First, Petey
If the Papacy is truly part of the Church Christ founded, it shouldn’t just appear centuries later, it should leave traces in the earliest Christian record. In this episode, we turn to the first 200–300 years of Christianity to examine whether the historical Church functioned with a recognizable center of unity. Rather than assuming later developments, we’re looking for the seed form, the earliest signs of structure, authority, and continuity. To test the evidence, we apply four key litmus tests: * Distinction: Is Rome treated as uniquely preeminent? * Authority: Does Rome act beyond its local church with real weight? * Unity: Is communion with Rome tied to orthodoxy and catholic unity? * Succession: Is Rome’s role seen as an enduring office passed down? Drawing from figures like Ignatius of Antioch, Irenaeus of Lyons, Cyprian of Carthage, and Tertullian, as well as key moments recorded by Eusebius of Caesarea, we examine whether the early Church’s lived reality aligns with the Catholic claim. This isn’t about reading the medieval Papacy back into history, it’s about asking a simpler question: What does the earliest evidence actually show? If the Church was meant to be one, visible, and enduring… what held it together?
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