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An argument to be the Universal Church (made by any organisation) might be the argument of continuity and antiquity, that an organisation can trace its existence back to antiquity such that it can trace a continuous presence in the world back to the time of the Apostles.

Laying that argument aside, does the present day Church of Rome have any claim or argument to make that it can be genuinely called 'The Body of Christ'?

curiousdannii
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Nigel J
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  • The Roman Catholic Church is only one Rite within the Catholic Church. – Ken Graham Jan 07 '19 at 19:17
  • Does the Roman Catholic Church actually assert that it is the only valid "Body of Christ"? Where would it say they exclude Eastern Orthodox as part of said Body? Or Protestants for that matter. – SLM Jan 07 '19 at 19:47
  • @SLM I have edited 'in its local sphere of operation' in order to more closely define. – Nigel J Jan 07 '19 at 20:23
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    I'm not a big fan of changing the title of the question so as to invalidate answers. Either way, I think you should change this question to "does the Latin Rite of the Catholic Church claim that it is the Body of Christ to the exclusion of the other Eastern Rites, the Orthodox Churches, all Protestants and all other Christians?" to which the answer would be no. – Peter Turner Jan 08 '19 at 20:09
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    I believe the word "Roman" should be removed from the title and left as Catholic Church. The reason being is that the first three centuries the liturgical language in Rome was Greek, not Latin. Some believe that it was St. Augustine who first brought in Latin in to the liturgy while in Africa. – Ken Graham Jan 08 '19 at 20:43
  • @SLM Yes, the Catholic Church claims that heretics and schismatics are not part of the church. – Pascal's Wager Jan 08 '19 at 20:46
  • @Peter Turner Yes, I agree. It would be unfair to invalidate answers by changing (fundamentally) the nature of the question. I think that is against Stack Exchange policies. – Nigel J Jan 08 '19 at 20:48
  • @Ken Graham. Given that the question lays aside antiquity and continuity arguments, I think that the first three centuries become irrelevant (only in regard to the question, of course). – Nigel J Jan 08 '19 at 20:50
  • Pope Pius XII states that the Universal Church is comprised of the Latin and Eastern Catholic Rites together. Tagging the question "Early Church" implies that one can use claims coming from antiquity. Otherwise it should be removed as it makes no sense. This question wants to take away the very foundation of the Church in a historical sense of the word, by excluding claims that are put forth in the Early Church itself. – Ken Graham Jan 08 '19 at 23:05
  • @KenGraham Point taken. Tag removed. – Nigel J Jan 08 '19 at 23:23
  • Historical claims from antiquity and Catholic continuity may not be permitted in responses. But what about historical facts that are not about claims, but are just that: historical facts? No interpretations, no claims, just facts. Are they permitted? – Ken Graham Jan 09 '19 at 03:52
  • @KenGraham Yes. Yes, of course. – Nigel J Jan 09 '19 at 13:35
  • @SLM "Does the Roman Catholic Church actually assert that it is the only valid "Body of Christ"? Where would it say they exclude Eastern Orthodox as part of said Body? Or Protestants for that matter." Pope Pius XII encyclical Mystici corporis Christi of 29 June 1943. – Ken Graham Jan 09 '19 at 15:14
  • @KenGraham Very revealing, especially the added "Roman Church" to the traditional 4-fold definition, thus excluding Orthodox and Protestant. "13. If we would define and describe this true Church of Jesus Christ - which is the One, Holy, Catholic, Apostolic and Roman Church [12] - we shall find nothing more noble, more sublime, or more divine than the expression "the Mystical Body of Christ"" But, didn't Vatican II more or less subsequently redefine that exclusivity idea? – SLM Jan 09 '19 at 17:36
  • It is all very simple. Jesus said that he is the vine and we are the branches. What we can learn from history is that the first Church, the Catholic Church, is the trunk of the vine; and that all other Christian Churches are offshoots from that trunk, all belonging to the vine, which is Christ. Thus, “The Mystical Body of Christ” encompasses all true Christians, from all Christian denomination. However, there may exist more true Christians in some denominations, than others. But, that is something only God knows. – Constantthin Aug 26 '19 at 05:17

6 Answers6

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Apart from any claim related to antiquity, does the modern Roman Catholic Church claim to be" The Body of Christ"?

The short answer is: Yes.

Pope Pius XII's encyclical Mystici Corporis Christi (Mystical Body of Christ) (June 29, 1943) should count as being on topic for this post? And, if so, keep reading.

