Grace & Peace!
I’m sorry I had not responded a bit sooner. I’ve been rather busy of late!
Atreyu:
Where is the evidence of this earliest formula? I would like to quote what Irenaeus said, with respect to the church at Rome.
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To me, being obligated to agree with the Church of Rome doesn’t imply simply first among equals (although I don’t disagree that this is an appropriate title for the bishop of Rome), but it implies the Church of Rome does have a more significant primacy.
Atreyu, I interpret Irenaeus’ words as making the Roman church an example to other churches, not setting the Bishop of Rome up as Supreme Pontiff. Note a couple things–he invokes the authority of Peter AND Paul, and he gets his history a bit mixed up–the church in Rome was not the most ancient. Also, Irenaeus (Saint though he is) was not the most original thinker–he’s less a theologian than a bulldog defending orthodoxy against the gnostic heresies. His championing of an ecclesiastical standard, seen in this light, makes much more sense.
For a different view of ther relationship of the Bishop of Rome to other Bishops, I would cite the example of St. Cyprian, Bishop of Carthage, who–writing a
century after Irenaeus–was unaware of any nascent doctrine of pontifical supremacy, who openly argued in his letters with Stephen, Bishop of Rome, and wrote regarding apostolic authority:
“though he gives to all the Apostles an equal power and says, ‘As my Father sent me, etc.’ yet he has ordained by his authority the source of unity beginning from one man that he might manifest the unity. Certainly the other Apostles were what Peter was, endued with an equal fellowship both of honor and power…” (De Catholicae Ecclesiae Unitate).
The drift of this is clear–Rome holds a place of primacy, but not supremacy. Cyprian’s idea of the Church in the Bishop and the Bishop in the Church also underscores this notion–each Bishop acts with the authority of the whole Church, not because it has been granted to them by the Supreme Pontiff to do so, but because that is the nature of the authority of Bishops, the first of whom is Peter. Later redactors of Cyprian’s work took care to slightly alter his views to make it seem as if Cyprian did, in fact, believe that the Bishop of Rome was Supreme Pontiff. But the earliest manuscripts do not indicate as much, nor does Cyprian’s life and his wranglings with Pope Stephen with whom he openly quarreled.
You can look to the fourth century Council of Sardica for the creation of distinct canons which begin to give supreme authority to Rome–but you must recognize in the process that the African bishops and the Eastern bishops were not present at Sardica and did not adopt these canons. When an African priest was deposed but then reinstated by the Bishop of Rome, appealing to Sardica, the Bishops of Africa would not recognize the canon (which they had not accepted in the first place) and wrote to Celestine, then Bishop of Rome,
“with all respect, we earnestly entreat you for the future not to be ready to admit to a hearing persons that come from this region, nor to be willing to receive into communion those that have been excommunicated by us…Unless it be supposed that God can inspire onr individual with justice and withold it from a multitude of bishops in council. And how can we place confidence in an overseas tribunal, since it will not be possible to send the required witnesses?..And we can find no sanction from any council of the Fathers for your sending delegates. If any should desire you to send delegates, do not comply…” (Synod of Carthage, 424).
It is clear, to me at least, that the notion of a Supreme Pontiff was not an idea present from the beginning of the church. It seems that it developed as the Roman See gained power, after which it dispensed with the notion of the Bishop of Rome as primus inter pares, dispensed with primacy, and opted for supremacy. Note, too, that the Ecumenical Patriarch is considered primus inter pares, and the whole of orthodoxy assents to this as the original model of the relationship of Rome to the other Sees of Christendom.
I do not deny Rome’s traditional primacy. I deny it’s supremacy.
Under the Mercy,
Mark
Deo Gratias!