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I Hated the Idea of Becoming Catholic
Aleteia ^ | JUNE 20, 2014 | ANTHONY BARATTA

Posted on 11/28/2014 2:33:31 PM PST by NYer

It was the day after Ash Wednesday in 2012 when I called my mom from my dorm room at Southern Baptist Theological Seminary and told her I thought I was going to become Catholic.

“You’re not going to become Catholic, you just know you’re not Southern Baptist,” she said.

“No, I don’t think so.”

A pause. “Oh boy,” she sighed.

I started crying.

I cannot stress enough how much I hated the idea of becoming Catholic. I was bargaining to the last moment. I submitted a sermon for a competition days before withdrawing from school. I was memorizing Psalm 119 to convince myself of sola scriptura. I set up meetings with professors to hear the best arguments. I purposefully read Protestant books about Catholicism, rather than books by Catholic authors.

Further, I knew I would lose my housing money and have to pay a scholarship back if I withdrew from school, not to mention disappointing family, friends, and a dedicated church community.

But when I attempted to do my homework, I collapsed on my bed. All I wanted to do was scream at the textbook, “Who says?!”

I had experienced a huge paradigm shift in my thinking about the faith, and the question of apostolic authority loomed larger than ever.

But let’s rewind back a few years.

I grew up in an evangelical Protestant home. My father was a worship and preaching pastor from when I was in fourth grade onwards. Midway through college, I really fell in love with Jesus Christ and His precious Gospel and decided to become a pastor.

It was during that time that I was hardened in my assumption that the Roman Catholic Church didn’t adhere to the Bible. When I asked one pastor friend of mine during my junior year why Catholics thought Mary remained a virgin after Jesus’ birth when the Bible clearly said Jesus had “brothers,” he simply grimaced: “They don’t read the Bible.”

Though I had been in talks with Seattle’s Mars Hill Church about doing an internship with them, John Piper’s book Don’t Waste Your Life clarified my call to missionary work specifically, and I spent the next summer evangelizing Catholics in Poland.

So I was surprised when I visited my parents and found a silly looking book titled Born Fundamentalist, Born Again Catholic on my father’s desk. What was my dad doing reading something like this? I was curious and hadn’t brought anything home to read, so I gave it a look.

David Currie’s memoir of leaving behind his evangelical education and ministries was bothersome. His unapologetic defense of controversial doctrines regarding Mary and the papacy were most shocking, as I had never seriously considered that Catholics would have sensible, scriptural defenses to these beliefs.

The book’s presence on my father’s desk was explained more fully a few months later when he called me and said he was returning to the Catholicism of his youth. My response? “But, can’t you just be Lutheran or something?” I felt angry, betrayed, and indignant. For the next four months I served as a youth pastor at my local church and, in my free time, read up on why Catholicism was wrong.

During that time, I stumbled across a Christianity Today article that depicted an “evangelical identity crisis.” The author painted a picture of young evangelicals, growing up in a post-modern world, yearning to be firmly rooted in history and encouraged that others had stood strong for Christ in changing and troubled times. Yet, in my experience, most evangelical churches did not observe the liturgical calendar, the Apostles’ Creed was never mentioned, many of the songs were written after 1997, and if any anecdotal story was told about a hero from church history, it was certainly from after the Reformation. Most of Christian history was nowhere to be found.

For the first time, I panicked. I found a copy of the Catechism and started leafing through it, finding the most controversial doctrines and laughing at the silliness of the Catholic Church. Indulgences? Papal infallibility? These things, so obviously wrong, reassured me in my Protestantism. The Mass sounded beautiful and the idea of a visible, unified Church was appealing - but at the expense of the Gospel? It seemed obvious that Satan would build a large organization that would lead so many just short of heaven.

I shook off most of the doubts and enjoyed the remainder of my time at college, having fun with the youth group and sharing my faith with the students. Any lingering doubts, I assumed, would be dealt with in seminary.

I started my classes in January with the excitement of a die-hard football fan going to the Super Bowl. The classes were fantastic and I thought I had finally rid myself of any Catholic problems.


