J
John7
Guest
look to the cross,Do you actually have a point, or are you just trolling?
Jesus died for your sins
time is short
look to the cross,Do you actually have a point, or are you just trolling?
I merely copied from 2 sources, what I found for “kathistemi”.My point in breaking down Acts 7:10 for you was to show you that “kathistemi” does not, in fact, mean “make someone ruler.”
The purpose of bringing up those names, was to make a point. Did Jesus conversations with those apostles, ever do for them what Jesus would do for Peter? NoWell, He kinda does with Thomas. Remember the whole Doubting Thomas episode?
duely notedNot that I’m aware. I do know it’s how you and the churches in communion with the Roan Pontiff feel about the issue.
not at the same time, that’s trueSo IOW, you’re saying that no, multiple bishops do not sit in Peter’s seat?
duely noted.Not to disrespect the Pope or Bishop John, but their say-so is hardly compelling to me as a non-Catholic. A statement from a modern-day person in the RCC or the ECC’s holds no authority to me.
One could argue if they kept the true faith, they never would have fractured into squabbling ethnic groups, all dividing from the chair of Peter. One could ask, what might have happened if they remained united to each other and the chair of Peter. Didn’t Jesus warn, a house divided against itself falls?Thanks to the Muslims, not very well. But at least they’ve kept the true faith.
Do you consider scripture, scripture? Do you consider the canon of books an accurate collection? If you say yes, then it’s evidence you believe in the Claims of the Catholic Church who gave us scripture, and gave us the canon of scripture in 381.Great. Why should I, as someone who is outside the Church, believe what it claims for itself without evidence? For you, this is an authoritative source. For me, it is not.
Bishops have full authority in their own particular Church. They don’t have authority in any other bishop’s Church. The pope has full authority over the entire Church. It’s just that this kind of conversation always winds up in a conversation about the chair of Peter.Also, you’re just showing me more how the Pope alone has absolute authority in your Church.
The only time I talk about it is to quote from scripture, a fair reference to warnings where appropriate. They’re there, for a reason…true?Yeah, so let’s not bring up the topic of who’s going to Hell and who isn’t, since it’s pointless to do so. K?
why the constant comparison between father and dictator? Or equating rule with a dictator.So, if Peter really does have this authority over his brother Apostles, and if the Popes really do have this authority over their brother bishops, are Peter and the Pope not able to exert full dominance and control over their brothers? Would they not have the authority as of a father over sons, or of a dictator over subjects?
I think this highlighted portion of a quote from Gregory answers this question.Why did you cross out this:
"No one can tell Peter or the Pope what to do at all aside from God Himself? They can just ask really, really nicely and hope that Peter and the Pope will do it?"
Benedict XVI contradicts your understanding, & where does Bp John show he’s outside of his Church, or disagreeing with his Church, or the pope?You have yet to prove what I bolded. And you have yet to prove in particular what I put in red.
I would suggest starting by responding to my post #78. I’ll even link you to it again to make it easy.
forums.catholic-questions.org/showpost.php?p=9584669&postcount=78
And why should I give heed to Bishop John again, as someone outside of his church and as someone who disagrees with both his church and the Roman church in this matter?
Peter didn’t stay in Antioch. He went to Rome.St. Gregory the Great and St. John Chrysostom at least talked like Antioch was the chair of Peter. But Antioch+Alexandria both being taken by Muslims didn’t help with their influence.
And yet Rome refused to accept that canon for hundreds of years. Later on after Rome started having a rivalry with Constantinople, they decided to use it and started shouting “HA! You’re inferior to us!”
καὶ εἶπεν ὁ κύριος· τίς ἄρα ἐστὶν ὁ πιστὸς οἰκονόμος ὁ φρόνιμος, ὃν καταστήσει
source of priestly unity by Cyprian?Quote and context, please.
And No pope ever taught heresy.Because up until that time, Rome hadn’t gotten itself embroiled in various heresies. Rome just kept to the simple faith as they had received it, while the Easterners who were better-educated in philosophy kept attempting to clarify the faith, and falling into extremes (read: heresies) as they did so.
Re: Church of Rome holds the presidency?Source?
Keep in mind, at this timeSo if they decided to ask Ephesus for help, would that mean that Ephesus was the foremost church, and not Rome?
That’s a political argument that has no traction. The Emperor at the time was trying to eradicate the Church. They were killing Catholics right and left.It also helped that it was the old capital of the Empire,
That point has traction. And the blood of the martyrs is the seedbed of the Church.and that both Peter AND Paul were martyred there.
It’s time to resurrect a quoteSeriously, why does Rome build its claims solely off of Peter when both Alexandria and Antioch have legit dibs on Peter as well?
Ahh, you got it from the KJV. Now everything is clearI merely copied from 2 sources, what I found for “kathistemi”.
Here was 1 of those sources.
Authorized Version (KJV) Translation Count — Total: 22
8,[ make ruler](http://www.blueletterbible.org/search/preSearch.cfm?Criteria= make ruler*+G2525)
Ahh, now I catch your drift.The purpose of bringing up those names, was to make a point. Did Jesus conversations with those apostles, ever do for them what Jesus would do for Peter? No
So then, what do you make of Gregory’s statements about Alexandria, Antioch and Rome all having the same Petrine See?not at the same time, that’s true
I think that is due more to politics than faith, and you have to agree. The Muslims kinda forced everyone into their little “cliques.”One could argue if they kept the true faith, they never would have fractured into squabbling ethnic groups, all dividing from the chair of Peter. One could ask, what might have happened if they remained united to each other and the chair of Peter. Didn’t Jesus warn, a house divided against itself falls?
Ahh, yes. I remember that.Ever hear the phrase “better the turban than the tiara of the pope”? That was the sentament in Constantinople, and they got their wish.
…watDo you consider scripture, scripture? Do you consider the canon of books an accurate collection? If you say yes, then it’s evidence you believe in the Claims of the Catholic Church who gave us scripture, and gave us the canon of scripture in 381.
Right. So the Pope can do stuff no other bishop can, i.e. have authority in another bishop’s diocese.Bishops have full authority in their own particular Church. They don’t have authority in any other bishop’s Church. The pope has full authority over the entire Church. It’s just that this kind of conversation always winds up in a conversation about the chair of Peter.
