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No – the “teaching authority of the Church” is an authority given by Christ Himself !!!”
Not sure if we’re talking - past one another … FOR…
That Comes across as a strawman argument which attempts to sweep away what I’d said.
I never said that it wasn’t!
And Christ Granted Authority to Peter
who now could pass on said Authority - to, for exsmple, other Apostles and Bishops…
From which to build Jesus’ CHURCH …
emphasis on
Build.
FOR, JESUS SAID:
**And I tell you that you are Peter, and on this Rock I WILL BUILD MY CHURCH,
and the gates of Hades will not prevail against it.
I will give you the keys of the kingdom of heaven.
**Whatever you bind on earth will be bound in heaven,
and whatever you loose on earth will be loosed in heaven.”
From 33 AD through to about 100 AD - is the time of Sacred Apostolic Tradition.
That’s the timeframe of the Widespread Oral Transmission of Jesus’ Gospel
followed by including varying and also widespread written accounts
some of which never wound up being placed into the Canon of the Bible - circa 400 AD
i.e., - as we know of the New Testament from then to today.
It was From c. 100 AD that we find the very beginnings of the Magisterium
- via the Bishop successors of the Apostles.
The most basic foundation of the Magisterium, the apostolic succession of bishops and their authority as protectors of the faith, was one of the few points that was rarely debated by the Church Fathers. The doctrine was elaborated by Ignatius of Antioch (and others) in the face of Gnosticism, expounded by others such as Irenaeus, Tertullian, Cyprian, Ambrose, and Augustine, and by the end of the 2nd century AD was universally accepted by the bishops.