Although Pope Pius XII states in his encyclical states that the true Church is which is the One, Holy, Catholic, Apostolic and Roman Church as being the Mystical body of Christ; he also states that the Universal Church comprises of the Latin and Eastern Rites.

  1. If we would define and describe this true Church of Jesus Christ - which is the One, Holy, Catholic, Apostolic and Roman Church - we shall find nothing more noble, more sublime, or more divine than the expression "the Mystical Body of Christ" - an expression which springs from and is, as it were, the fair flowering of the repeated teaching of the Sacred Scriptures and the Holy Fathers.

(42) What we have thus far said of the Universal Church must be understood also of the individual Christian communities, whether Oriental or Latin, which go to makeup the one Catholic Church. For they, too, are ruled by Jesus Christ through the voice of their respective Bishops.

Of all the Eastern Rites Churches, the Maronite Catholic Church has never been separated from unity with the See of St. Peter. Thus indicating a small flaw in the title of this question as it is presented at this moment in time.

The Maronite Church is considered the only one of the Eastern Catholic Churches to have always remained in full communion with the Holy See, while most of the other churches unified from the 16th century onwards.

Before going on any further, I believe the word "Roman" should be used with caution. The reason being is that the first three centuries the liturgical language in Rome was Greek, not Latin. Some believe that it was St. Augustine who first brought in Latin in to the liturgy while in Africa. The Church has from her very foundation worshiped in several languages and still does. This is not an historical claim, but an historical fact and as such is permitted in this response.

The following is not an historical claim from antiquity, but an historical fact dating back to antiquity.

The first language of Christian liturgy was Aramaic, the common language of the first Christians, who were Palestinian Jews. While Hebrew was the language of scripture and formal worship, Christian worship occurred in the home where Aramaic was spoken. The words Abba and maranatha are Aramaic.

Christianity quickly spread from Palestine to the rest of the world, and the Eucharist came to be celebrated in many languages, including Syriac, Coptic, and Armenian. In most of the Mediterranean world, the common language was Greek, which became the language of liturgy in that region and remained so until the early third century.

Eucharist itself is a Greek word, meaning thanksgiving. The phrase Kyrie eleison and the words liturgy, baptism, evangelize, martyr, and catechumen, among other familiar church words, are also Greek in origin.

From around the third century B.C., what we call “classical” Latin was the language of the Roman aristocracy and the educated classes. Around the time Jesus was born, during the reign of Augustus Caesar, the language began to change. The Roman aristocracy was destroyed by war and political infighting; when they disappeared, their language went with them. Classical Latin was replaced by a less refined version of the language.

In the third and fourth centuries A.D. this form of Latin began to replace Greek as the common language of the Roman world and soon became the language of the liturgy.

Exactly how this change in the liturgy came about is uncertain. In the early church the liturgy was led extemporaneously by the bishop, according to a pattern. There were written examples of Eucharistic Prayers, but they were models, not prescribed prayers. The last such document in Greek was written around the year 215. By the sixth century, the Roman Canon (which is still in use, also called Eucharistic Prayer I) appears, completely in Latin and prescribed for use exactly as written. - When did we start celebrating Mass in Latin?

Now for responding to the question at hand: Apart from any claim related to antiquity, does the modern Roman Catholic Church claim to be "The Body of Christ"?

Yes.

Well it so happens that Pope Pius XII in his encyclical Mystici Corporis Christi (29 June 1943) affirms that the Catholic Church is in fact the Mystical Body of Christ. The pope is the head of the Catholic Church on earth whether of the Roman Rite or Eastern Rite Catholics. We are still one Church in Christ.

The Maronite Church is considered the only one of the Eastern Catholic Churches to have always remained in full communion with the Holy See, while most of the other churches unified from the 16th century onwards. However, the Melkite Catholic Church and the Italo-Albanian Greek Catholic Church also claim perpetual communion. Eastern Catholic Churches (Wikipedia)

Pope Pius XII boldly asserts that the Universal Church is made up of the Roman Rite and those of the Eastern Rites united to the See of St. Peter.

Mystici corporis Christi (29 June 1943) is a papal encyclical issued by Pope Pius XII during World War II, on the Church as the Mystical Body of Christ.2 It is one of the more important encyclicals of Pope Pius XII, because of its topic, the Church, and because its Church concept was fully included in Lumen gentium but also strongly debated during and after Vatican II. The Church is called body, because it is a living entity; it is called the body of Christ, because Christ is its Head and Founder; it is called mystical body, because it is neither a purely physical nor a purely spiritual unity, but supernatural.

