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It seems that the very earliest challenges to Church authority arose because of divisions within Christianity that are already evident in the time of Paul the Apostle. Today, we tend to think of early Christianity as a single, monolithic authority guided by eyewitnesses to the life of Jesus. We tend to think that schisms in Christianity could not have occurred during the lifetimes of the apostles.

In fact, Paul talks of those who opposed his teachings and taught what he considered a "different Christ", within less than two decades of the traditional date for the crucifixion. When the gospels, which came somewhat later, spoke of false apostles, what they were talking about was other Christians who saw Christianity differently. Christians who, in turn, may have called the evangelists "false apostles".

There was no unanimity within the Christian community as to the meaning of Christ or his message. This was the challenge to Church authority.

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