Yeah, but those can lead to ugly tangents, as Orthodox can bring those against Catholics and vice-versa if either side felt like it. Then everything goes to Hell in a handbasket from there. So I like to avoid bringing stuff like that up; hopefully no one has to worry about hellfire anyway…The only time I talk about it is to quote from scripture, a fair reference to warnings where appropriate. They’re there, for a reason…true?
I’m trying to make the point about how ruling like a father and ruling like a dictator aren’t all that different outside of how they act. I’m trying to show that a father and a dictator have the same level of authority, even if how they decide to exercise that authority, and how much of that authority they exercise, differs.why the constant comparison between father and dictator? Or equating rule with a dictator.
Admittedly, I’m not sure I can find a way around this one. All I can do is provide words of Gregory’s to the contrary.I think this highlighted portion of a quote from Gregory answers this question.
Epistle 9:20 (emphasis mine)
For as to what they say about the Church of Constantinople, who can doubt that it is subject to the Apostolic See, as both the most pious lord the emperor and our brother the bishop of that city continually acknowledge? Yet, if this or any other Church has anything that is good, I am prepared in what is good to imitate even my inferiors, while prohibiting them from things unlawful. For he is foolish, who thinks himself first in such a way as to scorn to learn whatever good things he may see.
Oh, I wasn’t implying that. I was just saying that the Melkites are a separate church from the Roman church, is all. Note the un-capitalized c there.Benedict XVI contradicts your understanding, & where does Bp John show he’s outside of his Church, or disagreeing with his Church, or the pope?
And?Peter didn’t stay in Antioch. He went to Rome.
Alexandria was a bigger deal than Antioch because it was a MUCH larger city. It also helped that, when the Alexandrian and Antiochene schools of thought came into conflict, the Alexandrians were often able to upstage the Antiochians. For example, Cyril(Alexandrian) curbstomped the Nestorians(Antiochene) at Ephesus. Had the two schools not exaggerated their differences and instead looked at how their ideas complimented each other, we would have arrived at our miaphysite/dyophysite and dyothelite Christologies without anyone getting anathemized.Also, how did the East Regard Antioch and Alexandria? The were immediately demoted behind Constantinople because of the emperor. Muslims can’t be blamed for that. Obviously Antioch didn’t have any particular Petrine preference in the East, and politics took center stage.
That listing comes from the Second Ecumenical Council? That particular canon detailing the listing wasn’t accepted by Rome for centuries? Any of that ringing a bell? :ehh:
And I completely forgot the fast leading up to the Feast of Sts. Peter and Paul, ROFL :blushing:You make IMHO an excellent point here Shiranui. Indeed the Roman See is Peter PLUS Paul.And that the Roman Church has always remembered reminded that.
Indeed we read in Eusebius that the presbyter Gaius witnesses to two aediculae having been erected in the II century, one on Vatican hill, and the other one towards Ostia, to mark and celebrate the areas where Peter and Paul respectively had glorified God with their deaths. On those places St. Peter’s and St. Paul’s basilicae were respectively built in the IV centuries.
Rome has to our day Peter AND Paul as its patron saints. The feast is June 29th. The recent Pauline year proclaimed by the present Pope solemnly celebrated that date.
Inherent honor, yeah. You’ll understand if I take the whole “Peter and Paul died here, therefore Rome is infallible!” with a little more than a grain of salt, right?That Rome is the see where both Peter and Paul glorified the Lord with their deaths …that is precisely “something inherent” Shinanui![]()
tbcConsider then please for a second approach, the famous expression that in Irenaeus’ latin version reads “propter potiorem principalitatem” in Adv. Haer. III, 3. Whatever problems we can have with a precise translation, there is no way to escape the fact that he deals with “something inherent” to the Apostolic See IMHO.
Nothing like " because, as for now, they’re getting along well in keeping the doctrine of the Apostles ".
I don’t quite understand the question in bold, but I’ll try to answer it. A council looking at a doctrinal matter? Curious onlookers? People without an opinion in a controversy concerning what the true faith is?And here is the crux of the matter IMHO.
If we should assume that in the Roman See ( or anywhere, or in any ecclesial organ ) we cannot recognize through something inherent a beacon of Apostolic Tradition, then that leads us naturally to the question:
"Who precisely tests whom ?"
Basically, yeahBecause you’re saying, if I understand correctly, that Rome could be a good litmus test on Apostolic Tradition …just as long as it keeps to Apostolic Tradition.
MmmhmmmmBut then, we could also say that my cousin and your cousin are a good litmus test on Apostolic Tradition …just as long as they keep to Apostolic Tradition.
People that check his faith against the Apostolic Tradition and find that it matches.The only problem being: says who, that my cousin keeps to Apostolic Tradition ?![]()
If I haven’t got a clear answer, then my cousin is useless as beacon of Apostolic Tradition. If, on the contrary, we know the answer, then he is useless all the same, because it is that very answer that gives us the real beacon of Apostolic Tradition.
My problem with this is, you don’t necessarily to see someone who lives out Apostolic Tradition in the present day to know what the Apostolic Tradition is. We have access to the writings, liturgies, practices, teachings and experiences of the Church that make up Apostolic Tradition.But then … we have to discern whether that beacon is such because of “something inherent”, otherwise… and so on ad infinitum.Guess the point is clear.
Anyone who can look through the Apostolic Tradition, look at what Rome teaches, and concludes that they are without a shadow of a doubt the same thing. This is a scientific method sorta thing.Now: who precisely tells us nowadays ( or would tell us in the XV century, or in the IX, or in the V ), in your present view, whether Rome ( or my cousin ) keeps to Apostolic Tradition ?
lol, u trollinlook to the cross,
Jesus died for your sins
time is short
It seems you decided to leave off what Schaff himself said about that:source of priestly unity by Cyprian?
"After such things as these, moreover, they still dare–a false bishop having been appointed for them by, heretics–to set sail and to bear letters from schismatic and profane persons to the throne of Peter, and to the chief church whence priestly unity takes its source; and not to consider that these were the Romans whose faith was praised in the preaching of the apostle, to whom faithlessness could have no access."
