N
Nicea325
Guest
I am still wondering why you keep on dodging my question posed for you?PR,
Those bishops lists were fabricated in the third century. No historians accept them. Here is
Andrew Louth (EO) to explain
Andrew Louth, translator of Esubius’ History of the Church
in his introduction P xxii regarding the bishop list for the Roman Church.
“The problem for the first century or so is what it is a list of: for evidence
that there was a single bishop leading the Roman Church is lacking for that
period; indeed what evidence there is suggests a rather different picture.
When Clement wrote to the Corinthian Church, he wrote not as a bishop in the
later sense but as one of the presbyters of the Roman Church entrusted with
the task of writing on behalf of the whole Roman Church to the erring Church
of Corinth, similarly, Ignatius writing perhaps a decade later to the Roman
Church, does not seem to envisage a ‘bishop of Rome’, despite his enthusiasm
for monepiscopacy.”
“The other odd thing about Eusebius’ use of the succession list for Rome is more
venial; that for the last half of the third century he has clearly misread it,
reading years for months and months for years, so that, overlooking the
martydom of Xystus II, he has him reigning for another ten years, which upsests
the chronology of the bishops of Rome for the rest of the century.”
Peter was never a bishop of Rome or anywhere.
Here is Gary Wills to explain.
Garry Wills, Professor of History Emeritus, Northwestern U.,
Pulitzer Prize Winner
author of WHY I AM A CATHOLIC, wrote the following in his
Best Seller WHAT JESUS MEANT page 81.
“The idea that Peter was given some special power that could be
handed on to a successor runs into the problem that he had no
successor. The idea that there is an “apostolic succession”
to Peter’s fictional episcopacy did not arise for several
centuries, at which time Peter and others were retrospectively
called bishops of Rome, to create an imagined succession.Even
so, there has not been an unbroken chain of popes.”
What you are quoting is mythology and not historical fact.
Peace, JohnR
You claim we are quoting mythology (which you have provided zlich evidence) and yet St. Irenaeus clearly made a statement about Peter in 180 AD?
Tell me where this mythology derived from and where did it start?
If you believe it is mythology,hence meaning the CC position is bogus,then I want you to present me the ancient historical writings which challenged the CC tradition? Meaning what? There existed another tradition which apparently is the correct one. I’ll wait for those ancient sources. I want to read of this other tradition which challenged the current CC tradition going back to Peter.
Remember it is you claiming it is all a myth and not fact,thus burden of proof is all on you to show us otherwise.