M
Mystophilus
Guest
Look, are we getting anywhere with this, really?
Going back over my responses, they sound snappish and increasingly sarcastic, and careless about details, all of which are bad signs that I am letting stress interfere with communication.
Therefore, I would like to sum up what I want to say here. If you want to do likewise, go ahead. If you think that there are parts which we can usefully continue to discuss, please specify those.
Summary:
I do not see just cause to flatly state that επισκοπος must have been used in the C1st for Peter in Rome. I also do not see just cause to claim that Peter was not the individual leader of the church at Rome. The linguistic issue is entirely distinct from the ecclesiological one.
The historical record clearly shows that the Latin West and the Greek East, divided by language and by culture and by sheer geographical distance, viewed the Councils and the proceedings of the Councils differently, with the East opting at a very early date (possibly even right out of Acts 15) for a conciliar ecclesiology rather than a centralised one. In the West, however, a growing centralisation to Rome is visible, although not in a simply linear fashion: different provinces placed different amounts of dependence upon Rome (i.e. reserved different amounts of independence unto themselves), especially under particularly passive (Zosimus) or active (Leo) popes. Since the two ends held such divergent beliefs about authority within the Church for so long, the ultimate schism was most probably inevitable.
Going back over my responses, they sound snappish and increasingly sarcastic, and careless about details, all of which are bad signs that I am letting stress interfere with communication.
Therefore, I would like to sum up what I want to say here. If you want to do likewise, go ahead. If you think that there are parts which we can usefully continue to discuss, please specify those.
Summary:
I do not see just cause to flatly state that επισκοπος must have been used in the C1st for Peter in Rome. I also do not see just cause to claim that Peter was not the individual leader of the church at Rome. The linguistic issue is entirely distinct from the ecclesiological one.
The historical record clearly shows that the Latin West and the Greek East, divided by language and by culture and by sheer geographical distance, viewed the Councils and the proceedings of the Councils differently, with the East opting at a very early date (possibly even right out of Acts 15) for a conciliar ecclesiology rather than a centralised one. In the West, however, a growing centralisation to Rome is visible, although not in a simply linear fashion: different provinces placed different amounts of dependence upon Rome (i.e. reserved different amounts of independence unto themselves), especially under particularly passive (Zosimus) or active (Leo) popes. Since the two ends held such divergent beliefs about authority within the Church for so long, the ultimate schism was most probably inevitable.