The catholic church to which Ignatius belonged...?

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What if Ignatius (if he were transported through time) came to our towns and cities and used the metric of “loving God and loving their neighbor as themselves” to discern the faith community most like the church of his era.
I think that’s a very good point. Furthermore, what if St. Augustin appeared at Occupy Wall Street and declared that everyone should get free pizza? Or what if Aquinas ran for President in 2012? And just who, exactly, would win if Batman fought Darth Vader?

These are all totally relevant and really interesting questions. And I, for one, am glad you brought them up.
 
I think that’s a very good point. Furthermore, what if St. Augustin appeared at Occupy Wall Street and declared that everyone should get free pizza? Or what if Aquinas ran for President in 2012? And just who, exactly, would win if Batman fought Darth Vader?

These are all totally relevant and really interesting questions. And I, for one, am glad you brought them up.
I see you’ve been watching myth busters.

And you’ve rejected reality and inserted your own.👍

Now, for the really important question. If Jack Bauer and Chuck Norris were put in the ring, who would come out alive?
 
I think that’s a very good point. Furthermore, what if St. Augustin appeared at Occupy Wall Street and declared that everyone should get free pizza? Or what if Aquinas ran for President in 2012? And just who, exactly, would win if Batman fought Darth Vader?

These are all totally relevant and really interesting questions. And I, for one, am glad you brought them up.
Thanks for your serious reply to my post.
 
You are assuming that if Ignatius were alive today he would use the metric that you are cherry picking.

What if he used different metrics.

What if Ignatius (if he were transported through time) came to our towns and cities and used the metric of “loving God and loving their neighbor as themselves” to discern the faith community most like the church of his era.
What if we were accused of being Christians, would there be enough evidence to convict?
Great question, wonderful thought to start each day with. This idea could lead us into deeper spiritual lives and closer relationships, BUT I don’t believe it will help us discern if the Catholic Church of 2011 is the same Church that Ignatius belonged to.

We know, through his writings, that the Eucharist was central to the Church. Do you think he would look for it? Names and titles aside, I have a feeling he would look for the Eucharist in a remnant church. The Eucharist is not grape juice and bread with a few hymns, it is unleavened bread and wine transformed into the Body and Blood of Jesus Christ, that alone cancels out most churches from the reformation on.
 
You are assuming that if Ignatius were alive today he would use the metric that you are cherry picking.
You make an extremely valid point, but it will be an up hill battle to get that point understood. For many it would seem that the continuous use of “catholic” (first as an adjective and then as a proper name) means that the Christian entities to which “catholic” has been applied over the centuries must be, in fact, a single entity and that Ignatius’s “catholic Church” is the same Church as the Catholic Church of today.
What if he used different metrics.
absolutely…why should we assume that Ignatius would embrace (and not reject) all of the doctrinal “developments” that have occured since his day. We know Ignatius insisted that a bishop is necessary for a lawful baptism (which is at odds with the CC of the 21st century), so why would we assume that the rest of his doctrine was compatible with modern Catholicism (and vice versa)? As I have stated elsewhere on these threads, it is like insisting that the game of (American) football is the same game today as it was in 1890 simply b/c “football” was used as the name for both games.
 
You make an extremely valid point, but it will be an up hill battle to get that point understood. For many it would seem that the continuous use of “catholic” (first as an adjective and then as a proper name) means that the Christian entities to which “catholic” has been applied over the centuries must be, in fact, a single entity and that Ignatius’s “catholic Church” is the same Church as the Catholic Church of today.

absolutely…why should we assume that Ignatius would embrace (and not reject) all of the doctrinal “developments” that have occured since his day. We know Ignatius insisted that a bishop is necessary for a lawful baptism (which is at odds with the CC of the 21st century), so why would we assume that the rest of his doctrine was compatible with modern Catholicism (and vice versa)? As I have stated elsewhere on these threads, it is like insisting that the game of (American) football is the same game today as it was in 1890 simply b/c “football” was used as the name for both games.
I pointed out the Eucharist as a point that has not changed, do you think a central Doctrine to the Faith would be overlooked? You are right, he could search and find many differences from his time to ours, but there are still unchanged aspects. We know this from his writings, the Eucharist and Baptism are paramount. These alone disqualify most protestant churches from being “descendant churches”, i.e. the same as in Ignatius’ day.
 
You make an extremely valid point,
No. Not valid at all. St Ignatius was a Bishop of the Apostolic Church. If he were to find himself in one of today’s protestant assemblies…I’m guessing he would run screaming!
We know Ignatius insisted that a bishop is necessary for a lawful baptism (which is at odds with the CC of the 21st century),
I’m fairly certain that the good bishop would undersatnd that the flock had increased so drastically, that presbyters were needed to help administer the Sacrament. 😉
 
I pointed out the Eucharist as a point that has not changed,…
that might be your assumption, but it isn’t mine. Tell me, based on the evidence that we have (and not on any assumption or backwards projection):

a) why should I believe that Ignatius’s belief wrt the Eucharist was the same as that of the first century Church at Jerusalem, at Alexandria, at Carthage or at Rome?

b) did Ignatius believe that the Eucharist was part of an agape meal or a separate thing?

c) did Ignatius use leavened or unleavened bread for the one element?

d) did Ignatius envision that it was possible to offer only one of the two elements w/o invalidating the Eucharist?