Cyprian,To Cornelius,Epistle 54/59:14(A.D. 252),in ANF,V:344
Honorius sure did agree with heresy, though.And No pope ever taught heresy.
Are you talking about this part?Opening address from Ignatius
earlychristianwritings.com/text/ignatius-romans-lightfoot.html
So what? The Orthodox Church calls itself the Catholic Church as well. Let’s not go down the semantic rabbit hole.BTW, Ignatius identifies the Church as the Catholic Church. (letter to Smyrna)
Keep in mind, at this time
*Corinth needed quick resolve for their sedition of bishops. Rome is a long way away from Corinth.
*at the time of this sedition, the apostle John is still alive either in Ephesus or on Patmos. Either place, is closer to Corinth than Rome. Ask yourself, why not ask a sitting apostle, instead of going to the bishop of Rome?
The Emperor was killing Christians during the time of the Ecumenical Councils? :ehh:That’s a political argument that has no traction. The Emperor at the time was trying to eradicate the Church. They were killing Catholics right and left.
Wait. You just said that both Peter and Paul being martyred at Rome has nothing to do with Rome being preeminent and honored.That point has traction. And the blood of the martyrs is the seedbed of the Church.
K, so Linus got made bishop to take care of Rome, and people should agree with Rome since all the Churches hold to the Apostolic Tradition.. . .[we do this, I say,] by indicating thattradition derived from the apostles, of the very great, the very ancient, and universally known Church founded and organized at Rome by the two most glorious apostles, Peter and Paul; as also [by pointing out] the faith preached to men, which comes down to our time by means of the successions of the bishops. For it is a matter of necessity that every Church should agree with** this Church**, on account of its preeminent authority, that is, the faithful everywhere, inasmuch as the tradition has been preserved continuously by those [faithful men] who exist everywhere."
- "the apostles, then, having founded and built up the Church, committed into the hands of Linus the office of the episcopate.
It’s not like without the Roman Church, the Apostolic Tradition would be lost. Yes, Irenaeus received the Apostolic Tradition from the Apostolic Succession of Rome, but that’s because Irenaeus was of the Roman Church. Others under the jurisdiction of, say, Athens, received the Apostolic Tradition from the Apostolic Succession of their bishops.. . . and after him, in the third place from the apostles, Clement was allotted the bishopric. This man, as he had seen the blessed apostles, and had been conversant with them, might be said to have the preaching of the apostles still echoing [in his ears], and their traditions before his eyes. Nor was he alone [in this], for there were many still remaining who had received instructions from the apostles. In the time of this Clement, no small dissension having occurred among the brethren at Corinth, the Church in Rome dispatched a most powerful letter to the Corinthians. . . From this document, whosoever chooses to do so. . . may also understand the tradition of the Church, since this Epistle is of older date than these men who are now propagating falsehood, and who conjure into existence another god beyond the Creator and the Maker of all existing things. . . In this order, and by this succession, the ecclesiastical tradition from the apostles, and the preaching of the truth, have come down to us. And this is most abundant proof that there is one and the same vivifying faith, which has been preserved in the Church from the apostles until now, and handed down in truth."
Irenaeus lists all the popes of Rome from Peter & Paul down to his time, so there is no mistaking which Church is “this Church” that he is speaking of, and why all Churches everywhere must agree with this Church on account of its pre-eminent authority. And he identifies where he received this teaching
Yep, the Apostolic Tradition received by and handed down from all of the churches.It came from
*the apostles Peter and Paul
*and apostolic tradition faithfully handed down to his time
Hi Cavaradossi !Those are all areas which would have been under Pope Gregory’s historical regular jurisdiction, which extended all the way to the borders of Thrace.
Dear Shiranui,And I completely forgot the fast leading up to the Feast of Sts. Peter and Paul, ROFL :blushin
then no need to remind you that they go together then.
What about seeing that "inherent something " ( which is not just that they died, but that they glorified the Lord with their deaths ! ) as just a first solid stone on which the house can be built ?Inherent honor, yeah. You’ll understand if I take the whole “Peter and Paul died here, therefore Rome is infallible!” with a little more than a grain of salt, right?![]()
The point being that this "potior principalitas " of the Roman see, whether you translate “pre-eminence” or whatever, is “an inherent something”, which is taught by a prominent and early father ( with Eastern roots) .Thank you, Google Translate, for telling me what that Latin meant… (._.)
Basically, yeahMmmhmmmmCode:You see that Rome in the approach you described above gets just nothing, not even a super-conditional assent.People that check his faith against the Apostolic Tradition and find that it matches.My problem with this is, you don’t necessarily to see someone who lives out Apostolic Tradition in the present day to know what the Apostolic Tradition is. We have access to the writings, liturgies, practices, teachings and experiences of the Church that make up Apostolic Tradition.To attempt to put it simply and to the point (something I’m bad at, lol) Apostolic Tradition is its own thing that we can look at. We don’t need to have someone as a “beacon” for it; the Apostolic Tradition is its own beacon that shines through the people that live and believe it, like a lantern shining through a window. We don’t need the window to see the lantern; the lantern shines on its own, with or without the window.Anyone who can look through the Apostolic Tradition, look at what Rome teaches, and concludes that they are without a shadow of a doubt the same thing. This is a scientific method sorta thing.So this all seems IMHO to boil down to the assumption that ANYONE can individually in principle check what is sound Apostolic Tradition.The point is, ANYONE should be able to tell you whether or not Rome or your cousin keeps to the Apostolic Tradition, provided they bother to learn both the Apostolic Tradition, and what Rome or your cousin teach, practice and believe.
Now, re-examine please all the objections you have ever considered against Sola Scriptura.
Then, after due discernment, tell me please: don’t they fit here ?
Before replying "Wait a minute, what are you saying, we are speaking about Sacred Tradition, nothing to do with Sola Scriptura at all ", let us take note that we are dealing with Tradition as a collection of documents in this approach. Which are not "Tradition per se ", neither for a Catholic, nor for an Orthodox. Documents are rather “witnesses to Tradition” as Cardinal Congar would put it, and most Orthodox scholars would probably agree. If i go just by texts I simply do not have the general context to receive them, which is the life of the Church ( whatever it is according to me ).