But just a few weeks later, I ran into more doubts. We were learning about spiritual disciplines like prayer and fasting and I was struck by how often the professor would skip from St. Paul to Martin Luther or Jonathan Edwards when describing admirable lives of piety. Did nothing worthwhile happen in the first 1500 years? The skipping of history would continue in many other classes and assigned reading. The majority of pre-Reformation church history was ignored.

I soon discovered I had less in common with the early Church fathers than I thought. Unlike most Christians in history, communion had always been for me an occasional eating of bread and grape juice, and baptism was only important after someone had gotten “saved.” Not only did these views contradict much of Church history but, increasingly, they did not match with uncomfortable Bible passages I had always shrugged off (John 6, Romans 6, etc).

Other questions that I had buried began to reappear, no longer docile but ferocious, demanding an answer. Where did the Bible come from? Why didn’t the Bible claim to be “sufficient”? The Protestant answers that had held me over in the last year were no longer satisfying.

Jefferson Bethke’s viral YouTube video, “Why I Hate Religion, But Love Jesus,” was released during this time. The young man meant well, but to me he only validated what the Wall Street Journal called “the dangerous theological anarchy of young evangelicals,” attempting to remove Jesus from the confines of religion but losing so much in the process.

Ash Wednesday was the tipping point. A hip Southern Baptist church in Louisville held a morning Ash Wednesday service and many students showed up to classes with ashes on their forehead. At chapel that afternoon, a professor renowned for his apologetic efforts against Catholicism expounded upon the beauty of this thousand year old tradition.

Afterwards, I asked a seminary friend why most evangelicals had rejected this beautiful thing. He responded with something about Pharisees and “man-made traditions.”

I shook my head. “I can’t do this anymore.”

My resistance to Catholicism started to fade. I was feeling drawn to the sacraments, sacramentals, physical manifestations of God’s grace, the one, holy, catholic and apostolic Church. No more borrowing, no more denying.

It was the next day that I called my mom and told her I thought I was going to become Catholic.

I didn’t go to classes on Friday. I went to the seminary library and checked out books I had previously forbidden myself to look at too closely, like the Catechism and Pope Benedict’s latest. I felt like I was checking out porn. Later, I drove to a 5pm Saturday Mass. The gorgeous crucifix at the front of the church reminded me of when I had mused that crucifixes demonstrated that Catholics didn’t really understand the resurrection.

But I saw the crucifix differently this time and began crying. “Jesus, my suffering savior, you’re here.”

A peace came over me until Tuesday, when it yielded to face-to-windshield reality. Should I stay or leave? I had several panicked phone calls: “I literally have no idea what I am going to do tomorrow morning.”

On Wednesday morning I woke up, opened my laptop, and typed out “77 Reasons I Am Leaving Evangelicalism.” The list included things like sola scriptura, justification, authority, the Eucharist, history, beauty, and continuity between the Old and New Testament. The headlines and the ensuing paragraphs flowed from my fingers like water bursting from a centuries-old dam. 

A few hours later on February 29, 2012 I slipped out of Louisville, Kentucky, eager to not confuse anyone else and hoping I wasn’t making a mistake.  

The next few months were painful. More than anything else I felt ashamed and defensive, uncertain of how so much of my identity and career path could be upended so quickly. Nonetheless, I joined the Church on Pentecost with the support of my family and started looking for work.

So much has changed since then. I met Jackie on CatholicMatch.com that June, got married a year later, and celebrated the birth of our daughter, Evelyn, on March 3rd, 2014. We’re now in Indiana and I’m happy at my job.

I’m still very new on this Catholic journey. To all inquirers out there, I can tell you that my relationship with God has deepened and strengthened. As I get involved in our parish, I’m so thankful for the love of evangelism and the Bible that I learned in Protestantism.

I have not so much left my former faith as I have filled in the gaps. I thank God for the fullness of the Catholic faith.


TOPICS: Apologetics; Catholic; Evangelical Christian; Theology
KEYWORDS: anthonybaratta; baptist; catholic; evangelical; protestant; seminary; southernbaptist
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To: af_vet_1981
Several of the early church fathers, including Irenaeus, Hippolytus,[2] Epiphanius, and Theodoret mentioned this group, and stated that the deacon Nicolas was the author of the heresy and the sect.

