C
Cavaradossi
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But it is not St. Cyril alone who taught this, but also St. Augustine, St. Ambrose, and the Venerable Bede, among others.Back to our original citation from St. John Chrysostom on Jn 21:15-17 (which I believe Fr. Chapman refers back to at the very end of the aforementioned citation), The Catholic Encyclopedia comments:
“Even certain Protestant commentators frankly own that Christ undoubtedly intended here to confer the supreme pastorate on Peter. But other scholars, relying on a passage of St. Cyril of Alexandria (‘In Joan.’ 12:1), maintain that the purpose of the threefold charge was simply to reinstate St. Peter in the Apostolic commission which his threefold denial might be supposed to have lost to him. This interpretation is devoid of all probability. There is not a word in Scripture … …to suggest that St. Peter had forfeited his Apostolic commission; and the supposition is absolutely excluded by the fact that on the evening of the Resurrection he received the same Apostolic powers as the others of the eleven. The solitary phrase of St. Cyril is of no weight against the overwhelming patristic authority for the other view. That such an interpretation should be seriously advocated proves how great is the difficulty experienced by Protestants regarding this text.”
Source: Joyce, George. “The Pope.” The Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 12. New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1911. 26 Oct. 2013 http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/12260a.htm.
Sorry for that lengthy citation from Dom Chapman and for the lengthy posts![]()