The largely individualistic approach which is described above has seemingly no other solution than going by texts. So it is qualitatively IMHO of the same kind as Sola Scriptura.
The difference being in quantity.Which means that if mastering Scriptures in their several meanings and in their cultural environments is a really hard challenge for ANYBODY, … mastering togehter with them the thousands upon thousands of documents witnessing to Sacred Tradition over the centuries is beyond the theoretical possibility of ANYBODY. That is one fundamental reason why the “I am myself the litmus test of orthodoxy”, in any variazione does not stand IMHO.
You’ll probably ask “Well, how do people who aren’t Orthodox or Catholic know which of the two Churches is right?”I’d say, if non-Catholics and non-Orthodox 110% empirically knew which of those two Churches kept the Apostolic Tradition, then this schism wouldn’t still be going on to the extent that it is.Yes, it’s messy indeed. If it really “works” like this.It’s messy, it’s ugly, it causes a lot of headaches, but it’s how it works. A lot like life, or various other things in life.
Isn’t it that I do not need to get to know everything by my private judgment elevated to test of orthodoxy, but rather first and essentially something that allows to discern which Apostolic Church has the best claim to be trusted, or which ecclesial paradigm is most solid ( self-consistent, explicative, simple, beautiful …or what you want ) ?
In Christ
P7
When I said “Cyprian writes(mid 200’s) Church of Rome is the Chair of Peter, and the source of priestly unity” you asked for the source. So I gave the exact quote from Cyprian. Why would I care what Schaff has to say?Okay, phew, last post for this round.
It seems you decided to leave off what Schaff himself said about that:
[The Apostolic See of the West was necessarily all this in the eyes of an unambitious faithful Western co-bishop; but the letter itself proves that it was not the See of one who had any authority over or apart from his co-bishops. Let us not read into his expressions ideas which are an after-thought, and which conflict with the life and all the testimony of Cyprian
Privatus was well known as a heretic, that everbody knew about. newadvent.org/fathers/050654.htmAlso regarding the bolded part, Cyprian was referring to when the Romans shot down a request for support from a representative of Privatus.
“But the deceitfulness of that crafty man could not be hid from us even before we had your letters; for previously, when from the company of that very wickedness a certain Futurus came, a standard-bearer of Privatus, and was desirous of fraudulently obtaining letters from us, we were neither ignorant who he was, nor did he get the letters which he wanted. We bid you heartily farewell in the Lord.”
ccel.org/ccel/schaff/anf05.iv.iv.xxix.html
So, “to whom faithlessness could have no access” means “from whom heretics weren’t able to get help.”
We know Honorius didn’t define anything or teach anything regarding the will of Jesus, because 40 years after Honorius died no one knew that Honorious and Sergius were talking about this.Honorius sure did agree with heresy, though.
There’s another comment/request Ignatius makes later in his letter. He knows he’s going to die. His see will be vacant. So he saysAre you talking about this part?
“. . .unto her that hath found mercy in the bountifulness of the Father Most High and of Jesus Christ His only Son; to the church that is beloved and enlightened through the will of Him who willed all things that are, by faith and love towards Jesus Christ our God; even unto her that hath the presidency in the country of the region of the Romans, being worthy of God, worthy of honour, worthy of felicitation, worthy of praise, worthy of success, worthy in purity, and having the presidency of love, walking in the law of Christ and bearing the Father’s name”
Yeah, Ignatius was talking about Rome’s regional presidency. He never said a word about Rome having presidency over all the churches worldwide.
It’s not semantics. Ask someone where the Catholic Church is in town, they won’t be directing that person to the Orthodox.So what? The Orthodox Church calls itself the Catholic Church as well. Let’s not go down the semantic rabbit hole.
So?Actually, it seems St. Clement had been to Corinth before, and likely went there with Paul.
He was friends with St. Paul, so naturally the Corinthians would look to the friend of their father. The below quote is from Schaff’s intro to Clement’s epistle.
ccel.org/ccel/schaff/anf01.ii.i.html
". . .He seems to have been at Philippi with St. Paul (a.d. 57) when that first-born of the Western churches was passing through great trials of faith. There, with holy women and others, he ministered to the apostle and to the saints. . . He was possibly in some public service, and it is not improbable that he had visited Corinth in those days. From the apostle, and his companion, St. Luke, he had no doubt learned the use of the Septuagint, in which his knowledge of the Greek tongue soon rendered him an adept. . .
. . .After the death of the apostles, for the Roman imprisonment and martyrdom of St. Peter seem historical, Clement was the natural representative of St. Paul, and even of his companion, the “apostle of the circumcision;” and naturally he wrote the Epistle in the name of the local church, when brethren looked to them for advice. St. John, no doubt, was still surviving at Patmos or in Ephesus; but the Philippians, whose intercourse with Rome is attested by the visit of Epaphroditus, looked naturally to the surviving friends of their great founder; nor was the aged apostle in the East equally accessible. All roads pointed towards the Imperial City, and started from its Milliarium Aureum. But, though Clement doubtless wrote the letter, he conceals his own name, and puts forth the brethren, who seem to have met in council, and sent a brotherly delegation (Chap. lix.). The entire absence of the spirit of Diotrephes (3 John 9), and the close accordance of the Epistle, in humility and meekness, with that of St. Peter (1 Pet. v. 1–5), are noteworthy features. **The whole will be found animated with the loving and faithful spirit of St. Paul’s dear Philippians, among whom the writer had learned the Gospel. "
So, IOW, it was actually EASIER for the Corinthians to get a message to Clement via imperial roads than it was to sail a letter to St. John, and they knew him as a friend of St. Paul and as a visitor to their church.
I’m talking about the 1st 3 centuries. The 1st ecumenical council is early 4th century.The Emperor was killing Christians during the time of the Ecumenical Councils? :ehh:
Read it againWait. You just said that both Peter and Paul being martyred at Rome has nothing to do with Rome being preeminent and honored.
K, so Linus got made bishop to take care of Rome, and people should agree with Rome since all the Churches hold to the Apostolic Tradition.
