dan said:
My next order of business is to establish by the example of the Catholic Church (Christianity from the fourth century on) that the government of the church had been radically and illegally altered. It is paramount, then, to show that as long as God's people have had an ecclesiastical leader endorsed from on high, that leader has been an ordained leader, approved by God for his righteousness. In the OT it was originally prophets who bore the burden of leading the people, and they were righteous. If they weren't they were immediately removed from office. When Israel chose to have kings rule them they began a downward spiral into iniquity. These kings often ruled in unrighteousness, but their office gave them no ecclesiastical authority. There was usually a prophet to counsel them. We know this from the scripture that has been recorded. Another interesting fact: whenever there has been an approved ecclesiastical authority on the earth there has been scripture. We do not possess all of it, but we do know definitively that God's people were never guided by Him save scripture was present.
The point I believe is irrefutable is that there is no example anywhere in the Bible of ecclesiastical authority consistently administering in wickedness. Whenever the ecclesiastical leaders have become corrupt God has taken one of two actions. First, he immediately replaces the corrupt authority with a righteous one, or He withdraws His authority and administration completely. Those times would be the times of apostasy mentioned earlier.
"The scribes and the Pharisees sit in Moses' seat. Therefore, whatever they tell you to observe, that observe and do, but do not do according to their works, for they say and do not do." (Mt. 23.2). This would contradict your argument. Furthermore, would not Moses' seat be the closest thing to a mention of a prophetic office? This, however, would countermand your whole point on the matter: it would mean that wicked popes wouldn't disqualify the Roman Catholic Church (as if that were the only thing you have to consider and deal with).
dan said:
My object with this post is to show that the Catholic Church cannot be viewed as anything other than a manifestation complete and total withdrawal of divine sanction.
Which Catholic Church? My Church claims to be the Catholic Church. The Oriental Orthodox claim that. The Roman Catholics claim that. We all have a direct line to the Apostles. Which one manifests a "complete and total withdrawal of divine sanction?" I cite the same St. John of Shanghai and San Francisco I mentioned earlier as
proof that there is not a "complete and total withdrawal of divine sanction." You may say that it is deception, and it may well be, but his recent life is a direct challenge to this claim.
dan said:
We can begin in the Bible. There are numerous examples of churches being led by corrupt doctrines. Paul's letters are almost all corrective in nature. How would these congregations have survived had Paul not been around? Here's a better question: at what point, exactly, did these churches become autonomous to apostolic counsel? At the deaths of the apostles those epistles stopped and those churches were left to themselves. Had there been an ecclesiastical authority on the earth they would have continued as one. Without this counsel they would have split. As it really happened, they immediately began teaching all kinds of false and perverted doctrines.
What was the nature of those errors? It wasn't a rejection of a counsel of twelve apostles, for instance. We don't have any record of that. We do have Gnostic groups and their rebuttals (in Irenaeus, Hyppolitus, etc.). This type of falling away and doctrinal problems also fits in well with the Apostle Paul's statements, but it doesn't require a complete corruption of Christianity immediately after the Apostles. It also fits in well with Catholic doctrine and history.
It is also possible that the initial apostles and apostolic tradition was being laid down to prevent a total apostasy, because, well, God is the master builder and knows exactly what He is doing. This isn't evidence of a total apostasy. We can interpret it just as faithfully within our framework. There
was a great apostasy, and the apostasies continue

.
dan said:
From Joseph Milner's five volume History of the Church of Christ: "We shall now perceive that the most precious truths of the Gospel begin to be less attended to, and less brought to view. Even Justin Martyr, before the period of eclectic corruption, by his fondness for Plato, adulterated the gospel in some degree…Tatian, his scholar, went bolder lengths, and deserved the name of heretic. He dealt largely in the merits of continence and chastity; and these virtues, pushed into extravagant excesses, under the notion of superior purity, became great engines of self-righteousness and superstition; obscured men's view of the faith of Christ, and darkened the whole face of Christianity. Under the fostering hand of Ammonius and his followers, this fictitious holiness disguised under the appearance of eminent sanctity, was formed into a system; and it soon began to generate the worst evils…St. Paul's caution against philosophy and vain deceit, it appears, was now fatally neglected by Christians."
Wonderful. I now cite the Apostle Paul himself who quotes pagan poets as divine authorities (Acts 17.28). How is it that Paul can quote a pagan poet as a divine authority if there is no validity to them? Further, John opens his Gospel by calling Christ the
Logos. That word derives its use and meaning in contexts like this
from pagan philosophy. Hebrews draws its language of shadows and reality, heavenly and earthly realities, from Plato and reads the OT in light of that. It was a Hellenistic world, and frankly, philosophy was the
lingua franca, which means that Christianity would inevitably have to use it; indeed the Apostles had already done so.
dan said:
Here are some systems of faith that gained large followings during this time period, according to Hegesippus, by way of Eusebius: Simonians, Cleobians, Dositheans, Gortheonians, Masbotheans, Meandrians, Marcionists, Carpocratians, Valentinians, Basilidians and Saturnillians. Each of these sects was headed by an ecclesiastical leader vying for rank and authority. It was in this cloud of discord and pomp that Constantine held a council so that the doctrines could be ironed out. Different groups argued their cases and votes were taken. Majority established the original doctrine and the losers were made to conform or be killed. Many were killed. Is this truly God's ordained church? Does it act under His divine approbation?
Have you
read Eusebius, St. Irenaeus, St. Hippolytus, or any of the others? These sects were already on the down swing before Constantine. Why? Because they had a founder, and the Church went back to the Apostles. Each one claimed in some fashion to be restoring the doctrines of the Apostles or teaching hidden doctrines, but the Christian apologists argued, would not the Apostles have taught these doctrines to those to whom they had left the churches?
Which of these groups you named were exterminated by Constantine, and could you give me a source from around the era, not some modern book? You will not be able to do so. They were already going extinct. Sects were being dealt with before Constantine by Christian councils, apologists, and the like. Gnosticism was dying then, even with a few groups having their last gasps.
Furthermore, Nicea wasn't aimed at any of the groups you named (and that was Constantine's council). It was aimed at Arius, and originally the bishops were pro-Arian. When they saw what it taught clearly, they abandoned it and opposed Arianism and made
homoousia into a term for Christian theology. They, further, were not immediately accepted. Indeed, it was the other side that took power and began persecuting (remember, this Constantine who killed these groups even recalled the heresiarch he banished).
Your history is far from the mark, and as such, your conclusions must be at least as far.
dan said:
Allow me to further examine the leadership of this church. I'm well aware that the actions of the common members of any church in no way represent the church as a whole, so I will keep my comments limited to the very popes that ran this church. Every single male mentioned by name was Pope.
For the first one thousand years, the Pope was
never the individual "that ran this church."
Never did he have that kind of jurisdiction, and as such, you start your very criticism on the wrong foot. Before any such assertions were made, there was indeed corruption (look at the situation in the West before you judge too far), and you will find that it was one of the reasons that the East dismissed its theologians (even if sometimes unjustly so), and they weren't fond of it.
Further, when a pope tried to push himself as an individual "that ran this church," it resulted in schism. The Roman Catholics today represent the jurisdiction that was already under his authority and those they have evangelized since, Orthodoxy everybody else.
Again, your history is so far off the mark that your points cannot hold water. The papacy itself was a historical development, and as such, you haven't really addressed the nature of the Catholic Church in the first millennium (when its identity is relatively undisputed).
Because of the above, I feel no need to even comment on your list of popes. It really has no bearing on the matter IMO.