Nah, 6 September is not the birthday of the Catholic Church.  27     February 380 is.  It just took 14 years for resistance in the Western    Empire to be crushed militarily, which happened 6 September 394, so  it's    kind of like a birthday for the Western Roman Imperial Church.   And  fits right in with the Feast of St Augustine, 28 August, who was a  pagan  professor in 380 and about to be named Bishop of Hippo in the new state  church in 394. 
Huh? 
On    6 September 394 the Eastern Emperor Theodosius I defeated the Western    Emperor Eugenius at the conclusion of the  two-day Battle of The    Frigidus. 
Judas H Priest, never heard of it and why should I have heard of it, and where and what in the hell is the Frigidus? 
About the River and Why the Battle. 
OK    about the river.  The Frigidus is a river, the  Latin name means  "cold"   as its English descendant "frigid" suggests.  It is in  northeastern   Italy and Slovenia and is now called the  Vipacco in  Italian and the   Vipava in Slovene, and of course I gotta  tell ya it is  called the   Wipbach in modern German, or, as b and p get sort of  interchangeable in   German sometimes, the Wippach. 
So why was  there a battle there   and why should I  care to know?  Goes like this.   On 27 February 380, the   Eastern  Emperor Theodosius, in concert with  his Western co-Emperor    counterparts Gratian and Valentinian II, issued  the Edict of    Thessalonica, which made Nicene Christianity the  official state  religion   of the Roman Empire overall, required that all  subjects of  the Empire must hold   this faith as delivered to Rome and  preserved by then current Pope   Damasus I and then current Bishop of  Alexandria  Peter, and declared that these alone   shall be called  "Catholic  Christians", the universal faith of the   Empire, and all  others are  heretics and not even churches, subject to   such punishment  as the  Empire should choose to visit upon them. 
So,   27 February  380 is the birthday of the  "Catholic Church", as distinct   from the  catholic church.  The  then-new Imperial state church is still   around,  and still reflects  the divisions between the Eastern and  Western  Roman  Empire as Eastern Orthodoxy and Roman Catholicism.  The  Eastern   version took hold  earlier but it was a little more unsettled in  the   Western Empire.   That's why, though both have the same birthday, 6    September 394 is a  sort of Western birthday, since that is when    resistance to it in the  Western Empire was crushed by military power    from the Eastern Empire, no co-incidence at all that this was at the    hands of Theodosius, who would be the last Emperor both East and West. 
A Renowned Professor Get Caught Up In This.  
A    Roman citizen, from what are now called Berbers,  named Augustine is    teaching in Carthage in 380, seven years away from being baptised by  the   state bishop, Ambrose, of the state church in  the state's Western    capital by then, Milan. Diocletian, the last  emperor of an undivided    Roman Empire, had made Milan, then called  Mediolanum, the Western    capitol in 293 and Nicomedia, now Izmit  Turkey, the Eastern capitol in    286, and called his new provincial  units diocese, after himself.     Constantine moved the Eastern capitol  to nearby Byzantium, renamed it    Constantinople, which is now Istanbul  Turkey. 
The Roman Senate,    still in Rome, was not shall we  say comfortable with this new state    religion in the two new capitols  of the Empire, and lots of academic    disputes and apologetics on both  sides went back and forth, but no    violence.  During this unsettled  time Augustine gets appointed to the    most prestigious professorship  in his world, at the Western capitol    Milan in 384, and is all caught  up in the swirling controversy between    the old religion and classic  philosophy and the new state church. 
He    also gets caught up in his mother Monica's  designs for his career.    Now  with a prestigious academic position,  his longstanding relationship    with a woman he never names but called  "the one", of some 14 years    complete with son, called Adeodatus,  meaning "given by God", hasta go    according to mom.  So he caves and  sends her away, she saying she will    never be with another man, he  finding a new concubine to tide him over    until the proper social  marriage his mom, "Saint" Monica, arranges  with a   then-11 year old  girl can happen. 
And about concubines.   Ain't   what you think.  A  concubine in ancient Rome was simply a wife  that   Roman law forbade  you to marry due to your or her social class.   These   marriages denied legality by Imperial law were rather common,  and the   church didn't  come down on them since it wasn't the couple's  fault they   weren't  legally married.  Something to keep in mind when  "the one" gets    called concubine in the modern sense, their  relationship gets passed  off as   merely lustful and the son as  "illegitimate". 