Irenaeus was a disciple of Polycarp who was a disciple of John. Irenaeus and Polycarp were from Smyrna in the East. Ignatius wrote to Polycarp, and to the Church at Smyrna.It’s not like without the Roman Church, the Apostolic Tradition would be lost. Yes, Irenaeus received the Apostolic Tradition from the Apostolic Succession of Rome, but that’s because Irenaeus was of the Roman Church. Others under the jurisdiction of, say, Athens, received the Apostolic Tradition from the Apostolic Succession of their bishops.
Yep, the Apostolic Tradition received by and handed down from all of the churches.
The Church grew stronger through the blood and faith of martyrs, both locally and worldwide, yes. But how do you get from “Peter and Paul died in Rome” to “the Pope is infallible in XYZ circumstances (except when he’s not) and the Roman Church has full authority over every other church as if they were just dioceses under the omophor of the Pope”? To me, that is an extreme logic jump.Dear Shiranui,
What about seeing that "inherent something " ( which is not just that they died, but that they glorified the Lord with their deaths ! ) as just a first solid stone on which the house can be built ?![]()
But can you prove that he believed in Papal/Roman authority as it exists in the RCC+ECC’s today?The point being that this "potior principalitas " of the Roman see, whether you translate “pre-eminence” or whatever, is “an inherent something”, which is taught by a prominent and early father ( with Eastern roots) .
I’m not sure I understand what you’re saying here.You see that Rome in the approach you described above gets just nothing, not even a super-conditional assent.
Not what I was implying. I was saying, if it is clear what Apostolic Tradition is, and if it is clear what any given church or person teaches, then it is possible to judge whether the two link up. It’s not about deciding what isn’t Apostolic Tradition and what is.So this all seems IMHO to boil down to the assumption that ANYONE can individually in principle check what is sound Apostolic Tradition.![]()
Now, re-examine please all the objections you have ever considered against Sola Scriptura.
Then, after due discernment, tell me please: don’t they fit here?
Before replying "Wait a minute, what are you saying, we are speaking about Sacred Tradition, nothing to do with Sola Scriptura at all ", let us take note that we are dealing with Tradition as a collection of documents in this approach. Which are not "Tradition per se ", neither for a Catholic, nor for an Orthodox. Documents are rather “witnesses to Tradition” as Cardinal Congar would put it, and most Orthodox scholars would probably agree. If i go just by texts I simply do not have the general context to receive them, which is the life of the Church ( whatever it is according to me ).
Then we can say the same thing for any of the churches. How do we know that the Church in Antioch or Rome holds to the Apostolic Tradition? The only way out of this is to take for granted that one given Church holds faithfully to the Apostolic Tradition.The largely individualistic approach which is described above has seemingly no other solution than going by texts. So it is qualitatively IMHO of the same kind as Sola Scriptura.
The difference being in quantity.Which means that if mastering Scriptures in their several meanings and in their cultural environments is a really hard challenge for ANYBODY, … mastering togehter with them the thousands upon thousands of documents witnessing to Sacred Tradition over the centuries is beyond the theoretical possibility of ANYBODY. That is one fundamental reason why the “I am myself the litmus test of orthodoxy”, in any variazione does not stand IMHO.
So, as I said above, how do we examine which church best matches any of these criteria you put in parentheses?Isn’t it that I do not need to get to know everything by my private judgment elevated to test of orthodoxy, but rather first and essentially something that allows to discern which Apostolic Church has the best claim to be trusted, or which ecclesial paradigm is most solid (self-consistent, explicative, simple, beautiful …or what you want) ?
Well done:thumbsup:When I said “Cyprian writes(mid 200’s) Church of Rome is the Chair of Peter, and the source of priestly unity” you asked for the source. So I gave the exact quote from Cyprian. Why would I care what Schaff has to say?
"to set sail and to bear letters from schismatic and profane persons to the throne of Peter, and to the chief church whence priestly unity takes its source; and not to consider that these were the Romans whose faith was praised in the preaching of the apostle, to whom faithlessness could have no access**."** Epistle 54 [http://www.newadvent.org/fathers/050654.htm (http://www.newadvent.org/fathers/050654.htm)
the underlined answers your request, and of course giving the epistle number. . Cyprian is writing that to pope Cornelius.
there was an anti pope at the time Cyprian and Cornelius are communicationg.
Ep 40 Cyprian to Cornelius
newadvent.org/fathers/050640.htm
Ep 48 Cyprian to Cornelius about Novatian (anti pope)
newadvent.org/fathers/050648.htm
I think Schaff’s protestant bias is coming out there. You realize, Cyprian would have branded Schaff a heretic also, just like he did Novatian.
Privatus was well known as a heretic, that everbody knew about. newadvent.org/fathers/050654.htm
We know Honorius didn’t define anything or teach anything regarding the will of Jesus, because 40 years after Honorius died no one knew that Honorious and Sergius were talking about this.
There’s another comment/request Ignatius makes later in his letter. He knows he’s going to die. His see will be vacant. So he says
CHAPTER 9
9:1 Remember in your prayers the church which is in
Syria, which hath God for its shepherd in my stead.
Jesus Christ alone shall be its bishop, He and your
love.
It’s not semantics. Ask someone where the Catholic Church is in town, they won’t be directing that person to the Orthodox.
So?
http://t1.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcTYf2S8m92cYodPA4KImSPE0KDQXyFEhKjZdTEZ_POCWPjRB0TY
- That’s the biggest stetch I’ve seen yet. You mean to tell me Paul didn’t have other bishops he worked with in Greece in particular, and that whole region of the world in general?
- Have you looked at a road map of the area? There’s Corinth on the East coast of Greece, to Rome, on the West coast of Italy? Imperial road or not, look at the diatance by road. This map doesn’t even show the point above Macedonia where one can turn left and go south through Italy.
- Athens mentioned in Acts is ~50 miles from Corinth. Look where Ephesus & Patmos, are in relationship to Corinth. Corinth is a seaport. it should be a snap to get to Patmos or Ephesus to see St John. Would one ignore driving throughThessolonika so they can get to Rome to see Clement because he’s a friend of Pauls and no other reason?
I’m talking about the 1st 3 centuries. The 1st ecumenical council is early 4th century.
Read it again
You said “It also helped that it was the old capital of the Empire,” to which I said that has no traction. Now Peter and Paul dieing in Rome, that has preeminent honor for Rome.
sheesh! Go back and read it again
Irenaeus was a disciple of Polycarp who was a disciple of John. Irenaeus and Polycarp were from Smyrna in the East. Ignatius wrote to Polycarp, and to the Church at Smyrna.
