by the pope). A simple peek into history will make clear that it is a false statement.
 
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