E
eddie_too
Guest
another point that might have relevance is that almost all of the current Christian traditions grew from the Church of Rome. the orthodox churches were in communion with rome until the middle of the eleventh century. the protestant reformers were leading members of Christian communities were in communion with rome until the time of their protests. their protests were not a constant element of the Church of Rome prior to the 16th century.
almost all current protestant churches came about as protests against an earlier protest.
in other words, the dogmas and traditions that prevailed during the earliest centuries of the church were held virtually unanimously until the eleventh century. have there always been remnants of nestorianism, Gnosticism, Arianism, etc. visible through all centuries since the Incarnation? I am not expert enough to answer that. however, even if these strains persisted down through the centuries, it is entirely erroneous to conclude that therefore no one has the true faith. that is itself a heresy because it requires that we believe that Jesus was either incapable of preserving His divine teachings for future generations; or that, Jesus did not want to preserve His divine teachings for future generations.
it is natural and expected that those who were in positions of leadership in the church that Jesus created with a magisterium would confront those teaching contrary to what they had received from the apostles. the fact that there was opposition to the teachings of Jesus as handed down by the apostles is not surprising. if Jesus had not recognized the true fallen nature of men, He would not have needed a Church much less a Church with a divinely ordained magisterium. we know Jesus is God and acted with divine power and authority. we would be foolish to pretend that what Jesus brought He did not also preserve until the end of the world because it diminishes the greatness of the Lord.
almost all current protestant churches came about as protests against an earlier protest.
in other words, the dogmas and traditions that prevailed during the earliest centuries of the church were held virtually unanimously until the eleventh century. have there always been remnants of nestorianism, Gnosticism, Arianism, etc. visible through all centuries since the Incarnation? I am not expert enough to answer that. however, even if these strains persisted down through the centuries, it is entirely erroneous to conclude that therefore no one has the true faith. that is itself a heresy because it requires that we believe that Jesus was either incapable of preserving His divine teachings for future generations; or that, Jesus did not want to preserve His divine teachings for future generations.
it is natural and expected that those who were in positions of leadership in the church that Jesus created with a magisterium would confront those teaching contrary to what they had received from the apostles. the fact that there was opposition to the teachings of Jesus as handed down by the apostles is not surprising. if Jesus had not recognized the true fallen nature of men, He would not have needed a Church much less a Church with a divinely ordained magisterium. we know Jesus is God and acted with divine power and authority. we would be foolish to pretend that what Jesus brought He did not also preserve until the end of the world because it diminishes the greatness of the Lord.