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Yes. The terms used here descriptively “kath holos” translate “throughout the whole” or “universal”. It is a reference to the fact that the One Church, founded by Christ, was one throughout all the world (in doctrine).Per a comment that Acts 9:31 contains the phrase “Ekklesia kath olos (post #68) – which means the “Catholic Church”, I have not been able to find that. I have looked at three Greek/English Bible lexicons (two on-line and one I own) – and the phrase in all three simply reads “ oun Ekklesia kata” (“so the church throughout”) or a variant of that. The word “kata” here defined as “throughout” is said to mean “down from and according to”.
This was the first written evidence that the descriptors used by Luke had become a formal name.Code:I am Catholic, and I have seen taught here and in multiple sources that the first recorded use of the term “Catholic” was by Ignatius of Antioch in or around 110 A.D in one of his letters.
What do you mean, “nobody knows”? You don’t think that the Catholics used this term to refer to themselves? It was the way they distinguished themselves from heretics and schismatics. This is exactly why Ignatius was explaining it. There were a lot of counterfieThe same church existed in the 60’s, 90’s, 100’s etc. and up to now. Ignatius uses the term in 110 AD as if it were a well known term – but from when, nobody knows. Just wondered what lexicon defines “kath” or “kata” in some as Catholic? Thanks.
ts.