The actual encyclical has much to say and here follows just a small sampling. One may peruse the entire encyclical at one's leisure (Mystici Corporis Christi):

The doctrine of the Mystical Body of Christ, which is the Church, was first taught us by the Redeemer Himself. Illustrating as it does the great and inestimable privilege of our intimate union with so exalted a Head, this doctrine by its sublime dignity invites all those who are drawn by the Holy Spirit to study it, and gives them, in the truths of which it proposes to the mind, a strong incentive to the performance of such good works as are conformable to its teaching.

(14) That the Church is a body is frequently asserted in the Sacred Scriptures. "Christ," says the Apostle, "is the Head of the Body of the Church." If the Church is a body, it must be an unbroken unity, according to those words of Paul: "Though many we are one body in Christ." But it is not enough that the Body of the Church should be an unbroken unity; it must also be something definite and perceptible to the senses as Our predecessor of happy memory, Leo XIII, in his Encyclical Satis Cognitum asserts: "the Church is visible because she is a body. Hence they err in a matter of divine truth, who imagine the Church to be invisible, intangible, a something merely "pneumatological" as they say, by which many Christian communities, though they differ from each other in their profession of faith, are untied by an invisible bond.

(15) But a body calls also for a multiplicity of members, which are linked together in such a way as to help one another. And as in the body when one member suffers, all the other members share its pain, and the healthy members come to the assistance of the ailing, so in the Church the individual members do not live for themselves alone, but also help their fellows, and all work in mutual collaboration for the common comfort and for the more perfect building up of the whole Body.

(22) Actually only those are to be included as members of the Church who have been baptized and profess the true faith, and who have not been so unfortunate as to separate themselves from the unity of the Body, or been excluded by legitimate authority for grave faults committed. "For in one spirit" says the Apostle, "were we all baptized into one Body, whether Jews or Gentiles, whether bond or free." As therefore in the true Christian community there is only one Body, one Spirit, one Lord, and one Baptism, so there can be only one faith. And therefore, if a man refuse to hear the Church, let him be considered - so the Lord commands - as a heathen and a publican. It follows that those who are divided in faith or government cannot be living in the unity of such a Body, nor can they be living the life of its one Divine Spirit.

(34) That this Mystical Body which is the Church should be called Christ's is proved in the second place from the fact that He must be universally acknowledged as its actual Head. "He," as St. Paul says, "is the Head of the Body, the Church." He is the Head from whom the whole body perfectly organized, "groweth and maketh increase unto the edifying of itself."

(42) What we have thus far said of the Universal Church must be understood also of the individual Christian communities, whether Oriental or Latin, which go to makeup the one Catholic Church. For they, too, are ruled by Jesus Christ through the voice of their respective Bishops. Consequently, Bishops must be considered as the more illustrious members of the Universal Church, for they are united by a very special bond to the divine Head of the whole Body and so are rightly called "principal parts of the members of the Lord;" moreover, as far as his own diocese is concerned, each one as a true Shepherd feeds the flock entrusted to him and rules it in the name of Christ. Yet in exercising this office they are not altogether independent, but are subordinate to the lawful authority of the Roman Pontiff, although enjoying the ordinary power of jurisdiction which they receive directly from the same Supreme Pontiff. Therefore, Bishops should be revered by the faithful as divinely appointed successors of the Apostles, and to them, even more than to the highest civil authorities should be applied the words: "Touch not my anointed one!" For Bishops have been anointed with the chrism of the Holy Spirit.

(66) And if at times there appears in the Church something that indicates the weakness of our human nature, it should not be attributed to her juridical constitution, but rather to that regrettable inclination to evil found in each individual, which its Divine Founder permits even at times in the most exalted members of His Mystical Body, for the purpose of testing the virtue of the Shepherds no less than of the flocks, and that all may increase the merit of their Christian faith. For, as We said above, Christ did not wish to exclude sinners from His Church; hence if some of her members are suffering from spiritual maladies, that is no reason why we should lessen our love for the Church, but rather a reason why we should increase our devotion to her members. Certainly the loving Mother is spotless in the Sacraments by which she gives birth to and nourishes her children; in the faith which she has always preserved inviolate; in her sacred laws imposed on all; in the evangelical counsels which she recommends; in those heavenly gifts and extraordinary grace through which with inexhaustible fecundity she generates hosts of martyrs, virgins and confessors. But it cannot be laid to her charge if some members fall, weak or wounded. In their name she prays to God daily: "Forgive us our trespasses;" and with the brave heart of a mother she applies herself at once to the work of nursing them back to spiritual health. When, therefore, we call the Body of Jesus Christ "mystical," the very meaning of the word conveys a solemn warning. It is a warning that echoes in these words of St. Leo: "Recognize, O Christian, your dignity, and being made a sharer of the divine nature go not back to your former worthlessness along the way of unseemly conduct. Keep in mind of what Head and of what Body you are a member."