The Nicolaitanes are the followers of that Nicolas who was one of the seven first ordained to the diaconate by the apostles. They lead lives of unrestrained indulgence. The character of these men is very plainly pointed out in the Apocalypse of John, [when they are represented] as teaching that it is a matter of indifference to practice adultery, and to eat things sacrificed to idols.


In no wise pertaining in any respect to the RCC and other such organizations which maintain a hierarchy in authority over the individual Church members; right?
841 posted on 12/04/2014 12:45:16 PM PST by Resettozero
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To: delchiante
Because you and the english world call today Thor’s day doesn’t change the fact Scripture doesn’t...

Does Anybody Really Know What Time It Is?
842 posted on 12/04/2014 12:51:33 PM PST by Resettozero
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To: Resettozero

I was lucky enough to see them in concert twice, Once before the death of Terry Kath and once in 83-84 after. Some of the finest Jazz Fusion out there.


843 posted on 12/04/2014 1:12:31 PM PST by verga (You anger Catholics by telling them a lie, you anger protestants by telling them the truth.)
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To: Resettozero
Thanks verga, for setting me straight.

You weren't set; just accused.

Again...

844 posted on 12/04/2014 1:23:13 PM PST by Elsie ( Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going...)
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To: Resettozero
In no wise pertaining in any respect to the RCC and other such organizations which maintain a hierarchy in authority over the individual Church members; right?

Perhaps this theory was introduced, like "the rapture," by Cyrus Scofield. I have not found an earlier reference yet than him introducing it in the Scofield Bible. Perhaps someone else knows if anyone of the Reformation faith groups introduced it earlier.

845 posted on 12/04/2014 1:24:58 PM PST by af_vet_1981 (The bus came by and I got on, That's when it all began.)
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To: af_vet_1981
Perhaps this theory was introduced, like "the rapture," by Cyrus Scofield. I have not found an earlier reference yet than him introducing it in the Scofield Bible. Perhaps someone else knows if anyone of the Reformation faith groups introduced it earlier.

No, it is a Scofield novelty. It was meant to help justy other protestant novelties.

846 posted on 12/04/2014 1:32:35 PM PST by verga (You anger Catholics by telling them a lie, you anger protestants by telling them the truth.)
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To: editor-surveyor; Utah Binger
I suspect that his calendar has evolved to that because he lives in Jerusalem, where all three are needed daily to keep one’s head straight.

Kinda like the Navajos in Tuba city!

 
http://articles.latimes.com/1991-10-24/news/mn-426_1_tuba-city
https://www.facebook.com/TubaTimeWarp
http://azdailysun.com/news/opinon/columnists/on-time-or-not-in-tuba-city/article_565597a3-cd8e-58b4-b8d8-539db9cde9fe.html


My suggestion???



Something like this would be pretty cool at the 4 Corners Monument!

847 posted on 12/04/2014 1:37:16 PM PST by Elsie ( Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going...)
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To: af_vet_1981
Perhaps this theory was introduced, like "the rapture," by Cyrus Scofield. I have not found an earlier reference yet than him introducing it in the Scofield Bible. Perhaps someone else knows if anyone of the Reformation faith groups introduced it earlier.

I had forgotten how you love to deflect and regret my posting to you. Maybe I'll remember next time...maybe not.

(Scofield Bible's to blame...gimma break.)
848 posted on 12/04/2014 1:37:21 PM PST by Resettozero
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To: imardmd1

Shows that a picture is NOT worth a 1000 words.


849 posted on 12/04/2014 1:38:38 PM PST by Elsie ( Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going...)
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To: imardmd1

Seven Asia churches; long gone...


850 posted on 12/04/2014 1:40:03 PM PST by Elsie ( Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going...)
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To: delchiante

Calendars and clocks are a means to standardize the non-integer rotation of the Earth and it’s orbit around the sun.

Trying to put EVIL!! into it is a bit misplaced in my opinion.


