S
SCALCO
Guest
I’m confused. 
forums.catholic-questions.org/showthread.php?t=105278&So, you believe Peter and the Apostles were given authority, it just did not pass on? Why do you think they were given authority in the first place?
I will assume (with Charity) that you are lying to us or are just stupid. Please let me know which one.Absolutely – and that form didn’t have liturgies, popes, many rituals, confession for the purpose of redeeming you of sin, prayers to Mary, etc.
In NO dialect of the Greek language may you ever, EVER use kai to mean BUT. You just can not do it, EVER, AT ALL.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.
They don’t insist that Rome is wrong. You need to get your facts together and you also need to do more study about that the Byzantines believe and teach. The results of the meeting in Ravenna Italy I am sure you are aware of or you need to be and soon.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?
If you think that the Heirarchy of the Church didn’t exist then you are basically telling us that you refuse to read any valid information or history and you are being very unreasonable in your assertions.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).
History and facts, nuf said.“Seems to make sense” is an appelation to emotion and personal opinion, rather than to sound reasoning.
St. Ignatius of Antioch gives us a pretty clear description of the levels of clergy in the early Church as does the New Testament. I would refer you to his writtings in Greek but I am afriad that you will be seeing BUT in all the places where he wrote AND so I will look for a good English translation for you.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.
That authority is with the clergy. Jesus says so.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.
Most protestants that I have had contact with believe that “all catholics are going to hell” and my usual response to them is that they are not Christians. I can justify this easily. I do not justify it by judging them by thier behavior, that would be too easy for them to overlook and be blinded. I simply point out that since Catholics are Christians in reality and since being baptized is entering into communion with Christianity, anyone who claims that Catholics are not Christians are in fact themselves not Christains because they have created a false idea of what Christianity is and entered into that falsehood not Christianity.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 see everyone here responding to you and you just blowing us off because you have pre decided that you are right and we are wrong. We are giving you the truth and you are ignoring it. I expect more. Petra and Petros are Synonymous in Koine Greek. Jesus used the word Kepa not Shu’Wa, but even still it would still make sense because Kepa and Shu’Wa are synonymous. Kepa does indeed mean unmovable rock. It is not expected that a normal human being can remove a Kepa, or even an elephant for that matter. Look up the word AVNA. Your asertion that Kai can mean BUT is completely wrong for any dialect of Greek at any time in the language history. That is besides the point because Jesus uses a word in Syriac that clearly point to Peter as the ROCK. Jesus says Kepa twice.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).
Dude, you are at Catholic Answers. Sure I can go to the over side of the site and cut and paste, or I can go to St. Michaels media or go to the site run by Marty Barrack but you would accuse me of regurgitating the truth to you. I can show you all the research that I have done on my own but it would be mountianous and not very well organized since I mostly just live my faith in everyday reality. But even still, you would reject it because you need the Catholic Church to be wrong or you are faced with having to be intellectually honest and convert.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.I sincerely hope some of you will change your minds on this, and choose to respond in detail.
For example, CRAIG L. BLOMBERG
This exchange between Jesus and the Apostles is clearly saying the the statement by Peter “Thou are the Christ, the Son of the living God” is what the church would be built on.( CONTEMPORARY BAPTIST)
No. That is not clear, as has been shown up thread.This exchange between Jesus and the Apostles is clearly saying the the statement by Peter “Thou are the Christ, the Son of the living God” is what the church would be built on.
No, what I’m saying is that educated Protestants have already conceded the argument because the Greek supports the Catholic position and Protestant scholars know it. I have no explanation for those who don’t seem to get it.So you’re saying that all Protestants of education concede that Peter is the rock upon which the church is built, and that anyone who doesn’t follow this view is less educated? That there were some educated Protestants who espoused the point doesn’t mean that it’s true, or that they were correct in this, any more than heretics throughout Christian history can be called right simply for their education. Weak argument.
Did I say that?So you’re saying there’s no need to try to understand what the original Aramaic was?
