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Catholic means universal or whole. Early Christians used the term to refer to the whole undivided Church. Accordingly, all Christians lay claim to the term, including Protestants, who often do not capitalize it. The Church fathers and the historic creeds used it to distinguish the mainstream body of orthodox Christian believers from those adhering to sects or heretical groups.
Present-day usageIn countries that have been traditionally Protestant, Catholic will often be included in the official name of a particular parish church, school, hospice or other institution belonging to the Catholic Church, in order to distinguish it from those of other denominations. For example, the name "St. Mark's Catholic Church" makes it clear that it is not an Episcopal or Lutheran church. A millennium before the Protestant Reformation, St. Augustine wrote:
Those who apply the term "Catholic Church" to all Christians indiscriminately find it ironic that a term they see as designating the whole Church (as an invisible entity) should refer to one communion only. However, the Roman Catholic Church, which normally refers to itself simply as the Catholic Church — in 1992 it published a "Catechism of the Catholic Church" — sees itself as, basically, the continuation of the original Catholic or universal Church, from which other groups broke away at various times in history. As well as the Roman Catholic Church, the Eastern Orthodox Churches, and the Oriental Orthodox Churches all see themselves as the "one holy catholic and apostolic Church" of the Nicene Creed. Others too who do not recognize the primacy of the Bishop of Rome use the term Catholic, but not in an exclusive sense, to describe their position, so as to distinguish it from a Calvinist or Puritan form of Protestantism. These include "High Church" Anglicans, known also as "Anglo-Catholics"). Catholic Epistles"Catholic Epistles" is another term for the General Epistles of the Christian New Testament in the Bible, which were addressed not to a particular city but to all in general. It is thus, strictly speaking, not an ecclesiastical term, being employed in the original broad sense of the Greek word from which "catholic" is derived. CapitalizationCapitalization is no sure guide to denominational affiliation. It may indicate formal affiliation with the Roman Catholic Church or it may not. Capitalization may merely indicate a wish to stress the holy and solemn nature of the spiritual body of believers and a desire for all Christians to be one. It would be anachronistic to attribute significance to capitalization or lack of capitalization in printings of texts dating from before the last few centuries or in translations of those texts, since the originals were written in unmixed majuscule or minuscule letters. Translations even of modern texts into English often follow the usage of the original language. For instance, since French normally capitalizes only the first word of the title of an entity, the adjective "catholique", following the noun "Eglise", has a lower-case initial. Texts in Latin generally follow this usage, not the English practice. Avoidance of usageMany Protestant Christian Churches — especially Evangelicals — avoid the term completely. The Orthodox Churches share some of the concerns about Catholic claims, but disagree with Protestants about the nature of the Church as one body. For some, to use the word "Catholic" at all is to appear to give credence to papal claims. See alsoExternal links
ca:Església Catòlica de:Katholische Kirche it:Chiesa cattolica ko:카톨릭 |
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