BreadOfLife
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Let's stop right here.There is the Church at Rome but never a Roman Catholic Church. Calling the Church at Rome the Roman Church is equally correct.
You are correct - sort of.
The Church in Rome is the "Roman Church" - just like the Church in London is the "London Church" and the Church in Los Angeles is the "Los Angeles Church".
HOWEVER - in this instance, the "Roman Church" simply refers to the location or the diocese.
Jesus only caused division between those who believe and those who don't - even family members.The Jerusalem council was Catholic. But it was not Roman. The Roman Church does exist. It had its beginning with the Church at Rome and has since turned into the thing that it is today. But, it does not represent the Catholic Church, though it wants to.
No, I do not accept your 'apostolic tradition'. I have no problem with tradition as long as it is correct and is not put on the same level or above the Scriptures.
How can division be anathema when Jesus caused division? As I showed you.
No, the divisions are caused by those teaching wrong doctrines, which force those who hold to the true doctrines to divide. (Rom.16:17) "Now I beseech you brethren,mark them which cause divisions and offences contrary to the doctrine which ye have learned; and avoid them."
Division is always necessary. Which is why so many turned away from the Romanist Church. (1Cor. 11:18-19) "For first of all, when ye come together in the church,I hear that there be divisions among you; and I partly believe it. For there must be also heresies among you, that they which are approved may be made manifest among you"
See? The approved recognize the heresies and separate themselves from them.
Stranger
1 Cor. 11:18-19 is talking about precisely this. R*E*A*D the passage slowly. It says that factions were necessary in Corinth to weed out the REAL Believers. Corinth was a really messed up congregation and had problems LONG after Paul died. Read the Epistle of Clement written in about 80 AD. It's all about the problems going on in that Church - and how they wrote to Pope Clement for a decision on the matter - even though the Apostle John was still alive and living in the East where Corinth was.
Why didn't they go to John??
Because Clement was the Pope - not John.
When the Council of Jerusalem took place - Peter and Paul had not yet gone to Rome to establish the Church there.
When they did, however, that Church became, as Cyprian of Carthage put it - "the church where sacerdotal unity has it's source."