Take, Read -- This Christian Bestseller! 
No  wonder the  dude  was confused!  His whole world  is swirling in  unsettled controversy  and  mom is running his life like a beauty  pageant mom.  And then, as he's  all  upset about his life,  he has this  really weird  experience where he   hears a kid's voice  saying "Take,  read" (the famous  tolle, lege).   Now  what he was told  to take and  read you won't likely  find in your  local  Christian  bookstore, but was  among the most widely  read books,  first in  the  Imperial Christian  state church and then  through the  Middle Ages.   It's a Life of St  Anthony of the Desert,  written by St  Athanasius   about 360 in Greek,  but best known in a  Latin  translation made  about ten or so years  later. 
Hoo-boy, old Tony.   He was a  wealthy Egyptian who  became  Christian at  about age 34, so  far so good,  sold everything  and took  up with a local  hermit.  Tony in  NO way was  the "Founder of  Monasticism", as religious  hermits of  various religions  were common  on the outskirts of cities;  Philo the  Jewish-Egyptian  writer  mentions  them all, sharing the Platonic  idea of  having to get  out of the  world to get into an ideal.  Pure  Platonist  Idealism.  Sure   glad  Jesus didn't do that or let his Apostles  do it  either when they   wanted to, but went back to Jerusalem where real  life  had things for   them to do. 
But old Tony went the other  direction,  and left    even the outskirts for the desert itself to get  away from it  all to   get  into it all.  But the crowds followed --  everybody loves an    exotic  "holy man" -- and Tony took on the more  advanced cases of this   mania  and left the rest to his associates, a  Christian Oracle of   Delphi,   which "guidance" was later variously  collected as the Sayings  of the   Desert Fathers, or Apophthegmata, if  you want a word to   impress somebody   in a combox or something. 
The Famous Professor Converts. 
Anyhoo,   Gus reads this in 386, and on   the Easter  Vigil of 387, Ambrose   baptises Gus and his son.  The next   year, 388, he determines to return   home to North Africa.  Which he did,   but  along the way both his   mother and his son died, so he arrives alone    in the world, and   understandably unsure of himself once again.  Next   he  sells the family   stuff and gives the money away, except the house  which  he turns into  a  sort of lay monastery.  I guess that's what  you  do when  you read   about dudes in the desert, rather than go  through the  grief and  live   on in the world of people.  Then he gets  ordained  presbyter or priest   in 391 in Hippo, now Annaba, Algeria. 
This  mostly academic and   political controversy, in  which Gus' unsettled life  had its context,  and  of which it is  typical, changed when Western Emperor  Valentinian  II  was found hanged in his home on 16 May 392.  His half  brother and   co-Emperor Gratian  was already dead, killed 25 August 383 in  Lyon   France by forces of  Roman generals who thought he was losing his  grip.    The official word was Valentinian was a suicide, but his wife and    others though he was done in by his military power behind the throne,   a  Frank named  Arbogastes, and the Imperial Milan court church's bishop,    Ambrose,  left the question open, suicide being a no-no for a Christian    Emperor held up as a hero. 
A Digression, but a Damned Important One.  
What's  a Frank?  Not a hot dog, that comes from  Frankfurter, and originally  meant Frankfurter Würstchen, which means  "little sausages from  Frankfurt" served on a bun.  They originated in  the 13th Century and  became the peoples' food for coronations of the  Holy Roman Emperor  starting with Maximilian II, a Habsburg and nephew  of Emperor Karl V, he  to whom the Augsburg Confession was presented, on 25 July 1564.  About  1800 or so, a butcher named Johann Georg Lahner  from Coburg, Bavaria,  introduced the Frankfurter Würstchen to Vienna.   Now Vienna had its own  sausages, which were a mixture of pork and beef  called Wiener, from  Wien, which is "Vienna" in German.  Lahner modified his product by  mixing the original pork with beef like the Viennese  and calling the  result simply a Frankfurter.  German immigrants brought the product to  the US at Coney Island, and at St Louis where the  German American owner,  Chris von der Ahe, of the St Louis Brown  Stockings, now the Cardinals,  started selling them at baseball games,  and also at a stand in what is  now Paul T McCain's back yard.  OK just  jacking around on that last bit  --the inter-relation of hot dogs,  Lutheranism, St Louis and the Cards is  clear enough without it.  There, toldya it was important!  The name got  shortened to "Frank", they're  hot, and the "dog" thing came from  rumours that the makers actually  used dog meat.    Myself, I like kosher  beef hot dogs, not at all the  original! 