Did you miss the point that Irenaeus credits Peter and Paul and all the faithful bishops down to his day for the teaching that all must agree with Rome.
Alright, after looking in Cyprian’s “On the Unity of the Church,” I found this:When I said “Cyprian writes Church of Rome is the Chair of Peter, and the source of priestly unity” you asked for the source. So I gave the exact quote from Cyprian.
Congratulations, you proved my point. Privatus wasn’t able to get help from Rome. That’s the reason Cyprian said that Rome was a church “to whom faithlessness could have no access.” Get it now? He was talking about how Rome shot Privatus down. He was talking about that one instance."to set sail and to bear letters from schismatic and profane persons to the throne of Peter, and to the chief church whence priestly unity takes its source; and not to consider that these were the Romans whose faith was praised in the preaching of the apostle, to whom faithlessness could have no access**."** Epistle 54 [http://www.newadvent.org/fathers/050654.htm (http://www.newadvent.org/fathers/050654.htm)
the underlined answers your request, and of course giving the epistle number. . Cyprian is writing that to pope Cornelius.
there was an anti pope at the time Cyprian and Cornelius are communicationg.
Ep 40 Cyprian to Cornelius
newadvent.org/fathers/050640.htm
Ep 48 Cyprian to Cornelius about Novatian (anti pope)
newadvent.org/fathers/050648.htm
Privatus was well known as a heretic, that everbody knew about. newadvent.org/fathers/050654.htm
Then what about Honorius being condemned as a heretic?We know Honorius didn’t define anything or teach anything regarding the will of Jesus, because 40 years after Honorius died no one knew that Honorious and Sergius were talking about this.
And? Ignatius asks the Romans to pray for the church in Syria, and says that God, Jesus and the love of the Romans will be its bishop. What part of that says “You guys have full authority over the church in Syria from here on out”?CHAPTER 9
9:1 Remember in your prayers the church which is in
Syria, which hath God for its shepherd in my stead.
Jesus Christ alone shall be its bishop, He and your
love.
So, ITT, conventional language=truth?It’s not semantics. Ask someone where the Catholic Church is in town, they won’t be directing that person to the Orthodox.
…So that’s pretty much a huge reason why the Corinthians wanted to write to him, because Clement was one of their contacts who could help them out. Yeesh, do you not know what a contact is? (an acquaintance, colleague, or relative through whom a person can gain access to information, favors, influential people, and the like)
- That’s the biggest stetch I’ve seen yet. You mean to tell me Paul didn’t have other bishops he worked with in Greece in particular, and that whole region of the world in general?
- Have you looked at a road map of the area? There’s Corinth on the East coast of Greece, to Rome, on the West coast of Italy? Imperial road or not, look at the diatance by road. This map doesn’t even show the point above Macedonia where one can turn left and go south through Italy.
- Athens mentioned in Acts is ~50 miles from Corinth. Look where Ephesus & Patmos, are in relationship to Corinth.
Do you have any idea how unpredictable the ocean is? They could get headwinds, freak storms, hit a reef… There are all sorts of ways to get messed up on the ocean. Heck, Paul even got shipwrecked a time or two just getting from Judaea to Rome.Corinth is a seaport. it should be a snap to get to Patmos or Ephesus to see St John.
I think you missed the part where it was pointed out that Clement had been to Corinth. I.e. He personally knew a lot of people in that area, and vice-versa. So of COURSE they’re going to go to Clement, because they know him personally, and he had been there with Paul in Corinth when things were getting started there!Would one ignore driving throughThessolonika so they can get to Rome to see Clement because he’s a friend of Pauls and no other reason?
Oh, I thought you were talking about during the time of the 2nd Ecumenical Council.I’m talking about the 1st 3 centuries. The 1st ecumenical council is early 4th century.
Not what you said.Read it again
You said “It also helped that it was the old capital of the Empire,” to which I said that has no traction. Now Peter and Paul dieing in Rome, that has preeminent honor for Rome.
Though, this was at a time when being from the East or the West hadn’t taken on the connotations that it would later on.sheesh! Go back and read it again
Irenaeus was a disciple of Polycarp who was a disciple of John. Irenaeus and Polycarp were from Smyrna in the East. Ignatius wrote to Polycarp, and to the Church at Smyrna.
You’re running those two sentences together. Rome had received the Apostolic Tradition from their Apostolic Succession (much like every other church in Christendom), put in a period. Afterwards, he says that everyone should agree with Rome because everyone else received the Apostolic Tradition as well.Did you miss the point that Irenaeus credits Peter and Paul and all the faithful bishops down to his day for the teaching that all must agree with Rome.
