You're essentially right here. There were few differences in fundamental doctrine between the Donatists and the Constantine-led Catholics. But I'm not sure that they considered themselves the "real Catholics." Constantine himself invented the term, and led the unification effort. While the Donatists went along at first and even asked for arbitration from Rome in one instance, after the arbitration went against them they decided that church and state should be separate--somewhat of a convenient change in doctrine to be sure, but certainly an anti-Catholic belief.Zenas said:John, I would tend to agree with Edmond concerning the Donatists, but I don't think he told the whole truth. The Donatists were to the Catholic Church what the Puritans were to the Church of England, or perhaps more correctly what fundamentalists are to the Baptist Church. Not many doctrinal differences but dedicated to higher standards. The Catholics were inclusive; the Donatists (who regarded themselves as the real Catholics) were exclusive.
These statements are, to me, too dogmatic (seeing we have so little evidence from the Donatists themselves) and somewhat misleading, since Christianity in the 4th century was so much different than it is in the 21st century. For example, my reading says that it was dire sins, not just any sin after baptism, that they exercised church discipline towards. And even then it didn't appear to be that such sins could never be forgiven, just that they left it up to God, not the church.Donatists believed in the sacraments, except they did not believe in the forgiveness of sins committed after baptism. They believed in the Catholic priesthood. They venerated relics. Not much of a forerunner to the Baptist faith.
They believed in the priesthood, yes. So do I believe in the priesthood of the believers. However, I think you'd be hard put to prove that the Donatist concept of the priesthood was the same as that of 21st century Catholicism.
Concerning venerating relics, again this is a supposition. A rich widow Donatist named Lucilla did so according to Schaff. Did anyone else? My reading doesn't say this was a Donatist doctrine.
All around, to me the far greater heresy was that of Constantine in uniting the churches and instituting control from the top. As a good Baptist (I hope!