How does one measure the correctness of the successors? Based upon the fact that they were successors? There were beliefs held by the ECF that even the CC does not deny were unorthodox. The successors were imperfect. They were not without error. The best way I know of the measure their correctness is to measure them against the most ancient records of the Apostles as recorded in Scripture. I don’t trust it b/c it can’t doesn’t stand against that doctrine given to us by the authoritative Apostles, as recorded in Scripture.
Recorded in Scripture? You seem to forget that there are extra-Biblical sources that claim to have been written by the very Apostles themselves.
And these books
completely and utterly oppose the texts we have in the Bible. The Gospel texts we have were written by two Apostles (St. Matthew and St. John) and two hearers (St. Luke and St. Mark); there is also a gospel of St. Peter, but this book very much opposes what is written.
So my question to you is
how do you know which books belong, and don’t belong, in Scripture?
Oh, that’s right, you
couldn’t know. Instead, you rely on the very same early Church fathers, and the ecumenical councils that they participated in, that you so desperately don’t want to trust.
Again, what measure will you use to determine it’s correctness? You seem to be basing your faith in the doctrine on the fact that it came soon after the Apostles by those who succeeded them. Succession does not equal correctness. One has only to look to some of the many examples throughout the Bible to see how quickly man falls away from the truth. It is an assumption to hold to successorship as being the God-ordained method of preserving the truth. No doubt there have always been some that have maintained the truth throughout history, but the only way to test who those people were is to measure their beliefs against the original, and the writings of the ECF, although valuable and ancient, are not the most original.
No, Apostolic successorship is
the method of preserving truth as handed down by the Apostles. Since you probably have yet to read Timothy:
Command and teach these things.
1 Timothy 4:11
O Timothy, guard what has been entrusted to you
1 Timothy 6:20
So you, my child, be strong in the grace that is in Christ Jesus. And what you heard from me through many witnesses entrust to faithful people who will have the ability to teach others as well.
2 Timothy 2:1-2
I charge you in the presence of God and of Christ Jesus, who will judge the living and the dead, and by his appearing and his kingly power: proclaim the word; be persistent whether it is convenient or inconvenient; convince, reprimand, encourage through all patience and teaching.
2 Timothy 4:1-2
Even now, many Protestant brothers and sisters understand that there is something authentic to Apostolic succession.
They now only dispute who has it. The Catholic Church contends, by the length of her teaching and the
complete soundness of doctrine with the teachings of the Apostles, that
this is the true Church established by Christ, entrusted to men whom the Holy Spirit would lead until Christ’s glorious return.
The fact that
you don’t trust it bears nothing on it as truth, which it rightly is.
Yes, some early Church fathers
did err in some teaching and doctrine. St. Augustine had the same idea of “double predestination” as Calvin; Tertullian joined a breakaway sect later in life because he admired their work ethic, and indeed, the list goes on.
Yet the teachings we
do accept from them was
paradosis that the Church was already handed to the Apostles by Christ. For instance, St. Augustine taught very well on the Trinity, insisting - as the universal, Catholic Church always has - that the Father eternally begets the Son
from love since He is love, and that this love is made manifest in the other Person of the Holy Trinity, the Holy Spirit.
Just as in the Nicene creed from before St. Augustine’s time: “eternally begotten of the Father”, and on the Holy Spirit, “proceeds from the Father and the Son”. St. Augustine’s teachings don’t go
against anything there, do they? No, in fact, they seem to deepen our very meager human appreciation of the Mystery that is God as the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit.
When it comes right down to it, we cannot trust individuals. Yet when these individuals are in doctrinal unity with the rest of the Church - and were very rarely refuted - then you really have to go out on a very long, very thin limb to neglect everything, without prejudice, that they taught.
Faith is not opposed to reason. Don’t be silly and just ignore the history of the matter; God has revealed Himself in the history of the Jews, and so too does He reveal Himself in the history of the Church He has instituted for the salvation of mankind.
Moses submitted to God too, as did Jonah and others, and although we hold them in high esteem and look to them as examples of obedience and faith, we do not give them the same place Catholics do Mary.
Indeed we do not. We honor the faith of the Patriarchs and Jewish leaders because theirs was a foreshadowing of things to come. They worked in anticipation of something that they couldn’t quite understand, just as the Blessed Mother did.
Yet the fruit of their womb was not Our Lord and Savior, in full divinity and full humanity; they did not birth the Redeemer who would be counted among sinners in order to fulfill God’s covenant with mankind, the covenant of love.
The obedience of Mary as the Mother of God has tied her
intimately with the human race, just as Eve did. Both their actions determined the fate of humanity: Eve’s choice bound us to death, Mary’s loosed us.