Oh yeah, the Franks --  comes from the Roman name gens Francorum for these Germanic barbarians  who threw their axes (the  franks), whose own ethnic history says they  were Trojans under Priam  who ended up on the Rhein, oh sorry, Rhine,  after the fall of Troy in  Homeric times. 
Back To the Story. 
On  22 August 392, Arbogastes, who   being a Frank and not Roman could not  be Emperor, names a Roman   Christian named  Eugenius the Western  Emperor.   Eugenius though Christian was    sympathetic to traditional  Roman religion and started replacing Western officials sympathetic to  the Eastern   Empire.  The Eastern Empire put off   recognition of the  new Western regime, and finally in January of 392   Theodosius declared  his two-year-old son Honorius as Western  Emperor and    begins preparing  an invasion of the Western Empire,  which began in  May  394 and  concluded in the victory at The Frigidus 6 September 394.    Arbogastes  commits suicide and Eugenius is beheaded  by the Catholic   forces of  Theodosius. 
Later in the same year, 394, the Imperial   state   Catholic Church, on a real roll -- having destroyed the Temple of Apollo  at the   Oracle of Delphi in 390, the Serapeum and Great Library in   Alexandria   in 391, the year Augustine was ordained a priest in the   official   church, having ended the two great rituals of ancient Greece,  the   Eleusinian Mysteries in 392 and the Olympic Games after the ones  in 393 -- puts out the fire considered essential to Rome's survival at  the  Temple  of Vesta, and disbands the women who were personally   selected by  the  pontifex maximus, when that meant the head of the   traditional  Roman  religion rather than the head of the new state   Catholic religion. 
The   next year, 395, Augustine becomes  religious  head, which is called   bishop, of the Roman Imperial  administrative  unit called a diocese, in   Hippo.  Guess Gus knew on  which side his  bread is buttered. 
It All Comes To-gether, It All Falls Apart. 
The    Battle of The Frigidus effectively ended any  Western resistance to  the   new state church.  But those old Roman  families knew a thing or  two   about survival and before long they were papal families,  eventually   supplying Pope Gregory, made Pope 3  September 590, who  ruled the state   church like a real Roman indeed.   This enormous civil  war though left   the Western Empire greatly  weakened, and it collapsed a  thousand years   before the Eastern Empire did, with the Visigoths  sacking Rome in 410.  So Augustine, by then 56 and still Bishop of  Hippo, writes more   Platonism to assure the  shocked Romans that though  the joint was a mess,   the real and ideal  City of God was the real  winner. 
Yeah right.   Back here in reality the "City of God",  Rome, first sacked by the  Gauls in  387 BC, after the 410 sack by the  Visigoths, got sacked again  by the  Vandals in 455, but Gus died at 75  on 28 August 430 so he missed  it.  And Rome would be sacked again by  the Ostrogoths in 546, and again by the Arabs in 846,  and  again by  the  Normans in 1084, and last by soldiers of Holy Roman   Emperor  Charles  V, but not on his orders, in 1527. 
Still, warts and all, Augustine at least did not hold a six 24 hour day creation to be the "literal" understanding of Genesis  without which the rest of revelation falls apart. 
Anyway, that's   the famous  book The City of God,  which is actually only the first part   of its  title, which is On The  City Of God Against The Pagans (OK it's De    civitate Dei contra  Paganos, I translated).  Pagan is another term    reinvented by the new  church.  It once meant someone from the country,  or a   civilian, but  with the Imperial Catholic Church firmly in the  cities,   and their  faithful thinking they were a church militant,  soldiers of   Christ,  which, the state military having kicked the crap  out of the   former  religion for the state church, I guess kind of fits,  pagan came to mean   someone adhering to the old religion which hung on  more in the    countryside. 
The Aftermath. 