e) “how” did Ignatius believe the bread was the flesh of Christ? Was it in the same way that he believed Christ’s blood was incorruptible love? Was it symbolically, figuratively, spiritually, mysteriously or transubstantially?
…do you think a central Doctrine to the Faith would be overlooked?
what do you mean?
You are right, he could search and find many differences from his time to ours, but there are still unchanged aspects.
and that would hold for Protestants too.
We know this from his writings, the Eucharist and Baptism are paramount.
Again, based on the evidence that we have (and not on any assumption or backwards projection), according to Ignatius:
  1. how were these two things paramount?
  2. what purpose did they serve?
  3. was infant baptism acceptable? …was non-immersion acceptable when immersion was possible?
These alone disqualify most protestant churches from being “descendant churches”, i.e. the same as in Ignatius’ day.
as AP pointed out, that depends on what criteria you select and then on how much weight you give to each one. Why should I think that the modern CC properly qualifies as a “descendant Church”? The Catholic Marion doctrines aren’t stated in the NT or in the writings of the ECFs of the 2nd century. (the Prot of James being an EC fabricator and not an EC father). So why should I think that Ignatius would believe that a church possessing those doctrines would be a proper descendant of his catholic Church?
 
that might be your assumption, but it isn’t mine. Tell me, based on the evidence that we have (and not on any assumption or backwards projection):

a) why should I believe that Ignatius’s belief wrt the Eucharist was the same as that of the first century Church at Jerusalem, at Alexandria, at Carthage or at Rome?

b) did Ignatius believe that the Eucharist was part of an agape meal or a separate thing?

c) did Ignatius use leavened or unleavened bread for the one element?

d) did Ignatius envision that it was possible to offer only one of the two elements w/o invalidating the Eucharist?

e) “how” did Ignatius believe the bread was the flesh of Christ? Was it in the same way that he believed Christ’s blood was incorruptible love? Was it symbolically, figuratively, spiritually, mysteriously or transubstantially?

what do you mean?

and that would hold for Protestants too.

Again, based on the evidence that we have (and not on any assumption or backwards projection), according to Ignatius:
  1. how were these two things paramount?
  2. what purpose did they serve?
  3. was infant baptism acceptable? …was non-immersion acceptable when immersion was possible?
as AP pointed out, that depends on what criteria you select and then on how much weight you give to each one. Why should I think that the modern CC properly qualifies as a “descendant Church”? The Catholic Marion doctrines aren’t stated in the NT or in the writings of the ECFs of the 2nd century. (the Prot of James being an EC fabricator and not an EC father). So why should I think that Ignatius would believe that a church possessing those doctrines would be a proper descendant of his catholic Church?
Allow me to use quotes from Ignatius to defend my position.

“They abstain from the Eucharist and from prayer, because they confess not the Eucharist to be the flesh of our Saviour Jesus Christ, which suffered for our sins, and which the Father, of His goodness, raised up again. Those, therefore, who speak against this gift of God, incur death in the midst of their disputes.”-Letter to the Smyrnaeans. Whether he understood how it happens is debatable, but he claims to believe the Eucharist is the Flesh of our Lord. This is my point, if he believes the Eucharist is the Flesh of Jesus Christ, that disqualifies any Church who rejects that teaching. It would defy logic for him to be ordained Bishop of Antioch, by Apostles, if he was spreading an idea contrary to the teachings of the Apostles and Christ. Therefore, we can conclude his teaching on the Eucharist is in line with Apostolic teaching, remember he died between 98-117ad. He is said to have studied under St. John, I think St. John had the right idea on the sacraments.

“But avoid all divisions, as the beginning of evils.” -letter to the Smyrnaeans. Sounds like he would be right at home in 40,000 denominations:confused: As you well know, catholic is translated universal. As in no divisions, no splits and one unified belief, in that same letter he encourages them to avoid heretics altogether.

You said “and that would hold for Protestants too.”, how would this hold for protestants? The Protestant Reformation was, at its center, a rejection of the Catholic Church. Ignatius said "See that you all follow the bishop, even as Jesus Christ does the Father, and the presbytery as you would the apostles; and reverence the deacons, as being the institution of God. Let no man do anything connected with the Church without the bishop. Let that be deemed a proper Eucharist, which is [administered] either by the bishop, or by one to whom he has entrusted it. Wherever the bishop shall appear, there let the multitude [of the people] also be; even as, wherever Jesus Christ is, there is the Catholic Church. It is not lawful without the bishop either to baptize or to celebrate a love-feast; but whatsoever he shall approve of, that is also pleasing to God, so that everything that is done may be secure and valid. ". This is the traditional teaching of the Church, everything is to be done according to the Bishop’s permission/direction and in harmony with the Church. At the time of Ignatius, Bishops were more hands on because there were less Christians, as the Church grew the Priests took on more of the tasks under the direction of the Bishop.

As to baptism, “baptized by John, in order that all righteousness might be fulfilled by Him”. This reflects the necessity of Baptism, for if it was necessary for Christ then how much more for us!

You said "Why should I think that the modern CC properly qualifies as a “descendant Church?”, because there has been no evidence of any other Church than the “One Holy Catholic and Apostolic” before the reformers. See my earlier post.

I don’t follow what you are saying here, “(the Prot of James being an EC fabricator and not an EC father”. Please explain it to me.🙂
 
Thanks for the link. I’ve been reading history documents online from I believe from an OCA. Let me look on my computer. I took a massive amount of time to create a PDF of it for my personal use. My problem with some of these history documents. I’ve seen so many “revisionist histories” to cause concerns.
 
Who were those zealous scribes who did not believe in Biblical inerrancy or care that they were altering scripture?
Joe,
this is a very good point. It’s why I like to look at different translations and scrolls if possible. If we think the same mentality of revisionist didn’t exist back then, we’re grossly misguided. Historically speaking, some cultures tried to “snuff out” entire heritages and even particular houses and dynasties. We will never know for sure in this life whether this was actually achieved, but remnants of evidence left behind verifies this has been attempted.
 
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