CATHOLIC EPISTLES DEFINITIONS - 4 definitions found
The Nuttall Encyclopaedia (1907) 
Catholic Epistles
the name, equivalent to encyclical, given to
certain epistles in the New Testament not addressed to any community in
particular, but to several, and given eventually to all not written by
St. Paul.
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913) 
Catholic \Cath"o*lic\ (k[a^]th"[-o]*[i^]k), a. [L. catholicus,
Gr. kaqoliko`s, universal, general; kata` down, wholly +
"o`los whole, probably akin to E. solid: cf. F. catholique.]
1. Universal or general; as, the catholic faith.
Men of other countries [came] to bear their part in
so great and catholic a war. --Southey.
Note: This epithet, which is applicable to the whole
Christian church, or its faith, is claimed by Roman
Catholics to belong especially to their church, and in
popular usage is so limited.
2. Not narrow-minded, partial, or bigoted; liberal; as,
catholic tastes.
3. Of or pertaining to, or affecting the Roman Catholics; as,
the Catholic emancipation act.
Catholic epistles, the epistles of the apostles which are
addressed to all the faithful, and not to a particular
church; being those of James, Peter, Jude, and John.
International Standard Bible Encyclopedia 
CATHOLIC EPISTLES
kath'-o-lik (epistolai katholikai): In distinction from the apostolic or
Pauline epistles which were addressed to individual churches or persons, the
term "catholic," in the sense of universal or general, was applied by Origen
and the other church Fathers to the seven epistles written by James, Peter,
John and Jude. As early as the 3rd century it came to be used in the sense of
"encyclical," "since," as Theodoret says, "they are not addressed to single
churches, but generally (katholou) to the faithful, whether to the Jews of the
Dispersion, as Peter writes, or even to all who are living as Christians under
the same faith." Three other explanations of the term have been given, namely,
(1) that it was intended to indicate a common apostolic authorship (only a
few support this view);
(2) that it signifies that the seven epistles were universally received as
genuine;
(3) that it refers to the catholicity of their doctrine, i.e. orthodox and
authoritative versus heretical epistles whose teachings were in harmony with
Christian truth. By some misconception of the word "catholic" the Western
Church interpreted it as signifying "canonical" and sometimes called these
epistles epistolae canonicae. That it was originally used in the sense of
"general" epistles is now commonly received.
This is evident from their form of address. James wrote to all Jews,
"of the Dispersion," who had embraced the Christian faith. In his first
epistle Peter addressed the same Christians, including also Gentileconverts,
resident in five provinces of Asia Minor: "elect who axe sojourners of the
Dispersion." His second epistle is to all Christians everywhere. John's
first letter was evidently written to a cycle of churches and intended for
universal use. Jude also had in mind all Christians when he said "to them
that are called beloved in God," etc. The seeming exceptions are 2 and 3 Jn,
addressed to individuals, but included with the catholic epistles as properly
belonging with John's first epistle and of value to the general reader. The
character and contents of these seven epistles are treated under their
various heads. The letters of James and Jude belong to the Judaic school
of Christianity; those of Peter to a broad and non-partisan type of faith
that both includes and mediates between the Judaists and Paulinists. John's
letters were written after the internal doctrinal controversies of the church
had ceased, and the pressure of opposition and error from without tended to
unite his "little children" in a new community of love and spiritual life.
Dwight M. Pratt
Easton's 1897 Bible Dictionary 
Catholic epistles
the epistles of James, Peter, John, and Jude; so called because
they are addressed to Christians in general, and not to any
church or person in particular.
|
|
Recently Viewed Words
What is this?
Detonation
c6h14
c6h12
deceptional
c6h10/
beryllium
decapitate
Lilt
Spongy lead
sanctum
haddock
hemlock
scruple
manifest
beastly
reproach
Archeozoic eon
Scabby
Passioning
chide
honeydew
iwys
Streamline
Lusory
Na2CO3.10H2O
detailedness
halo
zoan
sarcasm
C6H10O2
Shuck
13
Nostril
central angle
CORDOVA
preteen
Septuagint
Recently Viewed Cities at my Weather Station
newark, ny
GOLDEN EAGLE, IL
COSBY, TN
SHAWSVILLE, VA
RIMFOREST, CA
ASH GROVE, MO
SABANA GRANDE, PR
LAKE VIEW, SC
FT MYERS, FL
ODESSA, WA
MINOTOLA, NJ
WASHINGTON, DC
APPALACHIA, VA
CALAIS, VT
ROCKAWAY PARK, NY
TAYLORSVILLE, GA
UNION, NJ
BASSETT, NE
SUNDANCE, WY
OKEMAH, OK
GREEN HARBOR, MA
NIAGARA FALLS, NY
PALMER, TX
BOHEMIA, NY
LA JOLLA, CA
WINDSOR, IL
LEVITTOWN, NY
VALLEJO, CA
|
Some of my other projects
Handwritten Receipts
My Receipts
Random Receipt
The Big Pictures
Found Photos
Stories and Things
Zebra
Payphone Project
Mailbox Locator
Universal WHOIS Lookup
Daily Receipt
What Is My IP Address?
Godfather at Calvary
BBS
Sorabji.com
Photo Galleries
Telephone Exchange Names
Film Photography
Who Are These People?
U.S. Forces in Germany
A Midwest Family
An Ohio Family
Baby Carriages
Eyes in the Sidewalk
Typos, Engrish, etc.
Faces of Laos
Faded Signs
Signage
Brooklyn Bridge
Stuff People Write on Money
Nebraska Road Trip, 2002
Payphones of the World
Random Picture
Stories & Things
You Have a Beautiful Face
Notes
Sausage
Excuse Me
Uneasily Spoken
Tonight
Old, Expired Film
Gnash
Time to Leave the Capsule, If You Dare
Talking
Old Bus Map
Pigeons
Skunky Puddles
Old Magazines
Great Wall of Review Avenue
Rotary Dial
Plain Sight
Seeing Things
Hot New Camera
Film Photography
|
|
|