J
joe370
Guest
If you are right and the CC is a man-made church, then you are right, however, I wholeheartedly believe that Jesus built the CC, and you have provided zero proof to the contrary.Anyone or anything can claim this (and all cults do - well one, the LDS, dropped this) but it’s the claim of one (self) for one (self), and obviously has nothing whatsoever to do with being correct. It ONLY has to do with one (self) exempting one (self) from accountability.
Jesus left the adoption of a name for His Church to those whom he commissioned to teach all nations. Christ called the spiritual society He established, “My Church” (Mt.18). Both St. Polycarp and St. Ignatius were identified as disciples of John, and they refered to Jesus’ church as Catholic, so it only stands to reason that John did too.
In order to have a distinction between the Church and the Synagogue and to have a distinguishing name from those embracing Judaic and Gnostic errors we find St. Ignatius (50-107 AD) using the Greek word “Katholicos” (universal) to describe the universality of the Church established by Christ. St. Ignatius was appointed Bishop of Antioch by St. Peter, the Bishop of Rome. It is in his writings that we find the word Catholic used for the first time. Around the year A.D. 107, a bishop, St. Ignatius of Antioch in the Near East, was arrested, brought to Rome by armed guards and eventually martyred there in the arena. In a farewell letter which this early bishop and martyr wrote to his fellow Christians in Smyrna, he made the first written mention in history of “the Catholic Church.” He wrote,
*“Where the bishop is present, there is the Catholic Church” (To the Smyrnaeans 8:2). *
Thus, the second century of Christianity had scarcely begun when the name of the Catholic Church was already in use.
St. Polycarp was martyred around 155, and the account of his sufferings dates back to that time, and in his final prayers before giving up his life for Christ, St. Polycarp
“remembered all who had met with him at any time, both small and great, both those with and those without renown, and the whole Catholic Church throughout the world.”
We know that St. Polycarp, at the time of his death in 155, had been a Christian for 86 years. He could not, therefore, have been born much later than 69 or 70. Yet it appears to have been a normal part of the vocabulary of a man of this era to be able to speak of “the whole Catholic Church throughout the world.”
The name had caught on, and no doubt for good reasons. The term “catholic” simply means “universal,” and when employing it in those early days, St. Ignatius of Antioch and St. Polycarp of Smyrna were referring to the Church that was already “everywhere,” as distinguished from whatever sects, schisms or splinter groups might have grown up here and there, in opposition to the Catholic Church.
The term was already understood even then to be an especially fitting name because the Catholic Church was for everyone, not just for adepts, enthusiasts or the specially initiated who might have been attracted to her.
St. Augustine, when speaking about the Church of Christ, calls it the Catholic Church 240 times in his writings.