C
cooterhein
Guest
You’re not a knucklehead, and I’m fairly certain that I’m being overly roundabout rather than very bright. Here, though, there seems to be a similar sort of dichotomy between the options of “repentance” and “penance” (although, as you say, no similar word is used in this particular passage). I would probably go with something more along the lines of repentance, and as you say, you’re going with something more along the lines of penance. But from some of the other comments that people have contributed, it’s also clear that it’s not really that simple. I’m sure I won’t find too many Catholics who will deny that Peter is repentant, and I’ve already seen a description of how repentance comes first and then penance naturally follows after.You seem like a very bright person and I am about the biggest knucklehead you will ever run across. Does whatever translation of whatever bible you read have this interaction between Jesus and Peter in it? All I want to know is what YOU think is going on i nthe scene. Why is that so hard? I am not really interested in the translation because they are insignificant to the question I posed to YOU and that is what do YOU think is happening. The word “trinity” isnt used in scripture but I take it you believe in the “trinity”, correct? We see it in the presence of other words and examples. Repentance and penance are revealed in other ways, just like the “trinity”, in scripture. All I want is YOUR thoughts on whats happening in that scene between Jesus and Peter.
In the end, I suppose it comes down to the Catholic saying Peter is demonstrating a basis for the sacrament of penance because his interaction with Jesus is done in a Catholic way, and Protestants will probably say this interaction is an act of repentance that is done in something more like a Protestant way and there’s no good basis for a sacrament that didn’t become mandatory until early in the 13th century thanks to the Fourth Lateran Council. At a bare minimum, we’re going to argue that a Christian who doesn’t have this yearly requirement has this in common with the apostolic church while Catholics do not.
At some point, we’re going to have to work out the differences between repentance and penance (which, I’m sure, entails some sort of repentance every time). What should we look at? The form? The people? The results? The reasons for doing it? All of the above? Then I guess we look at the passage and see what’s more consistent with Peter and Jesus’ interaction, go find material that supports our respective points of view, disagree, each become more convinced of what we thought in the first place, and…that’s how we spend the better part of a morning.
Are you sure that’s what you want to do? This is a little different from talking linguistics and semantics- if you grab the right lexicons and grammar tools, you can usually get somewhere with that. I don’t know if we’re going to get anywhere with this, and as far as helping the OP, I don’t know that such an exercise will prove worthy of reproduction in real life.