- Pontiff
Pontiff or Pontificate is a title of certain religious leaders, now used principally to refer to leaders such as the Pope of the
Catholic Church and of theCoptic Orthodox Church ."An ecclesiastical history, ancient and modern, from the birth of Christ to the beginning of the eighteenth century". "Page 191". [http://books.google.com/books?id=txMQAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA191&dq=pontiff] (Retrieved 21-07-2008)] "Pontiff" refers to the person in office, while "Pontificate" refers to the period in which the office is held by that singular person.Etymology
The term derives from the French word "pontife", from the
Latin "pontifex", a title used for high priests of theRoman Republic . The word "pontifex" is commonly held to derive from the Latin root words "pons", "bridge" + "facere", "to do" or "to make", with a literal meaning of "bridge-builder". This, however, is disputed - it may be only a folk etymology "Pontifex". "Oxford English Dictionary", March 2007] . See Pontifex for more details on the original Roman term.Usage
Pontiffs were originally simply chiefs or high priests of any religion; thus writers from the 16th through to the 18th centuries referred equally to Christian pontiffs (
bishop s) and "Mahometan[ Muslim ] (caliph s) orSwami (Hindu). Over time, however, the term became associated with only the highest religious authorities in the Christian Churches — the Popes and Patriarchs. It was often modified by an adjective - for instance, "Alexandrian Pontiff ", "Sovereign Pontiff" or "Roman Pontiff" - to distinguish from differentBishop s.In the modern era, the modifying adjective is usually dropped, with the term being used exclusively to refer to the Popes.
References
See also
*
Papacy
*Pontifex Maximus
*Primacy of the Roman Pontiff
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