Plausible if you are grasping at straws perhaps. Where is the trail of evidence that scholars down through the past 2,000 years have held your position as even a possibility? Sources, please.No – I’m asking why you accept the kepha/kepha explanation despite its lack of support, when what I have presented is at least as plausible.
Thank you.Sure – try here.
You assume that Paul was aware of the implications of calling Simon “the Rock”, disagreed with the interpretation (ie, he didn’t think Peter was “the Rock”, and then went ahead and used the nickname which supported something he didn’t believe anyway? This strains credulity. Talk about grasping at straws.I never questioned that Paul accepted the name as valid. I simply questioned the meaning of the name – how do you know that when Paul said Peter, he knew Peter to be the rock of the church? You assume it to be so, as if the name can have no other meaning.
Well, I suppose that if Jesus had said, “You are Sons of Thunder and on these Sons of Thunder I will build my Church” we would have some issues. But that’s not what happened, is it?Name changes do not necessarily make one ruler over X group. Paul is an example of this. James and John, the “Sons of Thunder”, had this to a degree, and yet we should think of these only Peter took on the role of leader?
As stated above, Paul understood the implications of calling Peter, “Rock”. And as we also know from scripture, Paul was not opposed to opposing Peter (or anyone or anything else he disagreed with) when he thought something was incorrect. Funny…he never suggests anywhere in his writings that Peter is NOT the rock.You’re assuming that Paul accepted the meaning that you accept.
I never said this was the case. But you’re assuming it to be true unless conclusively disproved. I’m assuming that we should prove what we’re going to believe in the first place.Well, no. Actually, pointing out various possible ways to interpret the “you are Peter” statement does not make the papacy illegitimate.
Had to? Or what?Someone, or some group of someone’s, had to address, for example, differences of opinion regarding Christ’s divinity.
There’s a difference between the “natural response of a group of people” as you would call it and an institution of God. I have no doubt people would want to appoint leaders in the church – the question is whether or not this was of God.Hierarchy has been a natural and demonstrated response in any group that has grown past a certain number of members.
Nor did I ever claim it did. That the holy spirit is the rule of faith, and that the holy spirit leads, does not mean all believers will follow. Saying that not everyone follows the holy spirit disproves the leadership of the holy spirit only as much as saying Roman Catholics don’t agree disproves the leadership of the pope.Now, we can still argue about whether or not that meant a papacy, a council, or some other form of authority. It certainly is clear that it did not take the form of the Holy Spirit just guiding each and every new Christian individually to the same conclusions. It just did not happen that way.
More rhetoric. Nice.But that strikes me as…
Woah there – once again you ignore what I said and twist it to your own meaning. I never said that Jesus didn’t have the power to institute the papacy. I simply said that he did not do so.By rejecting that Jesus had the power to institute Peter as Pope you are rejecting Lord Jesus and his saving Power.
Admittedly I’m not an expert on this, but if you’d care to substantiate your claims with some source material, that’d be great. Otherwise, they hold about as much water as saying kepha meant “unmovable rock”, which is obviously false.Again, the words Kepa and Shuwa are synonymous unless you are talking about the word Shuwa that looks the same but has a different meaning.
In which case, the gender argument can even work against the Roman Catholic position…The word Petra in Greek is used to translate both Kepa and Shu`wa into Greek.
Even the most rudimentary understanding of the evolution of language would tell you that none of those forms are completely distinct from one another. English is a great example. You can roughly approximate when Old English and Middle English were in use, but you cannot point to something and say “this is 100% middle English”. Definitions and word spellings survive from the oldest English to this very day.Another interesting thing is that the Septuagint was written in KOINE Greek, NOT Attic, NOR Pelapanesean, NOR Girko.
Care to substantiate this with some references?This is why even in the Septuagint we find them using both to refer to the same thing.
Generally a baseless assertion.The word would have been used so many times in the psalms to describe God that they got tired of it and started to insert other metaphoric words for God to prevent the Psalms from being just a list of Petra and Petos all over the place.