On this note, you’re forgetting that the Fathers of the council first scrutinized Leo’s letter, and only THEN did they proclaim it as such.Well done:thumbsup:
My 2 cents is, around 400AD, Pope Leo 's Dogmatic Letter to Flavian, one of the most important documents in the history of the Church. This is the famous letter which, when read aloud at the dogmatic Council of Chalcedon, caused all of the fathers of the council (more than 600) to rise to their feet and proclaim: “This is the faith of the Fathers, the faith of the apostles; Peter has spoken through the mouth of Leo.” ewtn.com/library/councils/chalcedo.htm#1
This is actually not true. The acts make it clear that the reading of the Tome of Leo during the second session was interrupted several times, and that the fathers only spoke the line that ‘Peter has spoken through Leo’ after determining that the Tome was in accordance with the faith of Cyril and of Nicaea. And even then, there were still dissenters in the 4th session (the session devoted to voting on whether the Tome of Leo taught the right faith) who opposed the theology of the Tome as being Nestorian.Well done:thumbsup:
My 2 cents is, around 400AD, Pope Leo 's Dogmatic Letter to Flavian, one of the most important documents in the history of the Church. This is the famous letter which, when read aloud at the dogmatic Council of Chalcedon, caused all of the fathers of the council (more than 600) to rise to their feet and proclaim: “This is the faith of the Fathers, the faith of the apostles; Peter has spoken through the mouth of Leo.” ewtn.com/library/councils/chalcedo.htm#1
Yet the evidence to support this conclusion is scant, since the original document survives only in fragments. It begs the question, is the scenario that the bishops of the world had to submit to Rome a written agreement true? What evidence can be found to justify that conclusion?Pope Zosimus taught to the whole world against Pelagianism:
The Catholic Encyclopedia:
“Having received the Acts of the Council of Carthage, Zosimus sent to all the bishops of the world his famous “Epistola tractoria” (418) of which unfortunately only fragments have come down to us. This papal encyclical, a lengthy document, gives a minute account of the entire “causa Caelestii et Pelagii”, from whose works it quotes abundantly, and categorically demands the condemnation of Pelagianism as a heresy. The assertion that every bishop of the world was obliged to confirm this circular by his own signature, cannot be proved, it is more probable that the bishops were required to transmit to Rome a written agreement; if a bishop refused to sign, he was deposed from his office and banished.” newadvent.org/cathen/11604a.htm
I didn’t ignore your post. I can only get to 1 maybe 2 posts a day.St. Cyril in that very sermon interprets the command to Peter to ‘feed my sheep’ as a generic command, belonging to all pastors of the Church:
For Christ even once said to the blessed Peter, " Simon, son of Jonah, do you love Me? feed My sheep; feed My lambs." If therefore he who feeds his flock loves it, then of course he that neglects it, and leaves the flock that has been entrusted to him without oversight, hates it: and if he hate it he will be punished, and be liable to the condemnation pronounced upon the unbelievers, as being convicted by the very facts of being negligent and contemptuous. Such was he who received the talent to trade with in things spiritual, and did not do so, but on the contrary brought that which had been given him without increase, saying, “Lord, I knew that you are a hard man, that you reap where others have sown, and gather whence others have scattered; and I was afraid, and hid the talent: lo! you have what is yours.” But those who had received the five talents, or even yet more, and laboured and loved service, were honoured with glorious dignities. For they heard, the one of them, “Be you over ten,” and the other, “Be you over five cities:” while that contumelious and slothful servant suffered the severest condemnation. To be negligent therefore in discharging the duties of the ministry is everywhere dangerous, or rather, brings upon men perdition: but to perform them with unwearying zeal earns for us life and glory. And this means to discourse to our fellow servants correctly and without error the things which relate to God, and whatsoever is able to benefit them in attaining both to the knowledge and the ability to walk uprightly. And the blessed Paul [Peter] also writes to certain persons, “Feed the flock of God which is among you, that when the Chief Shepherd shall appear, you may receive your reward.” And as knowing that slothfulness is the door of perdition, he again said, “Woe is me, if I preach not.”
tertullian.org/fathers/cyril_on_luke_09_sermons_89_98.htm#SERMON%20XCIII.
This is nothing more than a red herring. The one servant mentioned in the parable is symbolic of any teacher of the Church, just as St. Cyril clearly articulates:
Let us suppose, He says, a householder; who being about to go upon a journey, has entrusted to one of his faithful slaves the charge of all his house, to give his household, that is, his servants, their allowance of corn at its due season. When therefore, He says, he shall return, if on coming to his house he shall find him so doing as he commanded, very blessed shall that servant be. For he will set him, He says, over all that he has. But if he be neglectful and indolent, and take pleasure in oppressing his fellow-servants, eating and drinking, and given up to self-indulgent voluptuousness, he will be cut asunder, that is, will have to bear the severest punishment, when his lord shall come to him in a day that he expects not, and at an hour of which he is not aware.’
Such then is the simple and plain meaning of the passage: but if we now fix our mind accurately upon it, we shall see what is signified by it, and how useful it is for their benefit who have been called to the apostleship, to the office, that is, of teacher. The Saviour has ordained as stewards, so to speak, over his servants;----that is, over those who have been won by faith to the acknowledgment of His glory;----men faithful and of great understanding, and well instructed in the sacred doctrines.
tertullian.org/fathers/cyril_on_luke_09_sermons_89_98.htm#SERMON%20XCIII.
What is signified is the responsibility of the teachers of the Church, which is why he writes that the passage is for the benefit of those who teach, and the one servant made a steward mentioned in the parable signifies the teachers, who are stewards of Christ’s sheep.
Dear Shiranui,The Church grew stronger through the blood and faith of martyrs, both locally and worldwide, yes. But how do you get from “Peter and Paul died in Rome” to “the Pope is infallible in XYZ circumstances (except when he’s not) and the Roman Church has full authority over every other church as if they were just dioceses under the omophor of the Pope”? To me, that is an extreme logic jump.
But can you prove that he believed in Papal/Roman authority as it exists in the RCC+ECC’s today?
If there is no consensus even on a single passage form Book III ch. 3 of Adversus Haereses by St. Irenaeus, then probably it is not that clear what Apostolic Tradition (AT) is.Not what I was implying. I was saying, if it is clear what Apostolic Tradition is, and if it is clear what any given church or person teaches, then it is possible to judge whether the two link up. It’s not about deciding what isn’t Apostolic Tradition and what is.
Or, do we not even have a clear way of figuring out what the Apostolic Tradition is, and who best embodies and lives out that Tradition?
Then we can say the same thing for any of the churches. How do we know that the Church in Antioch or Rome holds to the Apostolic Tradition? The only way out of this is to take for granted that one given Church holds faithfully to the Apostolic Tradition.
My point is that I cannot master the entire corpus of the witnesses to Tradition, that there is no more exegetical consensus than on Scriptures, and that the litmus test for AT definitely is not me. That does not mean we cannot discern the Church , and receive from her the sound AT. That is what Apostolic Succession is about, after all, isn’t it ?Simply put, if it is indeed impossible to examine objectively whether anyone holds to Apostolic Tradition, then we have to just pick a Church or denomination on blind faith, and it’s impossible to tell who DOES hold to Apostolic Tradition.
For example, since the topic is ecclesial infallibility, you may go back to post #52 and offer your best opinions on letter a)So, as I said above, how do we examine which church best matches any of these criteria you put in parentheses ?
If you don’t mind, I’ll put out a list of premises for you to look at; this will help me ground myself in this discussion.Dear Shiranui,
I’d guess we should just work by incremental evidence here. We probably can agree on this rationale.
