It's so simple, Singer. It existed when Christ established it as He said He would in Matthew 16:18! Actually, the "birthday" for the church is considered to be Pentecost, when the holy Spirit came to enlighten all of the apostles, who were the "charter clergy" of this new church, but all Christians who were followers of Christ at the time.Originally posted by Singer:
Bill,
I have to go pick up a grandson and deliver a pickup truck to the mechanic and
get some parts for my swather and eat dinner........while I'm gone will you please
explain how the Catholic Church existed the day after pentecost.
So, we start out with a "community of believers" which is the church.
History shows that this is the same church, starting from Pentecost to about AD 110, when the title of "Catholic" which means universal, was attached as an amplification to the title of "church." So, we had the Catholic Church by title by Ignatious, yet it is the same church as Christ established!
If you doubt that, show me the true church that Christ established other then the Catholic Church, Singer! You simply cannot do that!
I last said:
The Church was in existence before the first Christian ever stepped into the city of Rome! Got it, now?
Which is telling you what, Singer? What does the attachment of an amplification of "Catholic" (given a capitol C since it is a title) to the same church Christ founded?Catholics admittingly confess to the term "Catholic" being used around 110 AD
with St. Ignatius and that it was taken from the term ''catholic' (Small C) that
depicted the group of believers (At, Before and after Pentecost) who believed
that Jesus was the Messiah. He was not asking them to believe anything more.
Is Jesus "Universal"?[/b]Please don't use the analogy that Jesus was a Catholic and God was a Catholic.[/b]
Is God "Universal"?
Therefore, I can quite nicely say that both Jesus and God are "Catholic!"

Why does that word, "Catholic," bother you so much, Singer? It is almost as repelling to you as a slip of garlic placed around the neck of Dracula!
The very early infant church was not called "catholic" simply because they were not yet "universal." That term did not apply until the gospel of the Lord was indeed, preached throughout the then known world, including the establishment of local churches there. Then and only then was it considered "universal." And when that title was coined by St. Ignatius, the word "universal" ("catholic") was capitolized, because then the word was now also a title of the Church. Now called the Catholic Church.Believers existed before Catholicism.
Facial tissues existed before Kleenex.
The term "Roman Catholic" is an oxymoron, as it expresses both universality and localism all at the same time. It was coined by the Anglicans (The Church of England) to distinguish them from the Church of Rome. They considered themselves as "English Catholics" and the rest of the Church as "Roman Catholic" (other then the Orthodox Church.)
I dislike the term and I eschew it normally.
That is all there is to it, Singer. You cannot isolate the word "Catholic" to apply to your distorted caracature of what you think the "Church of Rome" is which, in reality that old church is a sub-set of "THE CHURCH" that is the Universal Church!
Oh, another thing, the inventers of facial tissues later on gave it the name Kleenix? I don't know, but is an interesting thought...

God bless,
PAX
Bill+†+
Blest be God.
Blest be his holy name.
Blest be Jesus Christ, true God and true man.
Blest be the name of Jesus.
Blest be his most sacred heart.
Blest be his most precious blood.
Blest be Jesus in the most holy sacrament of the altar.
Blest be the Holy Spirit, the Consoler.
Blest be the great Mother of God, Mary most holy.
Blest be her holy and immaculate conception.
Blest be her glorious assumption.
Blest be the name of Mary, virgin and mother.
Blest be Saint Joseph, her most chaste spouse.
Blest be God in his angels and in his saints.
- The Divine Praises -