B
Bluegoat
Guest
The point is, what you are talking about is the unified Christian Church. That group has since splintered, and a number of organizations claim desent in one way or another from that body. The Oriental Orthodox, the Eastern Orthodox, the Catholic Church, the Anglican Communion, the Lutherans, to name the major groups. All claim to be a continuation of those early Christians, the One Holy Catholic Apostolic Church. All recognize the authority to name Scriptures, explicate doctrine and so on as residing in the Church itself.Ok, folks. I did not intend my statements to evolve into an exhaustive debate on the nuances of various manuscripts used in the development of the canon of Scripture. I am quite aware that the separate works that comprise even just the New Testament were not bound together in one volume but were circulating individually throughout different parts of the world for centuries. The development of the canon was discussed, disputed and argued for quite some time which is why it took several councils to finally arrive at an authoritative canon. The Epistles, by their very nature, were directed to and held by their target audiences in those Churches in those particular places. My point is that the Christian Church(es) existing at the time that the canon was settled (Council of Carthage - 397 AD) were Catholic. Of course, logistics alone would have prevented all of the individual Churches from using the same manuscripts all at the same time for the first three centuries and even then for sometime after. I am also aware that there are some variations between East and West, and that modern biblical scholars may debate as to whether or not a sentance or two was part of an original manuscript.
The very point I was trying to make, in fact, is that that were many writings circulating throughout the first three centuries so how does one know what was inspired and what was not? Who could determine that? Well, the authoritative canon, prior to the Reformation, was settled by the Catholic Church and if it was some other Church then I wish someone would please state the name of that Church.
And even if you think one group - say the OO - actually comprises that Church while the others are outside of it, there is no doubt that the others spring from the same root of the early Church.
You can try to argue that the Catholic Church comprises the True Church and has the authority to declare doctrine, while all these other groups have put themselves outside the Church. But you actually have to make that argument, it can’t just be seen in history when all of those groups have splintered out of one unified group.