Do Roman Catholics still believe that this clause refers only to their church? Or have they shifted to a more Protestant understanding that this could include churches from other denominations that are faithful to the gospel?
Martin Q. Blank said:
I'm not sure, maybe 5 or 6. But it was widely accepted that there was the one holy catholic and apostolic church, and the others were heretics damned to hell.
There has been past chatter even on this board in which some of these claims are not really ever cleared up by some of the resident RCC and EO folk. My take away is that it is gray area at best.CrackerJackAg said:Martin Q. Blank said:
I'm not sure, maybe 5 or 6. But it was widely accepted that there was the one holy catholic and apostolic church, and the others were heretics damned to hell.
Damned to Hell is not true.
My favorite thing that people do is make claims about The Church despite having no interaction or understanding of it outside what you discussed within your protestant echo chamber.
10andBOUNCE said:There has been past chatter even on this board in which some of these claims are not really ever cleared up. My take away is that it is gray area at best.CrackerJackAg said:Martin Q. Blank said:
I'm not sure, maybe 5 or 6. But it was widely accepted that there was the one holy catholic and apostolic church, and the others were heretics damned to hell.
Damned to Hell is not true.
My favorite thing that people do is make claims about The Church despite having no interaction or understanding of it outside what you discussed within your protestant echo chamber.
10andBOUNCE said:There has been past chatter even on this board in which some of these claims are not really ever cleared up by some of the resident RCC and EO folk. My take away is that it is gray area at best.CrackerJackAg said:Martin Q. Blank said:
I'm not sure, maybe 5 or 6. But it was widely accepted that there was the one holy catholic and apostolic church, and the others were heretics damned to hell.
Damned to Hell is not true.
My favorite thing that people do is make claims about The Church despite having no interaction or understanding of it outside what you discussed within your protestant echo chamber.
Martin Q. Blank said:
I'll rephrase so as not to derail. It was widely accepted that there was the one holy catholic and apostolic church, and the others were heretics.
Docetism, Ebionism, Gnosticism, Marcionism. Arianism was the reason for the council of Nicaea in the first place.The Banned said:
Curious where you're coming up with 5 or 6 denominations back then. It was under the impression the first real splits started in the 400s, which was after the creed was adopted.
I'm not asking about individuals, but churches. Which you answered early on wrt the EO position: there is no "church" outside of The Church.CrackerJackAg said:We cannot make that statement about anyone until they come and reject the Church and Faith as laid out by the Councils.Martin Q. Blank said:
I'll rephrase so as not to derail. It was widely accepted that there was the one holy catholic and apostolic church, and the others were heretics.
You could possibly align yourself with Orthodox beliefs, and then choose not to attend Church and pursue Salvation on your own.
I think most Orthodox followers would agree that God makes those decisions in the end and it is not for us to say and we ultimately cannot know God's mind or have the right to presume it.
If that is not clear enough for you, then you are just being obtuse and attempting to troll.
Martin Q. Blank said:Docetism, Ebionism, Gnosticism, Marcionism. Arianism was the reason for the council of Nicaea in the first place.The Banned said:
Curious where you're coming up with 5 or 6 denominations back then. It was under the impression the first real splits started in the 400s, which was after the creed was adopted.
Zobel said:
I'm curious to how you understand "church". Can you explain?
Martin Q. Blank said:
Nobody is forcing you to contribute if you feel that way.
There is a visible and invisible aspect. The visible are all churches who faithfully preach the gospel and administer the sacraments. This may be comprised of believers and hypocrites. The invisible are all those who are believers, aka "valid Christians", who may or may not be members of what you call The Church.Zobel said:
I'm curious to how you understand "church". Can you explain?
Martin Q. Blank said:Docetism, Ebionism, Gnosticism, Marcionism. Arianism was the reason for the council of Nicaea in the first place.The Banned said:
Curious where you're coming up with 5 or 6 denominations back then. It was under the impression the first real splits started in the 400s, which was after the creed was adopted.