851 posted on 12/04/2014 1:42:24 PM PST by Elsie ( Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going...)
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To: editor-surveyor; af_vet_1981
Eisigesis indeed.  I see nothing in these three verses which say the apostate was in fact a saved individual, elect, sealed by the Holy Spirit, and so forth.  That isn't there.  To say that it is is to import it illicitly into the passage (true "eisigesis").  If some modern readers cannot help but see here a saved individual turning apostate, that only reflects the success of the pelagian and semi-pelagian heresies, which have become so rampant in our era that they discolor the plain reading of Scripture for many people, most of whom have no idea they are getting into bed with an old and wicked heresy.

Still, some may wonder, how could such things be said of unsaved persons. Yet consider the written record on how the Holy Spirit has dealt with utterly lost persons.  He filled and spoke through Saul, who was an incorrigible enemy of God and the messianic line of David.  He empowered Judas along with the other apostles to perform healing, casting out devils, and any miracles such as God saw fit to work through him, though Jesus said he was, even at that time, a devil.  Not later, not saved then lost.  But fully lost.  Yet God had a purpose to work through him, and would fulfill it, yet not so as to save the son of perdition, but to accomplish the purposes of His own will.  Who beside Judas has ever been closer to the majesty of God's power working among men, truly a partaker of the workings of the Holy Spirit, while yet being as lost as the Devil himself? Utterly lost, yet for a time, a partaker of the Holy Spirit, according to the will of God.

I know this isn't easy, BTW.  I respect the variety of opinion on this passage.  Much better analysts than I have simply skipped it for justifiable fear of getting it wrong.  So I do not begrudge you your opinion.  But each of us comes to this passage with convictions built on other information, other doctrines and passages of Scripture.  Yes, I am totally convinced each and every elect person will endure all the way to the end and be saved.  We could have an entire thread bringing forth the evidence just on that.  For now, just understand that once that principle has been accepted, it is impossible to read passages like this as contradictory to the remainder of the God-breathed Scriptures.  They both must be true.  God is not in conflict with Himself. If I can't see that right away, it's my job to keep looking at it until I can see it. Let God be true, but every man a liar.

However, just because an elect person is definitely going to make it, that does not mean it's wrong to issue a fiery warning such as this passage to a congregation of those presumed to be believers.  I think of Johnathan Edwards and his famous sermon "Sinners in the hands of an Angry God."  This sermon was so powerful it is widely credited with being the trigger for the Second Great Awakening in America.  But it was preached to presumed Christians, challenging them to their core as to whether they were really ready to face eternity at a moment's notice.  This demonstrates how God not only ordains the end but the means to that end.  If someone is elect, they will doubtless need at certain points in their life to be challenged whether they are right with God.  Everything that happens to us as believers works to our good, even if it seems terrifying at the moment.

So in this passage in Hebrews, we have a terrifying look at what it would mean for a Jewish person to come to a full realization that Jesus is the Messiah, including witnessing of miracles and authentication by the powerful working of the Holy Spirit, then to turn one's back on all that and return to the shadow-world of Judaism, to willingly identify with those who had engineered the crucifixion of Jesus, and would do so again and again, given the chance.  Framed this way, it does sound almost exactly like the unpardonable sin of which Jesus spoke, missing only the attribution of Jesus' power to Satan.  

The truly catastrophic aspect of this repudiation of Christ is that it is a one-way passage.  There is no possibility of reversal.  None. Therefore we can conclude at least this one thing.  Whatever this passage teaches, it does NOT teach that one can be lost, saved, lost, saved, in an endless cycle of uncertainty.  Once this kind of repudiation of Christ has occurred, the die is cast, and eternal doom is certain.  One strike and you're out.  That's hardball.

And it corresponds well to the case of Judas. The Scripture even says he repented, but never in any passage is he readmitted to his apostolic status, but is ever after known as the son of perdition, the archetype of all traitors.  Like Esau, he traded away the most precious thing he had, personal access to Jesus, for worthless metal. This despite the full enlightenment of Jesus' teaching, the proof of Jesus' divinity through the ministration of miracles, and participation in the conduct of those miracles by the power of God's Holy Spirit.  And yet, in the midst of it all, Jesus calls him a devil.

