St. Clement thought himself to be Pope.
Care to share some proof, if you please?
Someone - one of the possible three - St. Peter, St. Linus, or St. Anacletus - told him that he was the Pope. Does it matter, really, at this stage, which one of the three it was who appointed him?
Not at all – what does matter is that there seems to be no proof that
any of them actually told him this. Where’s your evidence?
Less than 100 years later, St. Irenaeus placed St. Linus and St. Anacletus in between St. Peter and St. Clement - and he probably had very sound historical reasons for doing so. We don’t really have anything at this late stage of the game to say, either way, so what makes the most sense is to believe him. In any case, we have been proceding on that assumption for the past nearly-2,000 years, and we are still here, having outlived the rise and fall of three world civilizations and an uncountable number of localized Empires, in the meantime.
And I don’t argue against this lineage at all! All I’m arguing is that these individuals were
only the bishop of Rome, and not the head of the entire church. There is actually a difference.
Funny, tell that to most women who had children to prove it and they will look at you funny.
And then they show you pictures of the child, or show you the child itself – it’s called evidence. Further evidence might include a birth certificate with the child and parent’s names on it (thus proving the child wasn’t adopted). See, this is what I’m looking for – real, tangible proof.
If I say to you that I’m a father, would you believe me? The fact of the matter is that I am
not a father. But what if down the road someone thinks I was at this time? Of course, it’d be reasonable to ask them for proof, would it not? This is all I’m doing – asking for proof of a claim.
You claim that Linus was the second bishop of Rome. I agree. Irenaeus, among others, serve as testimony to that.
You claim that Linus was also pastor of the entire church, holding a primacy above all other bishops. I
disagree. Thus, it’s very reasonable to provide evidence to support the claim.
But are you signaling that you are finally coming around to the validity of tradition now or only secular tradition?
No, I’m saying that I do, and always have, accepted historical sources of reasonable credibility and antiquity. Contemporary accounts are highest among these, obviously.
At this point, I’m simply going to assume that you have no evidence to present (aside from that which demonstrates Linus was bishop of Rome – a point which is not in contention by me). All that’s left is to see if anyone else has such evidence, and if not, to move on to another topic – perhaps including later historical accounts of the early bishops of Rome, to determine at which point mentions of their primacy over others came into being.