Interesting then that only one gospel records this “pivotal” event (which would no doubt be very important to the church), and that it doesn’t say “You are Peter and on you I will build my church.”Wrong, The word used for Peter was Kepa, the exact same word that was used for Jesus Three times. Jesus gave his own name to Simon.
As far as I’m aware, the Greek “epi” generally means “upon”, not “on which”. The Greek “kai epi taute tu petra” would be “but/and/however/also upon/on this/that rock”. So, a legitimate translation might also be “You are a rock, but on that rock pointing toward Caesarea Philippi I will build my church.” You wrongly assume we can know for certain where Christ was pointing, and you make false assertions that the wording can only refer to Peter.We do know where Jesus pointed, he must have been pointing at Simon because the sounds that came out of his mouth to form the words that are recorded for us tell us that this must be so. The first eleven words of Jesus here give us a very clear indication of what he meant. Jesus saysIsay**I**to you(this is a singular word)you(again singular)are(a singular verb)Kepaon which(the very nature of this word implies that he is talking about Peter and ONLY Peter and any other explanation of it is always grammatically wrong for this langauge, it would be like saying HE AM. It just does not work)KepaI will buildMyChurch.
The name of the place where this happened has the word Kepa incorporated into it but the words of Lord Jesus point out to us clearly that he was not talking about the huge rock face there.
Proof? Got some logic to disprove shu’a (which is Syriac/Aramaic, not Hebrew – in Hebrew, the closest word would be sela/selah).Jesus did not suddenly switch into Hebrew and use Shu`wa or any other word. He said Kepa twice.
No, but the mathematic equivalent – the number 2 represents the quantity we all know as 2. The laws of mathematics state that X plus Y becomes another real number, counting upward from the original (X) by Y increments of 1.2 plus 2 is 4. 4 equals 2 plus 2. This is not circular logic…
Oh, I see – now you’re saying it’s Jesus, and just sliding the RCC in there as being the same thing…without substantiation.The Mountian represents Lord Jesus who is the Catholic Church (not just the Roman Catholic Church though we are the most visible part in English speaking countries.)
Aside form Koine being a transitional form, how do you demonstrate that the words were 100% synonymous? Where is there other use contemporary to scripture that shows them to mean the same?The words petra and petros in Koine Greek mean 100% the same thing. Even the pagans of the time would have used them as such. You have to go back centuries before the old Testament was translated into Greek to find a distinction and it was only ever found in ONE dialect of Greek, not all and certainly not Koine.
No, I mean “Peter is the rock because Jesus said kepha twice.” Almost none of them can answer the question of “how do you know that”. Canned answers that you’ve memorized.What canned responses? Oh, you mean telling you the truth and not allowing you to lie to us.
Gee, only one letter in the New Testament (2 Timothy) contains anything that even remotely suggests that the Bible Alone is the sole infallible rule of faith for the believer, and you sola scripturists hang your collective hats on vv. 3:16-17.Interesting then that only one gospel records this “pivotal” event (which would no doubt be very important to the church), and that it doesn’t say “You are Peter and on you I will build my church.”
What you’re actually saying is, “I’ve heard all the arguments, and I don’t believe them. Therefore, you have no support for this doctrine.”I realize it’s easy to stereotype, but let me reiterate – I’ve never claimed to adhere to sola scriptura. I completely agree that the evidence for such a claim is very shaky…and I hold that the papacy is also false because it doesn’t have strong support (or any in the early centuries of the church for that matter).
But that is not the logic of my argument which is that YOU (or most Protestants anyway) seem to find that one verse (2 Tim 3:16) is sufficient to prove sola scriptura while attempting to argue that one verse (Mt 16:18) is insufficient to support the papacy. You want to have it both ways.Besides, if you think the evidence for SS is faulty, and thus the concept has no support, likening the papacy to it really isn’t a good course of action. It just gives me one more reason to disbelieve.
I don’t believe them because there’s no support for them. People do things like saying “Jesus said kepha twice”, but fail to address how the Aramaic shu’a might have been translated, if not as petra. It’s an important question, and the lack of an answer bothers me somewhat.What you’re actually saying is, “I’ve heard all the arguments, and I don’t believe them. Therefore, you have no support for this doctrine.”