This also reminds one of what Jesus said concerning the final judgment:
Matthew 7:22-23  Many will say to me in that day, Lord, Lord, have we not prophesied in thy name? and in thy name have cast out devils? and in thy name done many wonderful works?  (23)  And then will I profess unto them, I never knew you: depart from me, ye that work iniquity.
These were people, like Judas, who appeared to be in God's inner circle, at least in their own minds, and could make claim to casting out devils and many wonderful works.  Yet Jesus does not say, "I knew you but you blew it." No, He says He never knew them.  At no time were these lost ones redeemed, adopted sons and daughters, sealed by the Spirit, inseparable from the love of God in Christ, children who cry "Abba Father to God from the depths of their heart, whose spirit testifies that they are indeed His children, and the sheep who hear His voice, and follow only Him.  At no time did they advance from those who merely knew the truth and saw the Spirit work and tasted heavenly things and the powers of the age to come, to those whose sins were washed away in the blood of Jesus, who were translated from the kingdom of darkness to the kingdom of light, who were made a new creation, given a new heart, raised from death to life by faith in the Son of God.

Which is why it is so important not to overlook verse 9:
Hebrews 6:9  But, beloved, we are persuaded better things of you, and things that accompany salvation, though we thus speak.
ES, it isn't that Paul is saying this that encourages me to see a difference between the terrors of apostasy and the "better things" that accompany salvation.  That contrast was put there by God Himself through the Holy Spirit for our encouragement.  Anyone who reads those first few verses and doesn't end up in the spiritual equivalent of the fetal position shaking like a leave just isn't paying attention. I actually had that happen to me physically years ago, so I know what I'm talking about.  I had just climbed a steep rock face, in street shoes no less, at the request of some friends.  Chickie's Rock in the Susquehanna Valley, PA.  I had no business doing that, and my body knew it better than I did.  When I got to the top, I curled up into a fetal ball and stayed that way for many minutes before I relaxed enough to enjoy the magnificent sunset.  

This passage entails a far greater fall than anything one can experience in this life, and any true Christian is going to be like the disciple at the Lord's Supper, worrying, "Is it me Lord? Am I going to be the traitor?"  And God knows this about us.  He knows our hearts in a way we could never know ourselves.  And in this word of comfort He reaches down to us and grips our hand and promises us, by the word of His own testimony, that salvation brings better things than just seeing truth, or seeing miracles, or experiencing the power of the Holy Spirit:
John 10:27-28  My sheep hear my voice, and I know them, and they follow me:  (28)  And I give unto them eternal life; and they shall never perish, neither shall any man pluck them out of my hand.

Peace,

SR



852 posted on 12/04/2014 1:43:08 PM PST by Springfield Reformer (Winston Churchill: No Peace Till Victory!)
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To: Resettozero

Oh; I left out that silly Moon’s influence in all of this; eh?


853 posted on 12/04/2014 1:43:13 PM PST by Elsie ( Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going...)
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To: Resettozero
What time IS it; really? Right now there are MORE that 24 time zones in effect and there are 2 days being observed on earth.

At the exact North and South poles; there is NO time; as all time zones converge there!

England; when IT was the World's power, had enough sense to drive a stake in the ground (so to speak) at Greenwich; saying, we'll measure EVERYTHING from here.

854 posted on 12/04/2014 1:47:01 PM PST by Elsie ( Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going...)
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To: Elsie
There are words to go along with that diagram on the chart given and

Abyss, Hell, and Lake of Fire Contrasted (click here)

Here are the words:

THE MYSTERY OF LIFE AFTER DEATH -- THE PIT (GRAVE)(click here)

855 posted on 12/04/2014 2:45:04 PM PST by imardmd1 (Fiat Lux)
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To: Springfield Reformer; af_vet_1981
>> “I see nothing in these three verses which say the apostate was in fact a saved individual, elect, sealed by the Holy Spirit, and so forth” <<

.
That's good, because God's word says that nobody is saved yet!

As Yeshua and his apostles state, we will be saved, if we endure to the end, at the Last trump!

Your “logic” is chasing its own tail.

You completely miss the point of his revelation.

