There was no church between the end of the first century and the reformation?

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There was no church between the end of the first century and the reformation seems to be the attitude amonst many non catholics. I guess Jesus got it woring when he said the gates of hades would not overcome his church
 
I guess when Jesus said: “I will be with you always, even unto the end of the earth” He missed the bit about “…except for the next 1500 years”.

Here’s a new one, to me at least.

I know someone who openly acknowledges that the Catholic Church had Authority…until the Holy Spirit gave it to Martin Luther!
 
Why was sola scripture not mentioned by the early Christians - how remiss of them.
 
There was no church between the end of the first century and the reformation seems to be the attitude amonst many non catholics. I guess Jesus got it woring when he said the gates of hades would not overcome his church
Is there a reason why some Catholics like to trot out the “there was no church” bogeyman, when a non-Catholic shows them that their leadership may have made a mistake or been in error about something?

Scripture shows us that Paul, Peter and James all made mistakes and the church continued to exist-so why adopt a chicken little approach to ecclesiology when someone notices inconsistencies or errors in your leaders?
 
I don’t think the OP is talking about those non-Catholics that do believe the Church remained but erred. He’s talking about those that don’t believe the Church existed for a certain amount of time. There are plenty of those around as well, and I too, don’t understand their reasoning.

If you have your own questions about Church error, I would suggest you start another thread on it. You’d be more likely to have your questions addressed there than on a thread that doesn’t address the concern you speak of.

A word of advice, though: if you phrase your question bittlerly or with anger implied, you’re not going to get very convincing answers, or have anyone bother to decently answer your question. Phrase them intelligently and neutrally if possible, showing that you are open to reflection on their answers. And probably the best place to post it is in the Apologetics section.

(Have you ever heard the phrase “you catch more flies with honey than vinegar”?) 😉
 
I don’t think the OP is talking about those non-Catholics that do believe the Church remained but erred. He’s talking about those that don’t believe the Church existed for a certain amount of time. There are plenty of those around as well, and I too, don’t understand their reasoning.

If you have your own questions about Church error, I would suggest you start another thread on it. You’d be more likely to have your questions addressed there than on a thread that doesn’t address the concern you speak of.

A word of advice, though: if you phrase your question bittlerly or with anger implied, you’re not going to get very convincing answers, or have anyone bother to decently answer your question. Phrase them intelligently and neutrally if possible, showing that you are open to reflection on their answers. And probably the best place to post it is in the Apologetics section.

(Have you ever heard the phrase “you catch more flies with honey than vinegar”?) 😉
Perhaps you are correct about the OP’s intent-if this is the case, then I was mistaken in my reply. It was based on comments by him in another thread where others’ specific questioning of historical events prompted the “There must have been no church” statement to be made.

Thank you for the advice-I have asked questions on a number of topics and gotten some good answers from some of the posters here-I’ve also gotten some rather snide and /or triumphal responses that may have made me a bit cranky of late. It’s always good to have someone point that out so I can refocus and hopefully come back with a better attitude than that. 🙂
 
Perhaps you are correct about the OP’s intent-if this is the case, then I was mistaken in my reply. It was based on comments by him in another thread where others’ specific questioning of historical events prompted the “There must have been no church” statement to be made.

Thank you for the advice-I have asked questions on a number of topics and gotten some good answers from some of the posters here-I’ve also gotten some rather snide and /or triumphal responses that may have made me a bit cranky of late. It’s always good to have someone point that out so I can refocus and hopefully come back with a better attitude than that. 🙂
LOL, no problem! I’ve utilized my own share of crankiness on these forums myself. 😊 I’m pretty sure that due to the nature of these forums, it’s expected that every now and then, emotions are going to run high from a discussion. Also, I’ve experienced myself that when I don’t feel good physically, it shows in my posts.
 
There was no church between the end of the first century and the reformation seems to be the attitude amonst many non catholics.
If this is true, what exactly is it that Martin Luther rebelled against?
 
There is a view held by a substantial number of fundamentalists that from 100 to 1500 there was an underground church that subsisted in fear of and hiding from their oppressors, the Catholic Church. Since they maintained a very low profile, historians know very little about them. Also since nearly all of the history from that era was written by Catholics, they made sure that history forgot about these small but pure Christian groups. Nevertheless, they continued in an unbroken chain from the time of Christ until they could finally come out in the open in the 1500’s.
 
There is a view held by a substantial number of fundamentalists that from 100 to 1500 there was an underground church that subsisted in fear of and hiding from their oppressors, the Catholic Church.

In other words, the lack of evidence for their existence is proof that they existed.
 
There is a view held by a substantial number of fundamentalists that from 100 to 1500 there was an underground church that subsisted in fear of and hiding from their oppressors, the Catholic Church. Since they maintained a very low profile, historians know very little about them. Also since nearly all of the history from that era was written by Catholics, they made sure that history forgot about these small but pure Christian groups. Nevertheless, they continued in an unbroken chain from the time of Christ until they could finally come out in the open in the 1500’s.
If that is so, then why was their light subdued?
No one lights a lamp to put it under a tub; they put it on the lamp-stand where it shines for everyone in the house. In the same way your light must shine in people’s sight, so that, seeing your good works, they may give praise to your Father in heaven. Mat 5:15, 16
Also, is what you speak of known as “the trail of blood”?
 
More than that, if it were truly a Reformation, what was reformed?
Exactly - whom/what were the grievances against, and to the door of what building were they nailed? In order to disagree with an organization as Luther did, one by definition acknowledges that it existed prior to the disagreement.
 
There was no church between the end of the first century and the reformation seems to be the attitude amonst many non catholics. I guess Jesus got it woring when he said the gates of hades would not overcome his church
You really are confused, Tim. You have know I idea what most protestants believe. You just parrot the straw man arguments you are fed by historically and theological inept apologists for Rome.
 
That argument rests on the RCC being the church Jesus founded, which no one has yet shown…
Probably because no one has shown any other Church to be the one, which leaves the Catholic Church most likely.
 
You really are confused, Tim. You have know I idea what most protestants believe. You just parrot the straw man arguments you are fed by historically and theological inept apologists for Rome.
Why do people say this? I’ve heard many a protestant say what the OP has stated. Just because you’re a protestant and you don’t believe the OP’s statement, doesn’t mean other Protestants or non-Catholics in general don’t either.

The OP says: 1.) many, not most and 2.) non-Catholics - which, by the way, also includes non-Protestants.
 
There was no church between the end of the first century and the reformation seems to be the attitude amonst many non catholics. I guess Jesus got it woring when he said the gates of hades would not overcome his church
Is this a question or just a statement?? What’s the point 🤷
 
Why do people say this? I’ve heard many a protestant say what the OP has stated. Just because you’re a protestant and you don’t believe the OP’s statement, doesn’t mean other Protestants or non-Catholics in general don’t either.

The OP says: 1.) many, not most and 2.) non-Catholics - which, by the way, also includes non-Protestants.
You’ve heard many protestants say this? I know that protestants at episcopal. lutheran, methodist, baptist, or any other mainline protestant churches don’t believe there was no church until the 1500s. Stop going to KKK rallies to learn about protestantism and expand your frame of reference.
 
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