I understand the point you’re trying to make and I agree – many Protestants want to have it both ways. I’m not one of those, however. I think that 2 Timothy 3:16 is insufficient to support SS. Likewise, I think Matthew 16:18 is insufficient to support the papacy. I’m not playing both sides – I’m consistent, at least in this regard.But that is not the logic of my argument which is that YOU (or most Protestants anyway) seem to find that one verse (2 Tim 3:16) is sufficient to prove sola scriptura while attempting to argue that one verse (Mt 16:18) is insufficient to support the papacy. You want to have it both ways.
What evidence is there that Jesus used shu’a? What sources can you cite for this idea? I’d like to take a look…I don’t believe them because there’s no support for them. People do things like saying “Jesus said kepha twice”, but fail to address how the Aramaic shu’a might have been translated, if not as petra. It’s an important question, and the lack of an answer bothers me somewhat.
Kudos. This is refreshing.I understand the point you’re trying to make and I agree – many Protestants want to have it both ways. I’m not one of those, however. I think that 2 Timothy 3:16 is insufficient to support SS. Likewise, I think Matthew 16:18 is insufficient to support the papacy. I’m not playing both sides – I’m consistent, at least in this regard.
Since when have Catholics ever relied on scripture alone to prove their case for the papacy? Or that Mt 16:18 is the sole verse that supports it? I concede that it is the first verse we tend to quote, but it is hardly ALL that the scriptures suggest about Peter’s primacy.Actually, I’d say that the Roman Catholic position is closer to playing both sides than I am – on the one hand, Matthew 16:18 in and of itself is considered conclusive evidence that Peter was the rock of the church, and yet 2 Timothy 3:16 is insufficient to prove SS.
I have no idea. But why does my inability to answer what appears to be a hypothetical question undermine the argument that Peter is the rock? Again, what evidence is there that Jesus used “shu’a”, and why have no other Protestant scholars (at least none I am familiar with) advanced this argument?if Christ had used kepha and shu’a respectively in Matthew 16:18, how would it have been translated into Greek?
Jesus says that he did so. The only way that I can think that you can possible come to the conclusion that what Jesus said did not actually take place because you deny that Jesus had the power to do it.Woah there – once again you ignore what I said and twist it to your own meaning. I never said that Jesus didn’t have the power to institute the papacy. I simply said that he did not do so.
Try a dictionary. Call someone who speaks Syriac. Go to the website for the Maronite Catholic Church and leave an Email asking the question. Learn Syriac and read the millions of documents in that langauge.Admittedly I’m not an expert on this, but if you’d care to substantiate your claims with some source material, that’d be great. Otherwise, they hold about as much water as saying kepha meant “unmovable rock”, which is obviously false.
You obviously have not tried very hard.Seriously, this claim sounds ridiculous to me, and I have tried (and failed) to find material to corroborate your claims, so please supply some source material.
The Grammar of the languages that we are dealing with not only make the Catholic interpretation FAR more reasonable it also make the Catholic interpretaion the only one that is grammatically correct.In which case, the gender argument can even work against the Roman Catholic position…
You are kepha, and on this shu’a/shu’wa I will build my church.
…becomes…
You are petra and on this petra I will build my church.
…and then we fix the gender issue, and are left with…
You are petros, and on this petra I will build my church.
So far, you’ve not convinced me that either interpretation is more reasonable than the other.
This is a fluff arguament. Pelapanesian Greek and Attic were not mutually intelligable. Modern Greek and Grinko are not mutually intelligable. The vocabulary and idiom are different. So unless you are going to tell me that you can still drink MEAT you have no arguement. The word Petros and Petra are synonymous in Koine Greek. The millions of documents in this language tell us so. The Old Testament in this langauge tells us so. And once you get over this intellectual boundary, you will see that Matthew, 16:18 also tells us so.Even the most rudimentary understanding of the evolution of language would tell you that none of those forms are completely distinct from one another. English is a great example. You can roughly approximate when Old English and Middle English were in use, but you cannot point to something and say “this is 100% middle English”. Definitions and word spellings survive from the oldest English to this very day.