As for Paul, he wasn't any more “lost” than the average present day churchian. He was following a gospel that had been twisted by the Pharisees, but his heart told him that he was doing it for Yehova.

Present day churchians are also following a false gospel, seeking a pre-trib rapture that will never come, and believing in unconditional OSAS absurdity, and passing the same on to those that they are “getting saved” through the coaxed recital of the completely unscriptural “sinner's prayer.”

How are they different from Paul? Or Judas for that matter.

If you don't know him, then he doesn't know you.

John addresses how to “know him” and know that you know him in his first epistle

1John 2:

[3] And hereby we do know that we know him, if we keep his commandments.
[4] He that saith, I know him, and keepeth not his commandments, is a liar, and the truth is not in him.
[5] But whoso keepeth his word, in him verily is the love of God perfected: hereby know we that we are in him.
[6] He that saith he abideth in him ought himself also so to walk, even as he walked.

But the majority here at FR openly deny that what John said in that epistle is what Yeshua has asked of us.

Its not hard to see that what Yeshua says in Matthew 7:23 is what the majority of churchians will be hearing, not at the first resurrection, but later at the GWT judgment.

856 posted on 12/04/2014 3:12:02 PM PST by editor-surveyor (Freepers: Not as smart as I'd hoped they'd be)
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To: Springfield Reformer; af_vet_1981
>> “I see nothing in these three verses which say the apostate was in fact a saved individual, elect, sealed by the Holy Spirit, and so forth” <<

.
That's good, because God's word says that nobody is saved yet!

As Yeshua and his apostles state, we will be saved, if we endure to the end, at the Last trump!

Your “logic” is chasing its own tail.

You completely miss the point of his revelation.

As for Paul, he wasn't any more “lost” than the average present day churchian. He was following a gospel that had been twisted by the Pharisees, but his heart told him that he was doing it for Yehova.

Present day churchians are also following a false gospel, seeking a pre-trib rapture that will never come, and believing in unconditional OSAS absurdity, and passing the same on to those that they are “getting saved” through the coaxed recital of the completely unscriptural “sinner's prayer.”

How are they different from Paul? Or Judas for that matter.

If you don't know him, then he doesn't know you.

John addresses how to “know him” and know that you know him in his first epistle

1John 2:

[3] And hereby we do know that we know him, if we keep his commandments.
[4] He that saith, I know him, and keepeth not his commandments, is a liar, and the truth is not in him.
[5] But whoso keepeth his word, in him verily is the love of God perfected: hereby know we that we are in him.
[6] He that saith he abideth in him ought himself also so to walk, even as he walked.

But the majority here at FR openly deny that what John said in that epistle is what Yeshua has asked of us.

Its not hard to see that what Yeshua says in Matthew 7:23 is what the majority of churchians will be hearing, not at the first resurrection, but later at the GWT judgment.

857 posted on 12/04/2014 3:16:44 PM PST by editor-surveyor (Freepers: Not as smart as I'd hoped they'd be)
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To: af_vet_1981
Myself beginning here from your own last sentence;

You answered it in part in one of your own statements which preceded that question.

Previous to development of patriarchates per se, things had been more along lines of concept for autoencaphaly for all bishops, although under biblical model each was (ideally, anyway) to make themselves subject to one another, and all the rest of the wider thus universal (catholic) Church, also.

Please bear in mind also, that these patriarchates as they eventually came to be known, there is lack of evidence and also some contra-evidence for in the first couple of centuries, even as that sort of church governing arrangement did eventually gel.

It is possibly interesting to note that the first official mentions or usages of the word to find their way into proceeding of Church Council(s), came about for reasons ancillary to the the Church of Rome having had asserted itself in North Africa, and in part, in response (in Church Council settings) was politely told to mind their own patriarchate (as others were also told/agreed to minding their own) there telling Rome to not again reach across the Mediterranean to appoint a priest there, setting also bulwark against two other patriarchates to do the same or similar in regards to any others, the same as Rome -- the overall results of the proceedings having rather pointedly re-established that they were in practical authority all on basically the same level.

