CJ,
So, you see NewMan99 arguing that with Clement, we have "the first step toward papal dominion." Hum.
Think about it, Josiah. Step back and think about what Schaff was actually saying. He was not saying that there was no
papal office prior to Clement. You are reading that into his words. He was saying that in Clement's letter to the Corinthians we have the first known
historical evidence that the papal office was asserting itself in a context of universal jurisdiction. Thus it is possible that prior to this letter no other Bishop of Rome asserted a form of universal authority (since this is the first historical evidence of it) - however - we have no historical evidence that prior Bishops of Rome did not either. And since Clement was a contemporary of Peter, it can be fairly said that even if this is the first instance of papal assertion of universal authority - it came pretty darned early in Church history, and within living memory of the Apostles (while one Apostle was still alive). Also, assuming for argument's sake that Clement was the first to assert papal authority in a universal context, that does not mean that Clement's predecessors did not also have the same level (and type) of authority. Just because someone has a certain kind of authority available to them does not mean that they will necessarily be compelled to use it.
MY position is that the bishop in Rome EVOLVED into what we now think of as the Pope of The Catholic Church.
And our position is that you are wrong. The problem I have with your statement is two-fold.
1. I object to your use of the word "evolve". It is a loaded term (especially among many Christians for whom the word "evolution" has a negative connotation). What does it even mean? In one context it could mean that one entity "evolved" into a different entity (i.e., dinosaurs supposedly evolved into birds). In another context it could mean something far less of a dramatic change (i.e., a species is merely adapting to its conditions when, for example, human pigmentation supposedly evolved and became darker among those who are natives along the equator than it is among those who live on the frozen tundra).
2. The more accurate word would be "developed" (and I believe this word can also suit your purposes and position too). Our position is not that the puppy grew up and became a cat - it is that the puppy grew up and became a dog.
Bob's position is that the bishop of that diocese has been regarded as having the two characteristics he's stressed (infallibility and the "entire universal church" being bound to such) from at least 30 AD so that it is at least theoretically possible that Jesus founded such.
Except that you continue to impose your definitions on the terms I use, and then argue against a position that I don't really hold. You have yet to accurately articulate back to me what I really mean when I speak of infallibility and what I mean by "binding the entire universal Church". So I am saying one thing - but you are hearing something entirely different.
And you prove this very point in your next comments:
Thus, it seems to ME, what you are substantiating is that I'm right, my unseparated Catholic brother.
It is good you used the qualifier "seems to ME" - because what you perceive is not exactly what we are saying to you. It might "seem" to you - but it isn't.
And you seem to be suggesting that this STARTED not with Jesus in 30 AD or before, but with Clement in 90 AD or so (some 60 years after the death/resurrection of Jesus), a process of evolution of claims we can see at least through 1870 as the denomination claims that such is "infallible" (one of the two marks of the papacy, as NewMan99 noted).
Nobody is suggesting any such thing. You are reading that into the text by imposing your own definitions on terms we use. We are suggesting that the STYLE of the papacy DEVELOPED through necessity - HOWEVER - the underlying authority was ALWAYS a part of Peter's (and his successors') special ministry (as given to him by Jesus). This special ministry as supreme pastor included universal jurisdiction along with the charism of papal infallibility as the Key-bearer who would strengthen others and keep the Church both unified and orthodox. The puppy developed and got doggier - it didn't "evolve" into a cat. A puppy organically develops into a dog. The style of the early papacy developed organically into the style we see later in the Middle Ages and then continued to develop organically into the style of the current papacy.