Millions of Koine Greek documents from Egypt to the Lavant to Greece, from 300 years before Jesus to the time of the Ottoman empire, they are synonymous. Call the Greek Orthodox Church and ask them. Learn to speak Koine Greek. Do your homework. No intellectually honest person that looks at this case will conclude anything other then in Koine Greek and in Matthew, they are Synonymous.It’s pretty well unargued that petros originally was a distinctly different word from petra. So, the question then becomes, how can you support your assertion that the two were 100% synonymous by the time the gospels were authored?
Open to the book of Psalms and start reading.Care to substantiate this with some references?
This is actually a very, VERY, well known aspect of the Septuagint translation. Even Wikipedia mentions it. Jerome mentioned it when speaking about changing from the Greek to the Hebrew. Compare the Hebrew to the Greek (as I have done personally) and you can see it plain as day.Generally a baseless assertion.
Seeing as how Matthew was written first and for a long time was the only Gospel universally accepted perhaps they didn’t see the need. But the Confession is there in other Gospels. Why did they take the time to mention it? The fact that it isn’t mentioned a lot lets us know that it was well known and accepted. The writers of the other Gospels assumed that the knowledge was already out, the same as they just assumed that everyone knew that Jesus worked as a carpenter.Interesting then that only one gospel records this “pivotal” event (which would no doubt be very important to the church), and that it doesn’t say “You are Peter and on you I will build my church.”
So you did your homework on this but now refuse to accept it. The fact is that Jesus is called a Kepa.Also, where is it that Christ is called a kepha, except in places where it would be necessary as a literary device (such as “a stone of stumbling” and “the chief cornerstone”, both illustrations which used smaller stones)? Where is Christ just “a stone”?
The name of the place in Syriac is a word that has the word Kepa as part of the name. I will get the correct spelling for you in a bit but I do not want to write something wrong. You can probably look it up on the INTERNET.
- How is the word incorporated? I’ve never heard this claimed before.
- How did Christ clarify that he wasn’t speaking of the mountainous Caesarea Philippi? In fact, I don’t see how you can avoid seeing the connection, given the additional use of “the gates of hell”.
The words of Jesus are recorded for us in Syriac and he says Kepa twice. Every single version of Matthew in Syriac records this for us.Proof? Got some logic to disprove shu’a (which is Syriac/Aramaic, not Hebrew – in Hebrew, the closest word would be sela/selah).
The Catholic Church is the One True Church, and that is the only conclusion you can honestly come to if you believe that Jesus is God. Once we know that the Catholic Church is the one true Church, then we can know that the Catholic Church fullfill the prophecy. The prophecy makes no sense without the Catholic Church being in existance. The prophecy was made for the Catholic Church and now the Catholic Church as come, established by Jesus and lead by the Holy Spririt to give proper praise and worship to God the Father, to fullfill the prophecy. In a way, since God made the prophecy known and God established the Catholic Church, it is a self fulfilling prophecy. God kept his word.No, but the mathematic equivalent – the number 2 represents the quantity we all know as 2. The laws of mathematics state that X plus Y becomes another real number, counting upward from the original (X) by Y increments of 1.
That’s logic. But then you added this – but we know that the laws of math work this way because we know 2 plus 2 is 4.
You’re saying that the RCC is the one that fulfills the prophecy because God has ordained it so. That’s fine. But to prove it, you say that you know God has ordained it so because the RCC has fulfilled it. You can’t have it both ways. One must be how you know the other, and the one must be supported by something else.
Paul makes that claim. Legitimate Exegesis makes that claim. That has been the claim of Christians for 2000 years. Besides, why don’t you open your Bible to the letter to Timothy and read about how the Church is the Foundation of the truth.Oh, I see – now you’re saying it’s Jesus, and just sliding the RCC in there as being the same thing…without substantiation.
