tall73 said:
It is not moot at all. You pick and choose in your own tradition. Just as you picked Ignatius' comment about Sunday, but ignored that he still kept the Sabbath. And you pick the comments of Tertulian when he is considered orthodox, but dismiss him...though he is still an important figure for understanding his time, after he turns to a different view of the Trinity.
The tradition shows a progression here, just as it did with papal succession. The records don't even agree who the early popes were, in what order they came, etc. And even Catholic sources show that they were a list of bishops or elders, not called popes until a later time.
These teachings were not handed down, they were pulled out by later generations. Generations who were selective, and worked according to their goals.
HUH? No, more thean adequate proof has been given in this thread, sorry to say and nowhere did you prove that Ignatius of Antioch still at htat point celebrated on Saturday with conclusive proof .... this is supposition on your behalf.... Therefore ladies and gents you can say all you like this and that but I have provided the proof and you have just provided suppositions, without empirical and objective evidence to back up those suppositions.
Considering it was Ignatius of Antioch that we look to for the complete defintion of Apostolic Succession then again you know not of what you speak, the Church thinks of him as one of the most prolyphic writers of his time and in Church History....
He was made a Bishop by the Apostles themselves and on top of that was friends with Polycorp who was Apostle John's student at the time....
Also called Theophorus (
ho Theophoros); born in Syria, around the year 50; died at Rome between 98 and 117.
More than one of the earliest ecclesiastical writers have given credence, though apparently without good reason, to the legend that Ignatius was the child whom the Savior took up in His arms, as described in Mark 9:35. It is also believed, and with great probability, that, with his friend
Polycarp, he was among the auditors of the Apostle St. John. If we include St. Peter, Ignatius was the third Bishop of Antioch and the immediate successor of Evodius (Eusebius, "Hist. Eccl.", II, iii, 22). Theodoret ("Dial. Immutab.", I, iv, 33a, Paris, 1642) is the authority for the statement that St. Peter appointed Ignatius to the See of Antioch.
St. John Chrysostom lays special emphasis on the honor conferred upon the martyr in receiving his episcopal consecration at the hands of the Apostles themselves("Hom. in St. Ig.", IV. 587). Natalis Alexander quotes Theodoret to the same effect (III, xii, art. xvi, p. 53).
http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/07644a.htm
Sorry you may think that using an encyclopedia is something that one should not do, I on the other hand think that one should avail themselves of ALL the KNOWLEDGE at their disposal ..... Christ told us to become educated and to verify not just by the means of the Bible but to make sure that what we see in the Bible is accurate .... He told me to Test my Faith and therefore I do test it against many things .... there is nothing wrong with that and one of the qualifiers is History and the facts of History... So therefore it is not that I am poor because I have to go to an encyclopedia to verify things it is that it enriches my Faith and my Knowledge which the Lord has told to ccontinually be seeking of Him ..... IMHO, I am sorry to say I find it hard to understand those that do not see this aspect and that are afraid to test their faith .... If your Faith is the TRuth then there should be no fear whatsoever in testing it should there and actually it should strengthen it not harm it .....