L
ltwin
Guest
Well, today, people can call themselves whatever they want and the civil authorities don’t really care. However, it is those who are in power who write history and give their own names to groups. Those who were in power chose to label themselves as the Catholic Church and denied other Christians the right to that name.While I enjoyed the read, and find the history quite fascinating, your interpolation that the reason why the Church is called Catholic being a historical accident, is plain well - silly. By the same token, shouldn’t every other group to this day be called “heretics”, since according to you this was decreed by Imperial might and no other reason?
Instead, dissenters were labeled heretics. Often, they were named for their heresiarchs. Thus, the Arians were named for Arius. Monantists were named for Montanism. And on and on it goes. Do you really think that Arians called themselves Arians? Or that Montanists called themselves Montanists? No. These labels were supplied by “Catholic” authors.
Yes, because all of these groups self-consciously maintain links to the undivided church of antiquity [the EO and the OO to the unified churches of the Eastern and Western Roman worlds; the Anglicans and Lutherans to the united medieval church of Western Europe].There are other groups who refer to themselves as Catholic, for example the Eastern Orthodox, Oriental Orthodox, Anglicans, Lutherans, and other groups who recognize historical Apostolic Christianity.
But you are making my point for me. Christians have called themselves catholic for a long time. Even civil authorities have regulated its usage at certain times and in certain places. And early on, the Roman Empire weighed in and put it’s considerable power behind the Christian factions that they supported. Those factions received recognition as the “Catholic” church. The Eastern Orthodox and Oriental Orthodox weren’t separated from the Western Church at the time, so they were all simply “Catholic.” By the sixteenth century, the Anglicans and Lutherans considered themselves simply a reformation of the ancient Catholic Church in their respective countries.
Because “Catholic” has become, in the minds of many people, associated with the Roman Catholic Church. Which was exactly the purpose of such measures as the Edict of Thessaolonica–to fix in the minds of people a clear demarcation between heresy and Catholicity; between legitimate church and unlawful conventicle. Of course, non-Catholic Christians continue to insist that they are catholic as well. However, as a label, “Catholic” is associated with the Roman Catholic Church and, thus, it’s not really an option for other churches.Why do many self-proclaimed non-Catholic groups shun themselves from the title/claim?
It could be, or it could just another variety of Christianity that has sprung forth out of the Christian diaspora.Why can’t all these be true and still be the Catholic Church as the Catholic Church claims?