"Many 'Bible Alone' Christians will say that the Church of the Bible
looks nothing like the Catholic Church. If that were true, then we would
expect to find evidence of the first few hundred years of Christianity
to support this claim. However, what we do find is evidence to show that
the Early Church was indeed Catholic in every way! Many Protestants
claim that the Church of the first three centuries was a 'pure' Church
and base that on a modern reading of Acts 2:42, ignoring that writings
of the earliest Christians. They will also claim that it was only after
the legalization of Christianity by Roman Emperor Constantine (313 AD)
did the Church become 'Catholic' and corrupt. However, the doctrines of
Post-Constantine Catholicism are the same doctrines that were held by
Christians for the preceding three centuries. In fact, the evidence
below clearly shows that the beliefs of the Early Church are the same as
those of the Catholic Church today in the 3rd millennium. . . .
"To make sure that the apostolic tradition would be passed down after the deaths of the apostles, Paul also told Timothy, 'What you have heard from me before many witnesses entrust to faithful men who will be able to teach others also' (2 Tim. 2:2). In other words, he was telling Timothy that it was
necessary to keep the traditions and teachings alive. Yes, he was
writing letters, but every place a church had been established did not
instantly get a copy of those letters. It would take many, many years
before they all would be compiled into what we now know as the New
Testament. No written Bibles as we know them today existed. . . .
"The Bible as we know it today didn’t come into being until the Councils
of Hippo and Carthage. That is when the Catholic Church defined which
books made it into the New Testament and which didn't. There were many
letters and writings that were floating around and they saw a need to
settle which were to be considered as inspired, which were important but
not inspired, and which were even heretical. The council fathers
studied many documents, including, of course, the writings of the
Apostles themselves, but it was not until these councils that the Church
officially settled the issue of what should be included in the Canon of
Scripture"
In a commentary, writer Kenneth Henderson reflected on what the early Church looked like and how the Bible came into being.
To access Mr. Henderson's complete post, please visit:
The Pint, The Pipe and The Cross: The Church, from the very Beginning…was Catholic! (12 AUG 16)
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