The wording used included (I am here paraphrasing) "going back to how thing were from times of old" which shows there, even as late as the early fifth century was it(?) that Rome was not set above the other patriarchates, and in fact, in a gentle way, figuratively had their hands slapped for having engaged in some degree of over-reaching.

Still, when we go again yet further centuries back from that Church Council (Carthage, there was a rather long and interrelated series of them held in that City) the sense centuries previous (in the earliest times of the Church) was by weight of conciliation and agreement among the many (whom most all held their own independence) not by weight of signature of the bishop of Rome.

Later, at instances where participation and agreement of the Roman bishop be lacking -- if but for a time, one of those times stretching to 70 years or more was it(?), was at one juncture indeed cause for some consternation, but that unrest be for reason of desire for fullest unity of the Church, and due also for the admittedly high regard that many held (perhaps nostalgically?) for that particular bishopric which a couple of centuries after time of the Apostles came to be spoken of as having double-Apostolicity.

Yet that type of talk (as for or about 'Rome') can be seen as portion of how also men were trying to figure out who should be the boss...with the rather more republican-like form of horizontally arrayed governing, wherein the bishops when assembled and/or by letter could be the representatives as it were of the many churches (ekklesia) having been the more original order and arrangement of how the various ecclesia would communicate with one another as one greater "body" and association, thus universal or "catholic" Church.

Can you see it now?

So just what error have I committed? 25 years or so? That's not immediate? You've got to be kidding me...

To perhaps help to put this in perspective;
When we gaze upon the latter decade of the 1st century, among the scholars who delve into such issues, the most commonly accepted dating for the writing of the Book of Revelation is 90 AD.

Even if we are set consideration for that written work (Revelation) aside, there is such a close overlap as per Clement (as per year/date) that his own writing is so nearly immediate to the Apostle John's own lifespan -- can you show me much of anything which is earlier than Clement which is not directly Apostolic? (I already know the answer to that question, I *think*).

Now, as for yourself ending that portion [quoted immediately above] with "but it grew more prominent over time" when that is put together with that which you presented concerning Clement -- just WHAT are you straining to attempt to establish here but refutation of what I had said previously -- my having said so with no actual error;

The sort of history of the early Church which you just presented, is not only not entirely true, but many if not most of the key aspects there alluded to (in order to promote the Church of Rome as centrally authoritative over others, and recognized as such from the time immediately after the fall of Jerusalem) is simply not true, for Rome was not looked upon as seat of centralized authority by the rest of the Church, most particularly at any time near to the overthrow of Jerusalem.

You most certainly have not refuted the above.

It simply cannot be honestly done.

Truth is what it is.

If that conflicts with what the Church of Rome (A.K.A., the Roman Catholic Church) has long told itself (and it's adherents and it's critics too) about itself, that is not my problem ---

858 posted on 12/04/2014 3:23:00 PM PST by BlueDragon
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To: Elsie; Resettozero; delchiante

>> “What time IS it; really?” <<

.
There is only one standard in God’s word.

The new moon tells us when the year begins, at Jerusalem, as it defers to the Barley growing on the slopes of the Mount of Olives.

The same new moon tells us when each month begins.

It’ll also tell us when Yeshua will return to Earth, at Yom Teruah, if we have been diligent enough to have watched for Antichrist to make his formal announcement, also at Jerusalem, and then counted out the days that Daniel revealed to us between then and Yeshua’s meeting us in the cloud. In Revelation 3 he commands us to so watch.
.


859 posted on 12/04/2014 3:45:49 PM PST by editor-surveyor (Freepers: Not as smart as I'd hoped they'd be)
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To: editor-surveyor
In Revelation 3 he commands us to so watch.

Yes, we have been instructed multiple times to watch and to keep watch for we don't know the hour.

But I'm not sure which verse in Revelation chapter 3 you refer to.

And I won't argue with any Christian Jew to convince them to not observe the Jewish calendar. But I will argue against Gentile Judaisers who have puffed themselves up and who think they're getting brownie Christian points for acting as if they are now half-converts to Judaism.

This is also where arguments about days and times and foods and dishwashing procedures and what not to touch or handle all get started between Christians.

I'm out.
860 posted on 12/04/2014 4:06:00 PM PST by Resettozero
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