(In alternative we could follow a short road. If there is a fundamental authority established by the Lord in the person of Peter, so as He established the Apostolic College, and if that authority, so as this college, by analogy is in existence somewhere because the college of those with apostolic authority did not cease right after Peter to have a head, do you have obvious or serious alternatives to Rome for that somewhere?).
If you mean the foundational step is from the martyrdom of Sts. Peter and Paul, yes. I hope you can forgive me if I have difficulty following you; this feels to me like a completely different topic and style of discussion that I’ve been having with steve b up until now, and I need a wee bit to adjust.So I claim most explicitly that the seminal event of the glorification of God by both Peter and Paul by their deaths in Rome is not the Papacy. Noone is asked to jump that long.It is IMHO an excellent foundational step. Isn’t it ?
But how do we define this Petrine ministry? How is it separate from the general ministry of the Apostles?On the second I respond that I cannot and don’t want to prove that much.
On the contrary I believe that the application/management of the gift of the Petrine ministry that the Church received from the Lord, is a never ending story (until His second coming, that is), as our understanding of the depositum fidei is .
I think there’s room for agreement between your interpretation and mine. Yes, Rome is/was the pre-eminent Church, and as long as everyone holds to the same Apostolic Tradition, everyone should agree with Rome, if Rome is pre-eminent and holds to the Apostolic Tradition.Irenaeus for what we can get, however, witnesses to a very early explicit presence of the principle “Look at Rome to get to know the soundest Apostolic Tradition”, and that on the basis of an “inherent” status of that church. He is not just saying that Everyone should agree with Rome because everybody received the same Tradition
Rather, IMHO: " If anybody preserved Tradition, and in as much as they preserved it, then they agree with Rome necessarily, since that is the pre-eminent locus of the Apostolic Tradition". I am open to different readings here, but we cannot explain away IMHO the acknowledgment of the *potior principalitas * as an “inherent something” in connection with the preservation of the depositum fidei in Rome.
The role of the Roman Church in Apostolic Tradition is one of the very few areas on which we do not have agreement among the Apostolic Churches (EO, RCC, OO).If there is no consensus even on a single passage form Book III ch. 3 of Adversus Haereses by St. Irenaeus, then probably it is not that clear what Apostolic Tradition (AT) is.
So the next question is, “how do we find who the best architect or lawyer in town is?” How do we discern which Church is the true one?My point is that I cannot master the entire corpus of the witnesses to Tradition, that there is no more exegetical consensus than on Scriptures, and that the litmus test for AT definitely is not me. That does not mean we cannot discern the Church , and receive from her the sound AT. That is what Apostolic Succession is about, after all, isn’t it ?Put it like this: you don’t have to be the best architect or lawyer in your city, you have just to find him/her.
Oh man, I’ll give it a shot.For example, since the topic is ecclesial infallibility, you may go back to post #52 and offer your best opinions on letter a)![]()
Meaning, that in the Church, truth will always win out over error? Agreed.a ) IMHO we could discern first of all whether we agree that the Church is indefectible.
If this infallibility is inherent, I’m not sold.Then whether her indefectibility is expressed through infallibility.
I take it that these “organs” are implied to have inherent infallibility. If that’s the case, then I think we should hold off on this part of your question until we agree whether or not anyone has inherent infallibility.Then which the organs of her infallibility are, if any.
Dear Shiranui,If you don’t mind, I’ll put out a list of premises for you to look at; this will help me ground myself in this discussion.
1: Jesus gives Peter the keys
2: The Apostles were later given the same powers and authority that Peter had, as St. Cyprian noted
3: Peter was set forth by Christ as a symbolic head and source of Apostolic unity, as first among equals
4: Rome, though only one of the three sees connected with St. Peter, arose as the pre-eminent See in the Church
5: A large source of the Roman Church’s honor was the fact that both Peter and Paul were martyred there
6: The Patriarch of Rome was later bestowed some powers of arbitration, and the Roman Church itself was relatively free from heresy
7: The Roman Pope later began to hold the same role as Peter, that is, of a symbolic head of the Church
I say we proceed from there. Does this seem fair to you?
.
You’re most welcome. Forgive my style.If you mean the foundational step is from the martyrdom of Sts. Peter and Paul, yes.
I hope you can forgive me if I have difficulty following you; this feels to me like a completely different topic and style of discussion that I’ve been having with steve b up until now, and I need a wee bit to adjust
.
What about feeding the Lord’s sheep and confirming the brothers ( John 21, Luke 22 ), all of them ?But how do we define this Petrine ministry?
It is not. How can we separate the college and its head ?How is it separate from the general ministry of the Apostles?
I think there’s room for agreement between your interpretation and mine. Yes, Rome is/was the pre-eminent Church, and as long as everyone holds to the same Apostolic Tradition, everyone should agree with Rome, if Rome is pre-eminent and holds to the Apostolic Tradition.
Yes. The gist of the message is that since it is pre-eminent Rome is supposed to hold the AT.
The role of the Roman Church in Apostolic Tradition is one of the very few areas on which we do not have agreement among the Apostolic Churches (EO, RCC, OO).
Thanks for this refreshing and so true remark.Other subjects, such as the role and definition of the Sacraments, how liturgies should be performed, Trinitarian theology, Christology, what the Ecumenical Councils anathemized and clarified, etc. are very clear.
So the next question is, “how do we find who the best architect or lawyer in town is?” How do we discern which Church is the true one?
Good, let’s see what happens this way.Oh man, I’ll give it a shot.
Yes, meaning that the Church of any age remains faithful to his Lord. So we concur that the Church is (inherently, I presume ) indefectible.Meaning, that in the Church, truth will always win out over error? Agreed.
If this infallibility is inherent, I’m not sold.
If this infallibility is along the parameters that I set out in post 54, then of course I’ll agree![]()
For reference, here are my premises:
1: A given person teaches the true faith correctly.
2: The definition of “infallible” is to be without error.
3: The given person has taught the true faith without error.
4: Therefore, the person was infallible in their teaching, since they were without error.
It looks like we need here to fix a definition of “infallibility”.I take it that these “organs” are implied to have inherent infallibility. If that’s the case, then I think we should hold off on this part of your question until we agree whether or not anyone has inherent infallibility