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PC_Master
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Because that’s not what I asked for.Why don’t we just begin with all of the Protestant scholars who have stated that Peter is the rock?
The question is also not if there are Protestants who hold that Peter is the rock – the OP was about how they could do this and yet not become Roman Catholic.
How do you know this? How do you know he didn’t say “You are kepha but on this shu’a I will build my church” ? I agree that we can’t assert petros and petra are different simply because they’re different in Greek, but surely you have some supporting logic as to why you think a rather non-standard translation of kepha->petra would have happened, do you not?Of course, Jesus did not speak Greek but Aramaic. Therefore, the words that Jesus actually spoke would be more accurately translated, “You are kepha and on this kepha I will build my church.”
and petra would not occur in Aramaic.Agreed – but if somehow the original were kepha/shua, and were translated to petros/petra, would we not have the same confusion and argument as we do now?The confusion over the masculine and feminine forms of the Greek petros
Right – this is how we know petros was translated from kepha.We can see the use of the Greek form of Simon’s new name, Cephas, in several verses.
According to one of the gospels (Mark, I believe), Peter was called this by Christ from the beginning of his ministry, long before Matthew 16:18. In fact, it’s not unreasonable to think that he may have held this nickname from friends and family before meeting Christ.Even Paul, the favorite Apostle of Protestants, called Peter “Cephas” in several of his letters which indicates that even Paul understood that Peter was the rock upon which the Church was founded. If not, he would have referred to Peter as “Simon” instead.
Regardless – that Paul called Peter by this instead of Simon only indicates that he knew of the nickname, not that he agreed with a particular interpretation of Matthew 16.
Universally acknowledged…except for the Eastern Orthodox (and various other splinter groups that happened before Luther). And, I’d argue that it was the rejection of the claim of authority that was part of the cause for them to break away, not the result of the action.For the Protestant Reformers to rationalize breaking away from what was universally acknowledged in their culture as the Christian Church, it was necessary for them to deny the Catholic Church’s authority.
How do you define “plain reading”?They were forced to deny the plain reading of Matthew 16:18—that Jesus made Peter the rock on which he would build his Church.
I’d really like to see you address my post on the subject, explaining why kepha/kepha would be rather odd to use.
I won’t ask for sources at this point, though they certainly would interest me. Anyway, that’s 1. Got more?2 cents: For St. John Chrysostom, Peter was “the foundation of the Church”, whom Christ made “stronger than any rock” (while Paul was “the vessel of election”, and he called both coryphaei, leaders - a term also applied to James, Andrew and John, though Peter is the foremost coryphaeus). Yet Chrysostom also said the foundation of the church was the faith of Peter’s confession.
Care to explain what’s contorted?Or they post page-long contortions of logic…
Such as? Personally, I think saying that petros cannot have been meant as a separate word is quite a liberty, given that there’s evidence to support that it in fact did have a distinct meaning of its own.…while taking substantial liberties with both ancient and modern language…
Feel free to address the issues I raised if you feel this way.…to postulate a quasi-believable “refutation” containing, when viewed from just the right angle, perhaps the slightest glimmer of plausibility.
No – anything to find the truth.ANYTHING to avoid becoming Catholic!
Absolutely – and that form didn’t have liturgies, popes, many rituals, confession for the purpose of redeeming you of sin, prayers to Mary, etc.If the church was to persist until the end of the age, wouldn’t it do so best in the form in which Christ created it?
As I understand, the underlying Greek “kai”, is a generic conjunction, which can mean either “and” or “but”. It’s not as specific as our English conjunctions are. Thus, its meaning must be determined by surrounding context.Christ didn’t say “but on this rock.” He said “and on this rock.” There is difference. Do you see the difference?
searchgodsword.org/lex/grk/view.cgi?number=2532&l=en
On this issue, I’m unsure. My understanding is that both are actually masculine words. I came across one article a while back that suggested it would have been perfectly proper to adapt petra into the masculine petras, which could have been used for Peter’s name. I don’t have that article handy, but if you’d like to explain what the importance is of the two different words, I’d like to hear it. Any source material you have on easily explaining different cases of Greek words would be useful as well.Also, could you explain the difference in the masculine and feminine form of the Greek words petros and petras? Is this masucline verses feminine usage evident in either aramaic or hebrew?
That it did. Then again, so did the hierarchy in Eastern Orthodoxy, which insists Rome is wrong on some things. Surely you’re not saying that something exists is proof that it’s legitimate, are you?I submit the grammar issue is of more concern to us today then it was when this was written. My point was, despite our wrangling over grammar, a hierarchy did in fact come into being.
Actually, I’m not sure there’s a time when such hierarchy wasn’t challenged, except for in the earliest centuries of the church (at which time I believe the hierarchy as such did not exist).At certain and rather lengthy points in Christian history this hierarchy was not seriously challenged in any substantive and material manner that we can point at until the split between East and West churches.
“Seems to make sense” is an appelation to emotion and personal opinion, rather than to sound reasoning.A hierarchical structure seems to make sense…
It makes sense to you for there to be a hierarchy precisely because that’s what you’re used to, and it guides the terms in which you think. To my mind, it makes sense for Christ to have not left this planet at all – he should have remained here with us, working miracles, preaching on Sundays, etc. But clearly our sense of what “makes sense” is not the same as what God chooses to do.
The authority was the holy spirit in the beginning, and should remain so to this day. Where does the authority come from? – God himself. How is this authority to be exercised? – By revelation to followers of Christ, as always.The issue becomes, at some point, who is the authoritative expert on the meaning of this or that teaching? Where does this authority come from? How is this authority to be exercised?
Of course, but the Roman Catholic contention is not only that “the RCC started to exist” but that “God made it happen”. Whether the RCC is right, or it’s wrong doesn’t change what actually happened, and whether or not God actually created the RCC – but isn’t trying to understand the truth a worthy cause in any case? Either the earth goes around the sun, or the sun goes around the earth – I can’t change it, but I sure do want to understand it.Now, I realize today that we need to grasp the grammar to grasp Christ’s meaning in the peter, rock, etc. statements. Our understanding of the grammar doesn’t change what factually happened however.
This is a good point. Some people assume that disagreement with the RCC means we hold the RCC is completely of satan and that all Roman Catholics are not Christian.I and many other moderate Protestants do not claim that the “Catholic Church has lost its way.” We simply are not convinced that the churches in communion with Rome constitute the Catholic Church in all its fullness. We don’t think you are heretics. We just think that you claim more for your particular Communion than is currently the case.
While this is often asserted, I know of very few Protestants who would willingly ignore the ECFs, etc. Ignoring the RCC’s interpretation thereof, on the other hand, is another story.Protestants, look at sacred Scripture as an “instruction manual”. Consequently all they can do is haggle over word definitions etc… They can’t get too deep into church history, because their history only starts from the Reformation.
It seems that they should have been more overt in their discussions of the papacy then.It’s obvious that since Jesus never wrote a single word, that he discussed in great detail how this unlikely group of men would shepherd His Church.
Didn’t we already deal with this one?Thirty thousand different denominations…
[edit]Thus far, very few have actually addressed the issues I raised previously regarding the petros/petra issue. Unfortunately, these have been covered with claims that are false (such as that Matthew 7 uses kepha, not shu’a, that kepha means an “unmovable rock”, or that “and” and “but” are two distinctly different things in Greek).
I was really hoping someone would take up the task of countering this with historical documents and logic, rather than just saying it’s useless to discuss. This just tells me that most of you can’t even be bothered to discuss a well-thought rational response to your claims.