Go to any website that contains documents written in Koine Greek and start reading. Many of these documents have been translated into the other prominent languages of the time, notably, Coptic, Syriac and Latin. It is easy to connect the dots. Legitimate scholars don’t even question this anymore.Aside form Koine being a transitional form, how do you demonstrate that the words were 100% synonymous? Where is there other use contemporary to scripture that shows them to mean the same?
True answers that do not change. EVERY SINGLE version of Matthew in Syriac has the words recorded for us. We do not have to imagine what his words might have been. We know what they actually were. Jesus said Kepa twice. Not because we want that to be true but because that is what happened.No, I mean “Peter is the rock because Jesus said kepha twice.” Almost none of them can answer the question of “how do you know that”. Canned answers that you’ve memorized.
Well the word Boynos comes to mind but that word was not used in the Bible and is far besides the point as we shall all see since Jesus absolutely did not use the word Shu’wa.Actually, for now, why don’t you answer this – if the original were kepha/shua as I’ve suggested, how might you translate that into Greek?
First let us establish what we are talking about. Here is the passage in question in Syriac and then in Greek with my personal translation and commontary.As far as I’m aware, the Greek “epi” generally means “upon”, not “on which”. The Greek “kai epi taute tu petra” would be “but/and/however/also upon/on this/that rock”. So, a legitimate translation might also be “You are a rock, but on that rock pointing toward Caesarea Philippi I will build my church.” You wrongly assume we can know for certain where Christ was pointing, and you make false assertions that the wording can only refer to Peter.
Why would Christ bring them to Caesarea Philippi and use such language if he was simply saying “I’m going to build my church on you, Simon, because you are now Peter” ? It doesn’t make any sense.
The OP implies that if you think Peter is the rock you must accept “Roman” Catholicism wholesale.Since when have Catholics ever relied on scripture alone to prove their case for the papacy? Or that Mt 16:18 is the sole verse that supports it?
If you accept that Peter is the Rock, then the final conclusion of a guienuine search for the truth will show you that the Catholic Church is right. Not many people accept Catholicism wholesale but after all the study and struggle that I went to the be where I am, I almost feel like maybe I should have and just trusted in God. I waisted many years trying to question and go my own way but my way was going to lead me to Hell. I have to do it God’s way and I just wish I could get some of those years back so that I could be a good Catholic from the start.The OP implies that if you think Peter is the rock you must accept “Roman” Catholicism wholesale.
Edwin
But that is not quite the same thing as saying that Mt 16:18 is the only support for the papacy. Or that we rely soley on scripture for our understanding.The OP implies that if you think Peter is the rock you must accept “Roman” Catholicism wholesale.
Edwin
Sigh. The problem is that Peter=rock does not “firmly establish” the papacy. You have to establish why Peter was called rock, whether he had successors, and who those successors are.But that is not quite the same thing as saying that Mt 16:18 is the only support for the papacy. Or that we rely soley on scripture for our understanding.
The OP seems to feel that once the papacy is firmly established (and that Peter=rock), the logical conclusion is to become Catholic.
I agree.
The way I see it, acknowledging that Peter is the Rock is a step. It is one of many steps. It is easy to concede that the Papacy is completely true and correct yet still not be in complete communion with Rome. I wouldn’t go that route but I can see how it can be done.Sigh. The problem is that Peter=rock does not “firmly establish” the papacy. You have to establish why Peter was called rock, whether he had successors, and who those successors are.
Furthermore, one can acknowledge that the papacy is instituted by Christ and even that it is protected from apostasy without becoming Catholic. One can argue that the papacy may be indefectible without being infallible. And if the papacy chooses to establish untenable conditions for being in communion with it, then some of us may have to be out of communion for a while. It doesn’t follow that the gates of hell have prevailed.
The whole line of argument that rests on Matt. 16:18 is too black-and-white. It assumes that either everything Catholics claim about the papacy is true, or Catholicism is apostate. This works a lot of the time because a lot of fundamentalists do believe this. It doesn’t work very well against those of us who don’t think Catholicism is apostate. In fact most of the standard Catholic-apologist arguments don’t work very well against moderate Protestants. That’s why you need to start refining your arguments a bit.
Edwin