Correct. It was widely accepted that there was the one holy catholic and apostolic church, and the others were heretics. Is this still the accepted view? The Roman Catholic Church is the one holy catholic and apostolic church. All others are heretics.The Banned said:Do those really count as denominations? There were heretics. They were excommunicated or rehabilitated. The end (although it could take many years for that end).Martin Q. Blank said:Docetism, Ebionism, Gnosticism, Marcionism. Arianism was the reason for the council of Nicaea in the first place.The Banned said:
Curious where you're coming up with 5 or 6 denominations back then. It was under the impression the first real splits started in the 400s, which was after the creed was adopted.
I could be wrong but I think we saw heretics remain inside of the church whiling trying (and failing) to advance their heresy. I don't think we saw any real splinter groups running their own church's like we saw in the reformation. Again, could be wrong there
One church, yet it is defined by "Rome" or "Roman."Martin Q. Blank said:
I'll rephrase so as not to derail. It was widely accepted that there was the one holy catholic and apostolic church, and the others were heretics.
That's up to you. Has the Roman Catholic understanding of "one holy catholic and apostolic church" changed?Zobel said:
So you're not asking about the invisible church in the OP then? Just visible?
10andBOUNCE said:One church, yet it is defined by "Rome" or "Roman."Martin Q. Blank said:
I'll rephrase so as not to derail. It was widely accepted that there was the one holy catholic and apostolic church, and the others were heretics.
Because you have your own understanding of the history?Zobel said:
How can it be up to me what you're asking?
Martin Q. Blank said:Correct. It was widely accepted that there was the one holy catholic and apostolic church, and the others were heretics. Is this still the accepted view? The Roman Catholic Church is the one holy catholic and apostolic church. All others are heretics.The Banned said:Do those really count as denominations? There were heretics. They were excommunicated or rehabilitated. The end (although it could take many years for that end).Martin Q. Blank said:Docetism, Ebionism, Gnosticism, Marcionism. Arianism was the reason for the council of Nicaea in the first place.The Banned said:
Curious where you're coming up with 5 or 6 denominations back then. It was under the impression the first real splits started in the 400s, which was after the creed was adopted.
I could be wrong but I think we saw heretics remain inside of the church whiling trying (and failing) to advance their heresy. I don't think we saw any real splinter groups running their own church's like we saw in the reformation. Again, could be wrong there
My understanding is that Roman Catholics have historically viewed "one holy catholic and apostolic church" as all visible churches in communion with the Holy See. Has this changed? Have they adopted other (Protestant) theories on what the "one holy catholic and apostolic church" is in order to include those visible churches not in communion with the Holy See?Zobel said:
I'm not asking about history, I'm asking about what you meant when you wrote the question.
The Banned said:10andBOUNCE said:One church, yet it is defined by "Rome" or "Roman."Martin Q. Blank said:
I'll rephrase so as not to derail. It was widely accepted that there was the one holy catholic and apostolic church, and the others were heretics.
To be clear, the phrase "Roman Catholic" was a slur first used by the Anglican Church in the 1500s. It's not something we went around calling ourselves. If you hear a Catholic call themselves Roman Catholic, that is a signifier of what rite in the church they are a part of: the Latin rite. They can also be Coptic, Ethiopian, etc etc.
Any time a Protestant calls us "Roman" they are simply going along with the Protestant slur used all those centuries ago.
AGC said:The Banned said:10andBOUNCE said:One church, yet it is defined by "Rome" or "Roman."Martin Q. Blank said:
I'll rephrase so as not to derail. It was widely accepted that there was the one holy catholic and apostolic church, and the others were heretics.
To be clear, the phrase "Roman Catholic" was a slur first used by the Anglican Church in the 1500s. It's not something we went around calling ourselves. If you hear a Catholic call themselves Roman Catholic, that is a signifier of what rite in the church they are a part of: the Latin rite. They can also be Coptic, Ethiopian, etc etc.
Any time a Protestant calls us "Roman" they are simply going along with the Protestant slur used all those centuries ago.
Or clarifying that the catholic Church pre-dates the papal revolution. The biblical episcopal structure is interesting to consider in your history when thinking about aquinas' bishop rejecting his writings but the pope choosing to accept them. The roman institution is largely defined by the elevation of that bishop to the point where they can no longer be distinguished, man acting as man or with God's authority, since the downstream effects are so great over time.