Then there is the fact that the Church claims of Apostolic Succession; but because this question overtly refuses to allow such legitimate claims (in Antiquity) shows yet another flaw on the subject (wording in the title of this post) of the true Universal Body of Christ which is the Church.

The Pope is the Supreme Pontiff of the entire Catholic Church (Latin or Oriental) which is called the Mystical Body of Christ, yesterday and today.

Ken Graham
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The question itself is inherently flawed, for several reasons (and thus any attempt at an answer is thus fallacious and mistaken):

Off the top of my head:

  • Any claim to be the true Church outside of demonstrating it historically amounts at best to 'good persuasion' (yes, as subjective as it sounds) to your personal (i.e., not historical) interpretation of Scripture, which is nothing objective and meaningless as a standard for determining which Church Christ founded. (You don't get to simply say, 'but, but it does mean this.' No one should have to simply accept that your interpretation is the final and correct one, which they need to in order to know that they've happened upon the Church, not a potential 'the Church.'

    As St. Athanasius points out, the only difference between an Arius and an Athanasius is "how many Fathers [of the Church] can you cite for your [beliefs]?" It does no good to argue from Scripture, because both sides did, and lots.

  • You cannot use the Bible to prove you are the true Church alone (i.e. as excluding the argument from ancientness/originality/apostolicity), either, since, historically speaking (the history can't be ignored simply because history specifically isn't the criterion in view), it was what everyone would have to call the Catholic Church that codified what constitutes the Bible before which time there were disagreements about what constitutes the canon of Scripture).

    This can also be called 'the Catholic Bible conundrum.' In that any attempt to prove the true Church from 'the Bible' already concedes that the Catholic Church had the authority to discern between Books and define the Canon for all Christians in the worldwide Church (which, again, historically speaking, is incontrovertible). And since a false Church has no authority to do this, but one did, and there is only one Church, then it is the Catholic Church which Jesus Christ founded, not any other.

On the other hand, an argument could be made that citing the fact that apostolic fathers (men who lived with directly, or lived with disciples of the Apostles taught things only Catholics still believe). And this isn't 'early people believed it so it's true,' it's that it's what the Apostles were teaching, or at the least, what could be matter-of-factly spoken of as Christianity in the first, second and third centuries, never to be questioned by later Christians (1500 years later is not a valid or realistic candidate, let's be honest here—that sounds suspiciously like a novelty, or heresy). It then only becomes a matter of whether the Eastern Orthodox or Catholics are the true Church in such a case, since only those really hold to the bishop, presbyter, deacon structure of the Church, as well as the Eucharist as a sacrifice, virgin Mary as new Eve, etc. In which case the Papacy becomes a deciding factor. And even then, the East always accepted and acted like it was true that the bishop of Rome was to be recoursed to in disputes and issues bishops who were closer to them couldn't. Arguably in Clement of Rome's case, even over a living Apostle (John).

In other words, the question is flawed because it asks the reader to overlook things which cannot be overlooked when determining the true faith—a doctrinal novelty (and on top of that, not just a new belief, but one which contradicts everything accepted as the true belief before it) can't just claim to be original, because you can read it into Scripture. It has to correspond to reality, history, and the way things are. What I mean by overlook is that even if you 'proved' to someone's satisfaction you were the true Church, once you take off the blindfold to history, you'll see there was no one who ever believed this.

Sola Gratia
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  • If we would define and describe this true Church of Jesus Christ - which is the One, Holy, Catholic, Apostolic and Roman Church [12] - we shall find nothing more noble, more sublime, or more divine than the expression "the Mystical Body of Christ" as mentioned Pope Pius XII encyclical Mystici corporis Christi of 29 June 1943. Unless subsequently rejected by another Pope, tough to get around that definition.
  • – SLM Jan 09 '19 at 17:39
  • Yes, the term body of Christ and church are synonymous: "His body, which is the church" (Col. 1:24). – Sola Gratia Jan 09 '19 at 17:48