T
thessalonian
Guest
The focus is all wrong on this thread. It doesn’t matter if 44 Fathers did say that Jesus is the Rock or Peter’s faith is the Rock (which some did). You see the Catholic Church allows for interprutations from different perspectives on a passage. There is the literal perspective from which there is no question that Peter is the rock. There are also spirtual perspectives that allow for Jesus to be the rock and certainly Peter’s faith was a component in his rockiness.
Actually that fathers do point out multiple interprutations gives credence to Catholic exegetical methods. The proof is in those fathers identified the rock in more than one fashion such as Augustine and Tertullian. I saw a study on this and may have it on my computer at home. If I do I will post it. This guy went through and catalogued all the quotations of Matt 16:18. Then the interprutations. There were I think 17 who identified the rock with Peter and a larger majority, perhaps 50 who identified it otherwise. There were a half a dozen however who identified the rock as Peter and Christ or Peter’s faith. NOWHERE HOWEVER did any Church father say it was a mistake to call Peter the rock. If it was a mistaken interprutation then surely some would have objected as Protestants do today. They quite clearly read eachother.
One thing to consider in all of this is that Peter is the Rock because of his relationship to Christ. Any faith he had that would make him a rock was a grace of God “flesh and blood hath not revealed this to you but my father in heaven”. Also making someone (christ) or something else (Peter’s faith) bibilically it does not logically follow that that excludes Peter. The scriptures tell us that Christ is the foundation of the Church (1 Cor 3:11), yet they also tell us that Prophets and Apostles are (Eph 2:20). We are told that Christ is the light of the world in John. Yet, it also says “You are the light of the world”. We as the body of Christ are the light of the world and there is no contradiction.
Hope that helps.
Blessings
Actually that fathers do point out multiple interprutations gives credence to Catholic exegetical methods. The proof is in those fathers identified the rock in more than one fashion such as Augustine and Tertullian. I saw a study on this and may have it on my computer at home. If I do I will post it. This guy went through and catalogued all the quotations of Matt 16:18. Then the interprutations. There were I think 17 who identified the rock with Peter and a larger majority, perhaps 50 who identified it otherwise. There were a half a dozen however who identified the rock as Peter and Christ or Peter’s faith. NOWHERE HOWEVER did any Church father say it was a mistake to call Peter the rock. If it was a mistaken interprutation then surely some would have objected as Protestants do today. They quite clearly read eachother.
One thing to consider in all of this is that Peter is the Rock because of his relationship to Christ. Any faith he had that would make him a rock was a grace of God “flesh and blood hath not revealed this to you but my father in heaven”. Also making someone (christ) or something else (Peter’s faith) bibilically it does not logically follow that that excludes Peter. The scriptures tell us that Christ is the foundation of the Church (1 Cor 3:11), yet they also tell us that Prophets and Apostles are (Eph 2:20). We are told that Christ is the light of the world in John. Yet, it also says “You are the light of the world”. We as the body of Christ are the light of the world and there is no contradiction.
Hope that helps.
Blessings