That  Platonic idealism guided and fuelled the West    as it struggled through  centuries of chaos and tried to reinvent its    former glory with the  Holy Roman Empire, which, as has been famously    remarked, was not holy,  not Roman, and not much of an empire.  Hell, it was Frankish, the new  Romans!  Old Arbogastes would have liked that!   And it by   God had the  Roman state Catholic Church with popes and  bishops and diocese and   all  the Platonism reinvented as Christianity  you can shake a stick at,    complete with justification as the City of  God. 
Which wholesale    hijacking of the catholic church as the Catholic Church, one might say    its Babylonian Captivity, lasted  for a thousand years.  Then a poor   guy  in a screwed up world with a  screwed up life, and a barbarian to   boot, a  German named Martin  Luther from outside the old Roman   boundaries, seeks  solace in a  religious order modelling itself after   Augustine's Platonic  idealism  turned into Christian monastic  asceticism, and  discovers none of this  crap is gonna save you but  simply  faith in the  Son sent by God to be  the sacrifice which takes  away our  sins, just like  Scripture, which  is supposed to be the  church's book,  says. 
And  so begins the disentanglement of the  catholic  church  from the Catholic  Church of the Roman and Holy Roman  Empires.  They  tried like hell to  make the catholic church, the pillar  and   ground of  truth, the bride of  Christ, into the Whore of Babylon.   The vestiges of  Theodosius' state  Imperial Catholic Church continue  in  the Roman  Catholic and Eastern  Orthodox churches.  Which is bad   enough, but equally false but  opposite reactions to the  Babylonian   Captivity arose and continue in later  Reformation churches.  The   guideline of the Lutheran reformation was, if it contradicts  Scripture  it must go but what doesn't is retained, since the power of the  Gospel  and  Word and Sacrament is  such that not even the Roman Empire  could   entirely keep it out.  But with these guys the guideline became, if it   ain't in Scripture it goes -- depending on whose version of what is in   Scripture one buys  --  thus losing his  Divine Service of his body  and  blood for  our salvation, and in some  cases even Baptism as well. 
And   lately all of these  anachronisms, state  churches that survived their  original state, seem  intoxicated with a  Rousseau-like Romantic fiction,  which is some  sort of  resurrection of an imagined pure church of the  Apostles and  Church  Fathers,  rediscovered by their scholarship of  course, a sort of   ecclesiastical version, a noble church, of  Rousseau's "noble savage".   And it must  be   said some of these  anachronisms have the word "Lutheran" in their  names.    Thus the equal  but opposite errors of the old state church  and the later Reformers,  equally condemned in the Lutheran    Confessions, continue as well. 
Conclusion. 
But  while all of this rages about   us, and even  infects the Lutheran  Reformation, thanks be to God for the   Lutheran  Reformation and its  confession of the true teaching of   Scripture, the book that is the  church's own measure and norm, while yet   retaining  what does not  contradict it. 
VDMA
Verbum domini manet in aeternum. The word of the Lord endures forever.
1 Peter 1:24-25, quoting Isaiah 40:6,8. Motto of the Lutheran Reformation.
Fayth onely justifieth before God. Robert Barnes, DD The Supplication, fourth essay. London: Daye, 1572.
Lord if Thou straightly mark our iniquity, who is able to abide Thy judgement? Wherefore I trust in no work that I ever did, but only in the death of Jesus Christ. I do not doubt, but through Him to inherit the kingdom of heaven. Robert Barnes, DD, before he was burnt alive for "heresy", 30 July 1540.
What is Luther? The doctrine is not mine, nor have I been crucified for anyone. Martin Luther, Dr. theol. (1522)
1 Peter 1:24-25, quoting Isaiah 40:6,8. Motto of the Lutheran Reformation.
Fayth onely justifieth before God. Robert Barnes, DD The Supplication, fourth essay. London: Daye, 1572.
Lord if Thou straightly mark our iniquity, who is able to abide Thy judgement? Wherefore I trust in no work that I ever did, but only in the death of Jesus Christ. I do not doubt, but through Him to inherit the kingdom of heaven. Robert Barnes, DD, before he was burnt alive for "heresy", 30 July 1540.
What is Luther? The doctrine is not mine, nor have I been crucified for anyone. Martin Luther, Dr. theol. (1522)
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