Drywall wrote:
So what? I also use the term “Church” to refer to the 1st century Church…such usage doesn’t mean that I equate the Church of the first century with the Catholic Church(es) of the 4th, of the 16th or of the 21st centuries.
There was the Catholic Church and various heresies that developed even during the lifetime of the Apostles. There have been heresies throughout the history of Christianity. With which heresy(ies) do you identify?
Really? It is a better documented secular history that shows that American football has existed from the late 19th century to the present in an unbroken continuum…but nobody worth their salt claims that the present game is the same one that existed in 1890 or in 1904.
I know nothing about the American football. I became a Catholic through my years of study of the history of Christianity. I was an atheist at the time, interested in religion only as an intellectual inquiry.
There are plenty of university-trained, accredited, peer-reviewed historians that already agree with me…just b/c you label an innovation as a “development” so that you can claim a “continuum” doesn’t mean that you have achieved a legitimate continuity. The Pharisees could have labelled their additions to the law as developments of the seed laid down by Moses…an organic growth if you will. Such a claim, by itself, doesn’t make the “development” either good or something less than an innovation
You might find
The Founding of Christendom interesting. Written by Warren J. Carroll, Ph.D., who has advanced degrees from Harvard and Columbia, it is the first volume of a 6-volume history of Christianity. Dr. Carroll is a convert to the Church.
Also recommended is
How the Catholic Church Built Western Civilization by Thomas E. Woods, Ph.D., holder of four Ivy League degrees including an A.B. from Harvard and a Ph.D. from Columbia, also a convert to the Church as a result of his historical research. Did you know the Catholic Church invented the university? Provided the framework for the Scientific Revolution? And that a astrophysicist-priest proposed the Big Bang theory? That the “father” of geology, genetics, and many other sciences were Catholic priests? Dr. Woods documents the presence of the Church through the centuries.
Also consider reading the
History of the Church by Eusebius, written c. A.D. 324.
Originally posted by J Dandy: Protestantism is based on circular reasoning – proving the (incomplete) Bible by the Bible.
I understand why you ignored this.
isn’t that 5? In any event secular history ain’t that supportive,…it tends to see a lot of innovation. As to the rest, it appears to be entirely circular, with the required interpretation provided by the CC (so as to establish its own authority).
I counted “history” only once. The authority of the Church was established by her founder, Jesus Christ. To the Apostles, the leaders of His Church, He said: “Who hears you, hears me . . .” Luke 10:16; “… I will give you the keys to the kingdom of heaven, whatever you bind on earth will be bound in heaven . . .” Mt 16:18-19; “I will be with you
always, to the end of the world” Mt. 28:20; KJV; “…and he [the Father] will give you another advocate, to be with you
always, the Spirit of truth…” Jn 14:16; "The Advocate, the Holy Spirit, that the Father will send in my name, will teach you everything and remind you of all that I told you , . .Jn 14:26; “the powers of death will not prevail against it” [My Church] Mt 16:18-19; and more.
Jim Dandy